1
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/RGBCube/serenity synced 2025-05-14 09:24:57 +00:00
Commit graph

19 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
kleines Filmröllchen
b4fbd30b70 AudioServer+Userland: Decouple client sample rates from device rate
This change was a long time in the making ever since we obtained sample
rate awareness in the system. Now, each client has its own sample rate,
accessible via new IPC APIs, and the device sample rate is only
accessible via the management interface. AudioServer takes care of
resampling client streams into the device sample rate. Therefore, the
main improvement introduced with this commit is full responsiveness to
sample rate changes; all open audio programs will continue to play at
correct speed with the audio resampled to the new device rate.

The immediate benefits are manifold:
- Gets rid of the legacy hardware sample rate IPC message in the
  non-managing client
- Removes duplicate resampling and sample index rescaling code
  everywhere
- Avoids potential sample index scaling bugs in SoundPlayer (which have
  happened many times before) and fixes a sample index scaling bug in
  aplay
- Removes several FIXMEs
- Reduces amount of sample copying in all applications (especially
  Piano, where this is critical), improving performance
- Reduces number of resampling users, making future API changes (which
  will need to happen for correct resampling to be implemented) easier

I also threw in a simple race condition fix for Piano's audio player
loop.
2023-07-01 23:27:24 +01:00
kleines Filmröllchen
03fac609ee AudioServer+Userland: Separate audio IPC into normal client and manager
This is a sensible separation of concerns that mirrors the WindowServer
IPC split. On the one hand, there is the "normal" audio interface, used
for clients that play audio, which is the primary service of
AudioServer. On the other hand, there is the management interface,
which, like the WindowManager endpoint, provides higher-level control
over clients and the server itself.

The reasoning for this split are manifold, as mentioned we are mirroring
the WindowServer split. Another indication to the sensibility of the
split is that no single audio client used the APIs of both interfaces.
Also, useless audio queues are no longer created for managing clients
(since those don't even exist, just like there's no window backing
bitmap for window managing clients), eliminating any bugs that may occur
there as they have in the past.

Implementation-wise, we just move all the APIs and implementations from
the old AudioServer into the AudioManagerServer (and respective clients,
of course). There is one point of duplication, namely the hardware
sample rate. This will be fixed in combination with per-client sample
rate, eliminating client-side resampling and the related update bugs.
For now, we keep one legacy API to simplify the transition.

The new AudioManagerServer also gains a hardware sample rate change
callback to have exact symmetry on the main server parameters (getter,
setter, and callback).
2023-06-25 00:16:44 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
ab49fcfb7c LibAudio+Userland: Remove Audio::LegacyBuffer
The file is now renamed to Queue.h, and the Resampler APIs with
LegacyBuffer are also removed. These changes look large because nobody
actually needs Buffer.h (or Queue.h). It was mostly transitive
dependencies on the massive list of includes in that header, which are
now almost all gone. Instead, we include common things like Sample.h
directly, which should give faster compile times as very few files
actually need Queue.h.
2022-05-03 23:09:20 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
49b087f3cd LibAudio+Userland: Use new audio queue in client-server communication
Previously, we were sending Buffers to the server whenever we had new
audio data for it. This meant that for every audio enqueue action, we
needed to create a new shared memory anonymous buffer, send that
buffer's file descriptor over IPC (+recfd on the other side) and then
map the buffer into the audio server's memory to be able to play it.
This was fine for sending large chunks of audio data, like when playing
existing audio files. However, in the future we want to move to
real-time audio in some applications like Piano. This means that the
size of buffers that are sent need to be very small, as just the size of
a buffer itself is part of the audio latency. If we were to try
real-time audio with the existing system, we would run into problems
really quickly. Dealing with a continuous stream of new anonymous files
like the current audio system is rather expensive, as we need Kernel
help in multiple places. Additionally, every enqueue incurs an IPC call,
which are not optimized for >1000 calls/second (which would be needed
for real-time audio with buffer sizes of ~40 samples). So a fundamental
change in how we handle audio sending in userspace is necessary.

This commit moves the audio sending system onto a shared single producer
circular queue (SSPCQ) (introduced with one of the previous commits).
This queue is intended to live in shared memory and be accessed by
multiple processes at the same time. It was specifically written to
support the audio sending case, so e.g. it only supports a single
producer (the audio client). Now, audio sending follows these general
steps:
- The audio client connects to the audio server.
- The audio client creates a SSPCQ in shared memory.
- The audio client sends the SSPCQ's file descriptor to the audio server
  with the set_buffer() IPC call.
- The audio server receives the SSPCQ and maps it.
- The audio client signals start of playback with start_playback().
- At the same time:
  - The audio client writes its audio data into the shared-memory queue.
  - The audio server reads audio data from the shared-memory queue(s).
  Both sides have additional before-queue/after-queue buffers, depending
  on the exact application.
- Pausing playback is just an IPC call, nothing happens to the buffer
  except that the server stops reading from it until playback is
  resumed.
- Muting has nothing to do with whether audio data is read or not.
- When the connection closes, the queues are unmapped on both sides.

This should already improve audio playback performance in a bunch of
places.

Implementation & commit notes:
- Audio loaders don't create LegacyBuffers anymore. LegacyBuffer is kept
  for WavLoader, see previous commit message.
- Most intra-process audio data passing is done with FixedArray<Sample>
  or Vector<Sample>.
- Improvements to most audio-enqueuing applications. (If necessary I can
  try to extract some of the aplay improvements.)
- New APIs on LibAudio/ClientConnection which allows non-realtime
  applications to enqueue audio in big chunks like before.
- Removal of status APIs from the audio server connection for
  information that can be directly obtained from the shared queue.
- Split the pause playback API into two APIs with more intuitive names.

I know this is a large commit, and you can kinda tell from the commit
message. It's basically impossible to break this up without hacks, so
please forgive me. These are some of the best changes to the audio
subsystem and I hope that that makes up for this :yaktangle: commit.

:yakring:
2022-04-21 13:55:00 +02:00
Elyse
bb747c471f AudioServer: Add a 'self_muted' state to each client connection
This new state will allow us to ignore muted clients when computing the
'output mix' in the Mixer.
2021-12-24 00:19:01 -08:00
Elyse
c78a8b94c5 Everywhere: Refactor 'muted' to 'main_mix_muted' in all AudioConnections
The 'muted' methods referred to the 'main mix muted' but it wasn't
really clear from the name. This change will be useful because in the
next commit, a 'self muted' state will be added to each audio client
connection.
2021-12-24 00:19:01 -08:00
Jelle Raaijmakers
f97c9a5968 Kernel: Allow higher audio sample rates than 65kHZ (u16)
Executing `asctl set r 96000` no longer results in weird sample rates
being set on the audio devices. SB16 checks for a sample rate between 1
and 44100 Hz, while AC97 implements double-rate support which allows
sample rates between 8kHz and 96kHZ.
2021-11-24 19:08:13 +01:00
kleines Filmröllchen
bd17da9f9e Audio: Add per-client volume
Note: While ClientAudioStream has had a volume property, it is only now
used in the mixer.
2021-09-12 23:38:57 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
152ec28da0 Audio: Change how volume works
Across the entire audio system, audio now works in 0-1 terms instead of
0-100 as before. Therefore, volume is now a double instead of an int.
The master volume of the AudioServer changes smoothly through a
FadingProperty, preventing clicks. Finally, volume computations are done
with logarithmic scaling, which is more natural for the human ear.

Note that this could be 4-5 different commits, but as they change each
other's code all the time, it makes no sense to split them up.
2021-09-12 23:38:57 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
9880a5c481 AudioServer: Expose the ability to get and set the sample rate
Two new IPC calls allow audio clients to get and set the sample rate.
The AudioServer calls into the new ioctl of the sound card.
2021-08-27 23:35:27 +04:30
Timothy
944e5cfb35 Everywhere: Use IPC include syntax
Remove superfluous includes from IPCCompiler's generated output and
add include directives in IPC definitions where appropriate.
2021-07-03 12:16:00 +02:00
Andreas Kling
5424372d50 AudioServer: Remove unnecessary greet() message 2021-05-23 09:53:55 +02:00
Gunnar Beutner
9e22e9ce88 Userland: Use snake case names in .ipc files
This updates all .ipc files to have snake case names for IPC methods.
2021-05-03 21:14:40 +02:00
sin-ack
62af6cd4f9 IPCCompiler: Remove hardcoded endpoint magic, attempt deux
This patch removes the IPC endpoint numbers that needed to be specified
in the IPC files.  Since the string hash is a (hopefully) collision free
number that depends on the name of the endpoint, we now use that
instead. :^)

Additionally, endpoint magic is now treated as a u32, because endpoint
numbers were never negative anyway.

For cases where the endpoint number does have to be hardcoded (a current
case is LookupServer because the endpoint number must be known in LibC),
the syntax has been made more explicit to avoid confusing those
unfamiliar.  To hardcode the endpoint magic, the following syntax is now
used:

endpoint EndpointName [magic=1234]
2021-04-25 14:06:56 +02:00
Andreas Kling
418bc484e4 Revert "IPCCompiler: Use string hashes for IPC endpoint magic"
This reverts commit 59218007a3.
2021-04-25 11:24:12 +02:00
sin-ack
59218007a3 IPCCompiler: Use string hashes for IPC endpoint magic
This patch removes the IPC endpoint numbers that needed to be specified
in the IPC files.  Since the string hash is a (hopefully) collision free
number that depends on the name of the endpoint, we now use that
instead. :^)
2021-04-25 09:29:49 +02:00
Andreas Kling
1ce03f4f34 LibIPC: Stop sending client ID to clients
The client ID is not useful to normal clients anymore, so stop telling
everyone what their ID is.
2021-02-01 11:32:00 +01:00
Andreas Kling
2cd16778b5 AudioServer+LibAudio: Pass audio buffers as Core::AnonymousBuffer
This was the last remaining user of shbufs! :^)
2021-01-17 09:07:32 +01:00
Andreas Kling
c7ac7e6eaf Services: Move to Userland/Services/ 2021-01-12 12:23:01 +01:00
Renamed from Services/AudioServer/AudioServer.ipc (Browse further)