Skip to content

DolbyLaboratories/gst-home-audio

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

7 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

gst-home-audio

What It Is

GStreamer plugins collection for building Dolby Home Audio media pipeline.

⚠️ Plugins require proprietary libraries to initialize properly.

Dependencies

Building

Linux

On Debian-based systems, install the following dependencies:

$ apt-get install ninja-build
$ pip3 install meson

More on installing Meson build can be found at the Meson quickstart guide.

Get other dependencies.

$ apt-get install \
    libglib2.0-dev \
    libgstreamer1.0-dev \
    libgstreamer-plugins-base1.0-dev \
    libgstreamer1.0-0 \
    gstreamer1.0-tools \
    gstreamer1.0-plugins-base \
    gstreamer1.0-plugins-good \
    libjson-glib-dev

Then configure with Meson, and build with Ninja.

$ meson build
$ ninja -C build

Windows

Support for Windows is enabled via MSYS2. Follow instructions on MSYS2 install page. You should have the gcc toolchain on MSYS environment.

Note: Run MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit.

Install Meson and Ninja

$ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-meson mingw-w64-x86_64-ninja

Install the GStreamer dependencies (required to build plugins):

$ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gstreamer mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-plugins-base \
    mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-plugins-good mingw-w64-x86_64-json-glib \
    mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-python

Install some useful plugins (optional)

$ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-plugins-bad mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-plugins-ugly \
    mingw-w64-x86_64-gst-libav

Build and install

$ meson build
$ ninja -C build
$ ninja -C build install

macOS

You can install GStreamer dependencies via Homebrew or you can use installer from GStreamer project.

$ brew install gstreamer gst-plugins-base gst-plugins-good gst-python json-glib

Install additional Python dependencies

pip3 install pycairo
pip3 install PyGObject

Build

$ meson build
$ ninja -C build

Building from source

GStreamer and the plugins can be built from source by using gst-build, or starting from GStreamer 1.20, GStreamer mono repo.

Install meson and ninja as instructed in the Linux, Windows, and macOS sections above.

On Linux systems additional dependencies may be required:

$ apt-get install flex bison libmount-dev

Clone the gst-build repository, specifying a stable version

$ git clone --depth 1 --branch 1.18.4 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-build.git gst-build

Copy the contents of this repository into gst-build/subprojects

$ cp -R /path/to/your/clone/gst-home-audio gst-build/subprojects

Then build the project

$ cd gst-build
$ meson builddir -Dcustom_subprojects=gst-home-audio -Dauto_features=disabled -Dgstreamer:tools=enabled
$ ninja -C builddir

Note: On macOS, an additional -Dcpp_std=c++17 flag is needed to build the project

$ cd gst-build
$ meson builddir -Dcustom_subprojects=gst-home-audio -Dauto_features=disabled -Dgstreamer:tools=enabled -Dcpp_std=c++17
$ ninja -C builddir

These commands will build the gst-home-audio plugins, along with GStreamer core, basic plugins, and tools such as gst-launch-1.0, gst-inspect-1.0 etc.

The built plugins can be found in gst-build/builddir/subprojects/gst-home-audio/plugins

To enter development environment run

$ ninja -C builddir devenv

Running

First we have to tell GStreamer where to look for the newly build plugins:

Note: On Windows, install plugins with ninja -C builddir install rather than point them via environment variable.

$ export GST_PLUGIN_PATH=/path/to/your/clone/gst-home-audio/build/plugins

Test if GStreamer can properly retrieve information about the plugins

$ gst-inspect-1.0 dlbac3dec

See Plugins Overview for pipeline examples.

Integration

The package provides sample integration Python code which can be used for file-based testing of the included plugins. The integration code is available in the integration directory and includes two frontends: gst-ha-flexr and gst-ha-dap.

Note: To run the integration code, make sure that the plugins are installed in the system, or that GST_PLUGIN_PATH is set correctly, as instructed in the Running section

gst-ha-flexr

This integration binary wraps the following plugins:

$ filesrc ! ac3parse ! ac3dec ! dlbflexr ! wavenc ! filesink

It takes encoded Dolby Digital/Dolby Digital Plus bitstreams, or WAV PCM files and outputs decoded and rendered WAV files.

How to run it

Navigate to the integration directory.

$ cd integration/

To print the full usage, type

$ ./gst-ha-flexr -h

Configuration files

The dlbflexr plugin wrapped with this integration code requires two configuration files: a stream configuration file, and a device configuration file. Note: The configuration files are generated by a propietary tool.

To decode a bitstream, type:

$ ./gst-ha-flexr -i input.ec3 -s stream.conf -d device.dconf -o output.wav

Playback

Playback is supported on Windows, Linux and macOS. Note that 48kHz output is required, and macOS supports playback up to eight channels only.

Note: This feature is mutually exclusive with decoding to file.

To decode and play a bitstream, type:

$ ./gst-ha-flexr -i input.ec3 -s stream.conf -d device.dconf -p

First the command invokes the device selection menu to allow a user to choose a target device. Note: Device selection menu is not available on macOS, audio will be played to default device.

To decode and play a bitstream directly on a device, type:

$ ./gst-ha-flexr -i input.ec3 -s stream.conf -d device.dconf -p <device id>

It will skip device selection menu and start playback immediately. Running gst-device-monitor-1.0 will show all connected devices with their ids.
On macOS, the feature is not supported.

Note: On Linux, ensure that your device id is correct so that a pipeline does not get stuck

gst-ha-dap

The integration binary wraps the following plugins:

filesrc ! dlbaudiodecbin ! dlbdap ! wavenc ! filesink

It takes encoded Dolby Digital/Dolby Digital Plus bitstreams and outputs decoded and rendered WAV files.

How to run it

Navigate to the integration directory.

$ cd integration/

To print the full usage, type

$ ./gst-ha-dap -h

To perform a basic decode to stereo, type

$ ./gst-ha-dap -i input.ec3 -o output.wav

Configuration files

The integration binary can be provided with two types of configuration files: .json configuration for dlbdap plugin, or .xml configuration file generated by Dolby Tuning Tool. Example of a .json configuration file can be found in tests directory.

To use the JSON configuration, type

$ ./gst-ha-dap -i input.ec3 -c config.json -o output.wav

To use the XML configuration, provide the file name, endpoint name, and profile name.

$ ./gst-ha-dap -i input.ec3 -x file=config.xml:endpoint=internal-speaker:profile=off -o output.wav

Dolby Tuning Tool XML conversion

The integration binary can be used to convert XML files generated by the Dolby tuning tool to JSON format supported by dlbdap plugin.

$ ./gst-ha-dap -i input.xml -o output.json

Plugins Overview

dlbac3parse

Dolby Digital Plus Parser. This plug-in performs parsing of incoming Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus signal.

Launch Line

$ gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=<file.ec3> ! dlbac3parse ! dlbac3dec ! \
    wavenc ! filesink location=out.wav

dlbac3dec

Dolby Digital Plus Decoder plug-in enables decoding Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus bitstreams with and without Dolby Atmos content.

Launch Line

$ gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=<file.ec3> ! dlbac3parse ! dlbac3dec ! \
    wavenc ! filesink location=out.wav

dlbflexr

Dolby Flexible Renderer plug-in enables flexible rendering. Accepts object- and channel-based audio at input. device-config and stream-config properties have to be set and their value must point to serialized config files.

Launch Line

Single stream:

$ gst-launch-1.0 \
    audiotestsrc ! \
    dlbflexr device-config=device.conf sink_0::stream-config=stream.conf sink_0::upmix=true ! \
    autoaudiosink

Multiple streams:

$ gst-launch-1.0 -v \
    audiotestsrc freq=100 ! \
    dlbflexr name=flexr device-config=device.conf sink_0::stream-config=stream.conf sink_1::stream-config=stream.conf ! autoaudiosink \
    audiotestsrc freq=500 ! flexr.

AC3/EAC3 stream:

$ gst-launch-1.0 -v \
    filesrc location=atmos.ec3 ! \
    dlbac3parse ! \
    dlbac3dec ! \
    dlbflexr name=flexr device-config=device.conf sink_0::stream-config=stream.conf ! \
    autoaudiosink

dlboar

Object Audio Renderer plug-in performs rendering of Dolby Atmos content, which is described by its associated object audio metadata. It should be used after the decoder for rendering Dolby Atmos content. Most of the time dlbaudiodecbin should be used instead as this will add dlboar only if needed. caps after an element determine rendering configuration.

Launch Line

$ gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=<file.ec3> ! dlbac3parse ! dlbac3dec ! dlboar ! \
    capsfilter caps="audio/x-raw,channels=8,channel-mask=(bitmask)0xc003f" ! \
    wavenc ! filesink location=out.wav

dlbdap

Dolby Audio Processing plug-in processes audio signals using cognitive and psychoacoustic models of audio perception to consistently enhance the listening experience for all audio content.

Launch Line

$ gst-launch-1.0 filesrc audiotestsrc ! dlbdap json-config=conf.json ! \
    capsfilter caps="audio/x-raw,channels=8,channel-mask=(bitmask)0xc003f" ! \
    wavenc ! filesink location=out.wav

The Dolby Audio Processing channel mask uses gstreamer channel layout, in the example above it is 5.1.2

Some other useful masks:

  • 2.0 - 0x3
  • 5.1 - 0x3f
  • 7.1 - 0xc3f
  • 2.1.1 - 0x8000b
  • 5.1.2 - 0xc003f
  • 5.1.4 - 0x3303f
  • 7.1.2 - 0xc0c3f
  • 7.1.4 - 0x33c3f

you can find full list of masks in the DAP unit tests in dap_test_negotiation_tuple.

dlbaudiodecbin

The plugin wraps the parser, decoder and object audio renderer into a single element.

Launch Line

$ gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=<file.ec3> ! dlbaudiodecbin ! dlbdap ! \
    capsfilter caps="audio/x-raw,channels=8,channel-mask=(bitmask)0xc003f" ! \
    wavenc ! filesink location=out.wav