Replaces the NATIVE_FREQUENCY constant with a configurable frequency.
The user may select 48000Hz if the hardware supports it. The default is
still 44100Hz and the minimum is 44100Hz. The setting is located in the
playback settings, under "Frequency".
"Frequency" was duplicated in english.lang for now to avoid having to
fix every .lang file for the moment and throwing everything out of sync
because of the new play_frequency feature in features.txt. The next
cleanup should combine it with the one included for recording and
generalize the ID label.
If the hardware doesn't support 48000Hz, no setting will be available.
On particular hardware where very high rates are practical and desireable,
the upper bound can be extended by patching.
The PCM mixer can be configured to play at the full hardware frequency
range. The DSP core can configure to the hardware minimum up to the
maximum playback setting (some buffers must be reserved according to
the maximum rate).
If only 44100Hz is supported or possible on a given target for playback,
using the DSP and mixer at other samperates is possible if the hardware
offers them.
Change-Id: I6023cf0c0baa8bc6292b6919b4dd3618a6a25622
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/479
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Causes the track change to go in the wrong buffer (and even be missed
by playback) if the current descriptor for the write index is descriptor
0 because the offset used is "-1" upon track change.
Got nailed by implicit conversion of the % operator dividend to unsigned.
Change-Id: I32538db801ac9d790c8b1b5bd041b09ad4b64d2e
Creates a standard buffer passing, local data passing and messaging
system for processing stages. Stages can be moved to their own source
files to reduce clutter and ease assimilation of new ones. dsp.c
becomes dsp_core.c which supports an engine and framework for effects.
Formats and change notifications are passed along with the buffer so
that they arrive at the correct time at each stage in the chain
regardless of the internal delays of a particular one.
Removes restrictions on the number of samples that can be processed at
a time and it pays attention to destination buffer size restrictions
without having to limit input count, which also allows pcmbuf to
remain fuller and safely set its own buffer limits as it sees fit.
There is no longer a need to query input/output counts given a certain
number of input samples; just give it the sizes of the source and
destination buffers.
Works in harmony with stages that are not deterministic in terms of
sample input/output ratio (like both resamplers but most notably
the timestretch). As a result it fixes quirks with timestretch hanging
up with certain settings and it now operates properly throughout its
full settings range.
Change-Id: Ib206ec78f6f6c79259c5af9009fe021d68be9734
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/200
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Additional status callback is added to pcm_play/rec_data instead of
using a special function to set it. Status includes DMA error
reporting to the status callback. Playback and recording callback
become more alike except playback uses "const void **addr" (because
the data should not be altered) and recording uses "void **addr".
"const" is put in place throughout where appropriate.
Most changes are fairly trivial. One that should be checked in
particular because it isn't so much is telechips, if anyone cares to
bother. PP5002 is not so trivial either but that tested as working.
Change-Id: I4928d69b3b3be7fb93e259f81635232df9bd1df2
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/166
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
'Twas a leftover from trying out counts instead of bytes when converting to
timestamping that should have been reverted.
Change-Id: I658c1a19e283025d991b7600378f97c6fc37db34
buffer chunks.
* Samples and position indication is closely associated with audio data
instead of compensating by a latency constant. Alleviates problems with
using the elapsed as a track indicator where it could be off by several
steps.
* Timing is accurate throughout track even if resampling for pitch shift,
whereas before it updated during transition latency at the normal 1:1 rate.
* Simpler PCM buffer with a constant chunk size, no linked lists.
In converting crossfade, a minor change was made to not change the WPS until
the fade-in of the incoming track, whereas before it would change upon the
start of the fade-out of the outgoing track possibly having the WPS change
with far too much lead time.
Codec changes are to set elapsed times *before* writing next PCM frame because
time and position data last set are saved in the next committed PCM chunk.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@30366 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
Now it'll raise the priority gradually when under 70% and gradually decrease again in the same way.
Previously it raised gradually when under 17% (way too late) and went straight back to default priority above 17% again.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@28877 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
The simulator defines PLATFORM_HOSTED, as RaaA will do (RaaA will not define SIMULATOR).
The new define is to (de-)select code to compile on hosted platforms generally.
Should be no functional change to targets or the simulator.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@27019 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657