Skip to content
/ mtrx Public

Transmit and receive low-latency audio via UDP unicast or multicast, using the Opus codec.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

VittGam/mtrx

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

14 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

mtrx

Transmit and receive audio via UDP unicast or multicast, using the Opus codec.

Copyright (C) 2014-2017 Vittorio Gambaletta

mtx

Usage: mtx [<options>]

    -h <addr>   IP address (default: 239.48.48.1)
    -p <port>   UDP port (default: 1350)
    -d <dev>    ALSA device name, or '-' for stdin (default: 'default')
    -f <n>      Use float samples (1) or signed 16 bit integer samples (0) (default: 0)
    -r <rate>   Audio sample rate (default: 48000 Hz)
    -c <n>      Audio channel count (default: 2)
    -t <ms>     Audio packet duration (default: 20 ms)
    -k <kbps>   Network bitrate (default: 128 kbps)
    -b <n>      ALSA buffer multiplier (default: 3)
    -T <n>      Enable or disable time synchronization (default: 1)
    -v <n>      Be verbose (default: 0)

mrx

Usage: mrx [<options>]

    -h <addr>   IP address (default: 239.48.48.1)
    -p <port>   UDP port (default: 1350)
    -d <dev>    ALSA device name, or '-' for stdin/stdout (default: 'default')
    -f <n>      Use float samples (1) or signed 16 bit integer samples (0) (default: 0)
    -r <rate>   Audio sample rate (default: 48000 Hz)
    -c <n>      Channels count (default: 2)
    -t <ms>     Audio packet duration (default: 20 ms)
    -b <n>      ALSA buffer multiplier (default: 3)
    -e <ms>     Audio total delay (default: 80 ms)
    -T <n>      Enable or disable time synchronization (default: 1)
    -v <n>      Be verbose (default: 0)

Quick 'n' easy steps to transmit audio routed from PulseAudio

  • First clone the repo and run make ;)

Transmitter

First time

  • Append this to /etc/asound.conf:
pcm.pnm {
	type pulse
	device null.monitor
}

Every time

  • Run pacmd load-module module-null-sink (once per session)
  • Run sudo ./mtx -d pnm -f 1 (the root privs are needed to get realtime priority)
  • Change network bandwidth with -k if needed
  • Run pavucontrol and move streams that need to be streamed to the Null Output sink
  • Run pacmd unload-module module-null-sink at the end if you want

Receiver(s)

  • Run sudo ./mrx (the root privs are needed to get realtime priority)
  • Change receiving latency with -e if needed
  • If having problems try sudo ./mrx -d pulse
  • On OpenWrt and/or with cheap USB audio cards without PulseAudio, if it doesn't work try mrx -d plughw:0,0
  • It shouldn't be needed anymore, but it might still be useful, so this is a working /etc/asound.conf file for OpenWrt with cheap USB audio cards

Bugs

  • Well, all the desync bugs seem to happen (and needed a resync hack in mtx) only when using alsa-pulse to capture from the null output sink monitor...
  • If you find any bugs, please report them! :)

TODO

  • Support IPv6
  • Implement native PulseAudio interface (but only if it doesn't bloat the program! The target is embedded systems like OpenWrt routers...)
  • OpenWrt/LEDE packaging
  • On OpenWrt, libopus is compiled with floating point enabled by default, and since floating point is emulated on most routers' CPUs, it's SLOW as hell. Maybe send a patch to LEDE (if that was not already done in the meantime)?
  • Any suggestion?

License

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

About

Transmit and receive low-latency audio via UDP unicast or multicast, using the Opus codec.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages