On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 01:18:28PM +0000, Qais Yousef wrote:
On 10/28/2014 11:55 AM, Clemens Ladisch wrote:
Qais Yousef wrote:
AXD Audio Processing IP performs audio decoding, encoding, mixing, equalisation, synchronisation and playback.
What exactly do you mean with "synchronisation" and "playback"?
Synchronisation refers to accurate audio playout relative to a master clock source including compensation of drift between the master clock source and the playout clock of the audio hardware. Hence allowing synchronised audio playout across multiple independent devices.
Playback simple refers to the fact that AXD is capable of managing audio playout hardware like I2S and SPDIF interfaces.
It doesn't fit in alsa subsystem but I Cced them to confirm.
... because those two words sound like something that a sound card could do.
The problem mainly stems from the fact that we take a variety of compressed audio as input and we could perform audio encoding. The problem with the compressed audio is that the range of decoders and configuration supported in alsa is limited and there's no support for taking raw pcm and producing compressed output. I'm not an expert on alsa but when I looked it looked like there's more infra structure required.
The following not supported points from Documentation/sound/alsa/compress_offload.txt affect us:
Volume control/routing is not handled by this API. Devices exposing a compressed data interface will be considered as regular ALSA devices; volume changes and routing information will be provided with regular ALSA kcontrols.
Embedded audio effects. Such effects should be enabled in the same manner, no matter if the input was PCM or compressed.
Encoding/decoding acceleration is not supported as mentioned above. It is possible to route the output of a decoder to a capture stream, or even implement transcoding capabilities. This routing would be enabled with ALSA kcontrols.
So instead you created a one-off api just for this hardware? Ick, no, please work with the audio developers to incorporate it into the standard Linux audio apis so that everyone can benifit and not require special userspace programs to drive this hardware.
thanks,
greg k-h