shithub: sox

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                           SoX Installation
                           ----------------

This distribution will compile and run on most UNIX systems. It was
originally developed on a UNIX/386 machine running AT&T V3.2 but it's
currently developed under Linux. With a little work it should work
with most POSIX systems.


Compiling
---------

[Only if you're compiling the CVS sources, first make sure you have
the GNU autotools installed (automake 1.9, autoconf >= 2.59) and run

	autoreconf -i
]

The preferred method for compiling SoX is to use the "configure"
scripts compatible with most UNIX systems that contain "/bin/sh" or
equivalent (it can also be used on Windows with Cygwin).

To compile and install SoX on these platforms run the following
commands:

	./configure
	make
	make install

There are several optional parameters that you may pass to the
configure script to customize SoX for your applications. Run

	./configure --help

for a complete list of options.


Optional Compile Features
-------------------------

SoX can make use of some external libraries to obtain support
for additional file formats and/or effects.  Some optional libraries
may require pkg-config to be installed to be properly detected.

SoX can detect and use the following libraries:

Ogg Vorbis - More information available at http://www.vorbis.com

Lame MP3 encoder - http://lame.sourceforge.net/

MAD MP3 decoder - http://www.underbit.com/products/mad/

FLAC - http://flac.sourceforge.net/

Secret Rabbit Code - http://www.mega-nerd.com/SRC/

libsndfile - http://www.mega-nerd.com/libsndfile/

If any libraries are installed in a non-standard locations in your
system then you can use the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS variables to allow
configure to find them. For example:

./configure CPPFLAGS="-I/home/sox/include -I/usr/local/multimedia/include" LDFLAGS="-L/home/sox/lib -L/usr/local/multimedia/lib"

If you are compiling under cygwin and would like to create a static
sox.exe using mingw libraries then you can use the following:

./configure CC="gcc -mno-cygwin" --disable-shared

Testing
-------

After successfully compiling SoX, try translating a sound file. If you
can play one of the supported sound file formats, translate
'monkey.wav' to your format (we'll use 'xxx'):

        cd src
	./sox monkey.wav monkey.xxx

You may have to give the word size and rate for the file. For example,
this command will make a sound file with a data rate of 12,500 samples
per second and the data formatted as signed shorts:

	./sox monkey.voc -r 12500 -s -w monkey.xxx 

If monkey.xxx plays properly (it's a very short monkey screech),
congratulations! SoX works.

If your adding new features to SoX or want to perform advance tests
on a new platform then you can use the scripts "tests.sh" and
"testall.sh" to stress SoX.