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libgig actually consists of three parts: |
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- RIFF classes (RIFF.h, RIFF.cpp): Provides convenient methods to parse and |
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access arbitrary RIFF files. |
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- DLS classes (DLS.h, DLS.cpp): They're using the RIFF classes to parse |
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DLS (Downloadable Sounds) Level 1 and 2 |
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files and provide abstract access to the |
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data. |
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- gig classes (gig.h, gig.cpp): These are based on the DLS classes and |
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provide the necessary extensions for |
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the Gigasampler file format. |
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Requirements |
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============ |
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I simply used automake & co this time so you will need to have automake, |
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autoconf and libtool installed. I used the following versions: |
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automake 1.6.3 |
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autoconf 2.57 |
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If you want to compile the 'gigextract' application that comes with these |
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sources then you will additionally need to have libaudiofile (>= 0.2.3) |
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or libsndfile (>= 1.0.2) installed. Note: for Windows systems only |
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libsndfile is available. |
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Non-POSIX systems |
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================= |
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If you don't have a POSIX system, you have to set 'POSIX' to '0' in RIFF.h. |
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Instead of using POSIX calls then standard C calls will be used for file |
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access. This applies e.g. to Windows systems. I would appreciate if |
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somebody sends me his MS Visual Studio / .NET, Borland C++ Builder or |
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Apple XCode project file! This might help others to conveniently compile |
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libgig on those platforms as well. |
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Compiling |
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========= |
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You can either compile the sources and install the library directly on |
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your system or you can create Redhat or Debian packages. |
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a) Compiling and installing directly |
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Use 'make -f Makefile.cvs && ./configure && make' to compile the library, |
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all tools, demo applications, documentation and install them with |
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'make install'. You can use 'make distclean && make -f Makefile.cvs clean' |
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to clean up everything again. |
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b) Creating Debian packages |
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Use 'make -f Makefile.cvs && dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -b' to compile |
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and create the Debian packages. This will generate 3 Debian packages: |
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libgig: Contains the shared library files. |
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libgig-dev: Contains the header files and documentation for building |
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applications using libgig. |
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gigtools: Contains the tools and demo applications. |
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You can use 'fakeroot debian/rules clean && make -f Makefile.cvs clean' |
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to clean up everything again. |
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c) Creating Redhat packages |
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You need to have the rpmbuild tool installed and properly configured to |
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create RPM packages. To create the RPM packages do the following: |
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* Get .spec file generated by ./configure and edit it as appropriate. |
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* Copy the source tarball to "/usr/src/<rpmdir>/SOURCES" directory, |
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where <rpmdir> is dependent to the system you are using. For SuSE |
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<rmpdir> will be "packages", for Mandrake <rpmdir> is "RPM" and for |
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Redhat / Fedora <rpmdir> always equals "redhat". |
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* Build the rpm(s) by invoking 'rpmbuild -bb <specfile>' from the |
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command line. |
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On success, the resulting rpm(s) can usually be found under the proper |
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"/usr/src/<rpmdir>/RPMS/<arch>" directory. |
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Tools |
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===== |
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Beside the actual library there are four applications: |
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gigdump: Demo app that prints out the content of a .gig file. |
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gigextract: Extracts samples from a .gig file. |
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dlsdump: Demo app that prints out the content of a DLS file. |
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rifftree: Tool that prints out the RIFF tree of an arbitrary RIFF |
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file. |
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API Documentation |
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================= |
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If you have Doxygen installed you can generate the API documentation by |
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running 'make docs' in the sources' top level directory. The API |
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documentation will be generated in the 'doc' subdirectory. |
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Patches |
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======= |
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If you find bugs or have improvements, your patches are always welcome! |
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Send them either directly to me or to the LinuxSampler developer's mailing |
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list <linuxsampler-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>. |
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Credits |
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======= |
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The initial library was based on the reverse engineering effort of |
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Paul Kellett and Ruben van Royen. We owe current support for the quite new |
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Gigasampler v3 format to Andreas Persson. Please also have a look at the |
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ChangeLog for all those who contributed. Thanks for your great work! |
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Christian Schoenebeck <cuse@users.sourceforge.net> |