Gustavo da Silva Serra escreveu:
stan escreveu:
Gustavo da Silva Serra wrote:
I have discovered something else. Choppy audio occurs when snd_pcm_playback_silence, in pcm_lib.c, will silence the same period than the capture pointer is pointing at. I am printing this variables "ofs" in snd_pcm_playback_silence and what is returned from snd_card_loopback_pointer when the substream is capture.
How snd_pcm_playback_silence is supposed to work? Must it silence the next period from the playback pointer? How is ensured that this situation (ofs == capture pointer) does not happen with sound cards?
Thanks ANY help... any...
The way the API docs describe it the silence function fills the play buffer with a set amount of silence when the buffer has fewer than threshold frames to play. So, if your playback is running close to that threshold, it will be continuously injecting chunks of silence into the stream. That would certainly sound choppy. From the docs it sounds like the silence is always injected into the existing stream at the current pointer.
Note: this is just from reading the docs. I haven't actually used this.
I don't know if the silence function snd_pcm_playback_silence is the same from alsa library. It uses the threshold, but it is not clear for me how. It seems that this function clears the buffer for the new stream arriving, because, from time to time, it silences a whole period.
Thanks for the attention :) _______________________________________________
It silences a whole period because the pointer inside aloop behaves like that. Logging the pointer inside aloop I discovered that it is incremented so fast inside timer function that when pointer function is called, the pointer is not being incremented anymore. It is like a concurrency issue: first the pointer will be incremented many times, after that, the pointer function will be called many times with the same pointer value. Later, the pointer will be incremented some more, and so on... I wonder if this is not the problem, logging the pointer for my sound card I see a different behavior: the pointer function return offset between two periods.