MIXER(7I) | Ioctl Requests | MIXER(7I) |
mixer
—
#include <sys/soundcard.h>
Ordinary audio applications should not attempt
to adjust their playback or record volumes or other device settings using
this device. Instead, they should use the
SNDCTL_DSP_SETPLAYVOL
and
SNDCTL_DSP_SETRECVOL
ioctls that are documented in
dsp(7I).
Applications should issue SNDCTL_SYSINFO
first to learn what audio devices and mixers are available on the system,
and then use SNDCTL_AUDIOINFO
or
SNDCTL_MIXERINFO
to obtain more information about
the audio devices or mixers, respectively.
OSS_GETVERSION
SNDCTL_SYSINFO
typedef struct oss_sysinfo { char product[32]; /* E.g. SunOS Audio */ char version[32]; /* E.g. 4.0a */ int versionnum; /* See OSS_GETVERSION */ char options[128]; /* NOT SUPPORTED */ int numaudios; /* # of audio/dsp devices */ int openedaudio[8]; /* Reserved, always 0 */ int numsynths; /* NOT SUPPORTED, always 0 */ int nummidis; /* NOT SUPPORTED, always 0 */ int numtimers; /* NOT SUPPORTED, always 0 */ int nummixers; /* # of mixer devices */ /* Mask of midi devices are busy */ int openedmidi[8]; /* Number of sound cards in the system */ int numcards; /* Number of audio engines in the system */ int numaudioengines; char license[16]; /* E.g. "GPL" or "CDDL" */ char revision_info[256]; /* Reserved */ int filler[172]; /* Reserved */ } oss_sysinfo;
The important fields here are numaudios,
which is used to determine the number of audio devices that can be
queried with SNDCTL_AUDIOINFO
,
nummixers which provides a count of mixers on the
system, and numcards which counts to total number
of aggregate devices. A card can consist of one or
more audio devices and one or more mixers, although more typically there
is exactly one audio device and one mixer for each card.
SNDCTL_AUDIOINFO
typedef struct oss_audioinfo { int dev; /* Device to query */ char name[64]; /* Human readable name */ int busy; /* reserved */ int pid; /* reserved */ /* PCM_CAP_INPUT, PCM_CAP_OUTPUT */ int caps; int iformats; /* Supported input formats */ int oformats; /* Supported output formats */ int magic; /* reserved */ char cmd[64]; /* reserved */ int card_number; int port_number; /* reserved */ int mixer_dev; /* Obsolete field. Replaced by devnode */ int legacy_device; int enabled; /* reserved */ int flags; /* reserved */ int min_rate; /* Minimum sample rate */ int max_rate; /* Maximum sample rate */ int min_channels; /* Minimum number of channels */ int max_channels; /* Maximum number of channels */ int binding; /* reserved */ int rate_source; /* reserved */ char handle[32]; /* reserved */ unsigned int nrates; /* reserved */ unsigned int rates[20]; /* reserved */ char song_name[64]; /* reserved */ char label[16]; /* reserved */ int latency; /* reserved */ /* Device special file name (absolute path) */ char devnode[32]; int next_play_engine; /* reserved */ int next_rec_engine; /* reserved */ int filler[184]; /* reserved */ } oss_audioinfo;
In the above structure, all of the fields are reserved except the following: dev, name, card_number, mixer_dev, caps, min_rate, max_rate, min_channels, max_channels, and devnode. The reserved fields are provided for compatibility with other OSS implementations, and available for legacy applications. New applications should not attempt to use these fields.
The dev field should be initialized by
the application to the number of the device to query. This is a number
between zero (inclusive) and value of numaudios
(exclusive) returned by SNDCTL_SYSINFO
.
Alternatively, when issuing the ioctl against a real mixer or
dsp device, the special value -1 can
be used to indicate that the query is being made against the device
opened. If -1 is used, the field is overwritten with
the device number for the current device on successful return.
No other fields are significant upon entry, but a successful return contains details of the device.
The name field is a human readable name representing the device. Applications should not try to interpret it.
The card_number field indicates the
number assigned to the aggregate device. This can be used with the
SNDCTL_CARDINFO
ioctl.
The mixer_dev is the mixer device number
for the mixing device associated with the audio device. This can be used
with the SNDCTL_MIXERINFO
ioctl.
The caps field contains any of the bits
PCM_CAP_INPUT
,
PCM_CAP_OUTPUT
, and
PCM_CAP_DUPLEX
. Indicating whether the device
support input, output, and whether input and output can be used
simultaneously. All other bits are reserved.
The min_rate and max_rate fields indicate the minimum and maximum sample rates supported by the device. Most applications should try to use the maximum supported rate for the best audio quality and lowest system resource consumption.
The min_channels and max_channels provide an indication of the number of channels (1 for mono, 2 for stereo, 6 for 5.1, etc.) supported by the device.
The devnode field contains the actual full path to the device node for this device, such as /dev/sound/audio810:0dsp. Applications should open this file to access the device.
SNDCTL_CARDINFO
typedef struct oss_card_info { int card; char shortname[16]; char longname[128]; int flags; /* reserved */ char hw_info[400]; int intr_count; /* reserved */ int ack_count; /* reserved */ int filler[154]; } oss_card_info;
This ioctl is used to query for information about the aggregate audio device.
The card field should be initialized by
the application to the number of the card to query. This is a number
between zero (inclusive) and value of numcards
(exclusive) returned by SNDCTL_SYSINFO
.
Alternatively, when issuing the ioctl against a real mixer or
dsp device, the special value -1 can
be used to indicate that the query is being made against the device
opened. If -1 is used, the field is overwritten with
the number for the current hardware device on successful return.
The shortname, longname, and hw_info contain ASCIIZ strings describing the device in more detail. The hw_info member can contain multiple lines of detail, each line ending in a NEWLINE.
The flag, intr_count, and ack_count fields are not used by this implementation.
SNDCTL_MIXERINFO
typedef struct oss_mixerinfo { int dev; char id[16]; /* Reserved */ char name[32]; int modify_counter; int card_number; int port_number; /* Reserved */ char handle[32]; /* Reserved */ int magic; /* Reserved */ int enabled; /* Reserved */ int caps; /* Reserved */ int flags; /* Reserved */ int nrext; int priority; /* Deice special file name (absolute path) */ char devnode[32]; int legacy_device; /* Reserved */ int filler[245]; /* Reserved */ } oss_mixerinfo;
In the above structure, all of the fields are reserved except the following: dev, name, modify_counter, card_number, nrext, priority, and devnode. The reserved fields are provided for compatibility with other OSS implementations, and available for legacy applications. New applications should not attempt to use these fields.
The dev field should be initialized by
the application to the number of the device to query. This is a number
between zero inclusive and value of nummixers
(exclusive) returned by SNDCTL_SYSINFO
, or by
SNDCTL_MIX_NRMIX
. Alternatively, when issuing
the ioctl against a real mixer or dsp device, the
special value -1 can be used to indicate that the
query is being made against the device opened. If -1
is used, the field is overwritten with the mixer number for the current
open file on successful return.
No other fields are significant upon entry, but on successful return contains details of the device.
The name field is a human readable name representing the device. Applications should not try to interpret it.
The modify_counter is changed by the mixer framework each time the settings for the various controls or extensions of the device are changed. Applications can poll this value to learn if any other changes need to be searched for.
The card_number field is the number of
the aggregate audio device this mixer is located on. It can be used with
the SNDCTL_CARDINFO
ioctl.
The nrext field is the number of mixer
extensions available on this mixer. See the
SNDCTL_MIX_NREXT
description.
The priority is used by the framework to assign a preference that applications can use in choosing a device. Higher values are preferable. Mixers with priorities less than -1 should never be selected by default.
The devnode field contains the actual full path to the device node for the physical mixer, such as /dev/sound/audio810:0mixer. Applications should open this file to access the mixer settings.
Those ioctls should only be used by dedicated mixer applications
or desktop olumme controls, and not by typical ordinary audio applications
such as media players. Ordinary applications that wish to adjust their own
volume settings should use the SNDCTL_DSP_SETPLAYVOL
or SNDCTL_DSP_SETRECVOL
ioctls for that purpose. See
dsp(7I) for more information. Ordinary applications should
never attempt to change master port selection or hardware settings such as
monitor gain settings.
The ioctls in this section can only be used to access the mixer device that is associated with the current file descriptor.
Applications should not assume that a single
/dev/mixer node is able to access any physical
settings. Instead, they should use the ioctl
SNDCTL_MIXERINFO
to determine the device path for
the real mixer device, and issue ioctls on a file descriptor opened against
the corresponding devnode field.
When a dev member is specified in each of the following ioctls, the application should specify -1, although for compatibility the mixer allows the application to specify the mixer device number.
SNDCTL_MIX_NRMIX
SNDCTL_MIXERINFO
ioctl. The same information
is available using the SNDCTL_SYSINFO ioctl.
SNDCTL_MIX_NREXT
SNDCTL_MIX_EXTINFO
typedef struct oss_mixext { int dev; /* Mixer device number */ int ctrl; /* Extension number */ int type; /* Entry type */ int maxvalue; int minvalue; int flags; char id[16]; /* Mnemonic ID (internal use) */ int parent; /* Entry# of parent (-1 if root) */ int dummy; /* NOT SUPPORTED */ int timestamp; char data[64]; /* Reserved */ /* Mask of allowed enum values */ unsigned char enum_present[32]; int control_no; /* Reserved */ unsigned int desc; /* NOT SUPPORTED */ char extname[32]; int update_counter; int filler[7]; /* Reserved */ } oss_mixext;
On entry, the dev field should be
initialized to the value -1, and the
ctrl field should be initialized with the number
of the extension being accessed. Between 0, inclusive, and the value
returned by SNDCTL_MIX_NREXT
, exclusive.
Mixer extensions are organized as a logical tree, starting with a root node. The root node always has a ctrl value of zero. The structure of the tree can be determined by looking at the parent field, which contains the extension number of the parent extension, or -1 if the extension is the root extension.
The type indicates the type of extension used. This implementation supports the following values:
MIXT_DEVROOT |
Root node for extension tree |
MIXT_GROUP |
Logical grouping of controls |
MXIT_ONOFF |
Boolean value, 0 = off, 1 = on. |
MIXT_ENUM |
Enumerated value, 0 to maxvalue. |
MIXT_MONOSLIDER |
Monophonic slider, 0 to 255. |
MIXT_STEREOSLIDER |
Stereophonic slider, 0 to 255 (encoded as lower two bytes in value.) |
MIXT_MARKER |
Place holder, can ignore. |
The flags field is a bit array. This implementation makes use of the following possible bits:
MIXF_READABLE |
Extension's value is readable. |
MIXF_WRITEABLE |
Extension's value is modifiable. |
MIXF_POLL |
Extension can self-update. |
MIXF_PCMVOL |
Extension is for master PCM playback volume. |
MIXF_MAINVOL |
Extension is for a typical analog volume |
MIXF_RECVOL |
Extension is for master record gain. |
MIXF_MONVOL |
Extension is for a monitor source's gain. |
The id field contains an ASCIIZ identifier for the extension.
The timestamp field is set when the extension tree is first initialized. Applications must use the same timestamp value when attempting to change the values. A change in the timestamp indicates a change a in the structure of the extension tree.
The enum_present field is a bit mask of possible enumeration values. If a bit is present in the enum_present mask, then the corresponding enumeration value is legal. The mask is in little endian order.
The desc field provides information about scoping, which can be useful as layout hints to applications. The following hints are available:
MIXEXT_SCOPE_MASK |
Mask of possible scope values. |
MIXEXT_SCOPE_INPUT |
Extension is an input control. |
MIXEXT_SCOPE_OUTPUT |
Extension is an output control. |
MIXEXT_SCOPE_MONITOR |
Extension relates to input monitoring. |
MIXEXT_SCOPE_OTHER |
scoping hint provided. |
The extname is the full name of the extension.
The update_counter is incremented each time the control's value is changed.
SNDCTL_MIX_ENUMINFO
typedef struct oss_mixer_enuminfo { int dev; int ctrl; int nvalues; int version; short strindex[255]; char strings[3000]; } oss_mixer_enuminfo;
On entry, the dev field should be
initialized to the value -1, and the
ctrl field should be initialized with the number
of the extension being accessed. Between 0, inclusive, and the value
returned by SNDCTL_MIX_NREXT
, exclusive.
On return the nvalues field contains the number of values, and strindex contains an array of indices into the strings member, each index pointing to an ASCIIZ describing the enumeration value.
SNDCTL_MIX_READ
SNDCTL_MIX_WRITE
typedef struct oss_mixer_value { int dev; int ctrl; int value; /* Reserved for future use. Initialize to 0 */ int flags; /* Must be set to oss_mixext.timestamp */ int timestamp; /* Reserved for future use. Initialize to 0 */ int filler[8]; } oss_mixer_value;
SNDCTL_MIX_NREXT
, exclusive. Additionally, the
timestamp member must be initialized to the same value as was supplied in
the oss_mixext structure used with
SNDCTL_MIX_EXTINFO
.
For SNDCTL_MIX_WRITE
, the application
should supply the new value for the extension. For
SNDCTL_MIX_READ
, the mixer returns the
extensions current value in value.
SOUND_MIXER_READ_VOLUME
SOUND_MIXER_READ_PCM
SOUND_MIXER_READ_OGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECLEV
SOUND_MIXER_READ_IGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECSRC
SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECMASK
SOUND_MIXER_READ_DEVMASK
SOUND_MIXER_READ_STEREODEVS
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_VOLUME
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_PCM
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_OGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_RECGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_RECLEV
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_IGAIN
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_RECSRC
SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_RECMASK
SOUND_MIXER_INFO
SNDCTL_AUDIOINFO_EX
SNDCTL_ENGINEINFO
These ioctls can affect the software volume levels associated with the calling process. They have no effect on the physical hardware levels or settings. They should not be used in new applications.
February 1, 2019 | illumos |