ref: 987ddbfb95e682dab4798336a6fda56ca82ac117
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SoX: Sound eXchange SoX (also known as Sound eXchange) translates sound samples between different file formats, and optionally performs various sound effects. This release understands: o Raw files in various binary formats o Raw textual data o Microsoft .WAV files o PCM, u-law, a-law o MS ADPCM (Read only) o IMA ADPCM (Read only) o MAUD files o Sound Blaster .VOC files o IRCAM SoundFile files o SUN .au files o PCM, u-law, a-law o G7xx ADPCM files (read only) o mutant DEC .au files o Apple/SGI AIFF files o CD-R (music CD format) o Macintosh HCOM files o Sounder files o NeXT .snd files o Soundtool (DOS) files o Psion (palmtop) A-law files The sound effects include: o Channel Averaging o Band-pass filter o Chorus effect o Cut out loop samples o Add an echo o Add a sequence of echos o Apply a flanger effect o Apply a high-pass filter o Apply a low-pass filter o Display a list of loops in a file o Add masking noise to a signal o Apply a phaser effect o Convert from stereo to mono o Change sampling rates using several different algorithms. o Apply a reverb effect o Reverse the sound samples (to search for Satanic messages ;-) o Convert from mono to stereo o Display general stats on a sound sample o Add the world-famous Fender Vibro-Champ effect Big news! Lots of new effects have been added. This includes most the popular "Guitar Effects" talked about in the same named FAQ available. The 'resample' and 'polyphase' effect does high-grade signal rate changes using real signal theory. Yes, it's very slow. There seems to be a small problem with aliasing with 'resample' currently. More big news! Sample loops are now supported in a few file formats: SMP and AIFF. WAV and VOC needs it. I don't know what other formats actually know about sampler notes & loops. (To make a loop, you need a waveform editor that knows about them and has special features.) History: This is the 12th release, Patchlevel 16 of the Sound Tools. Sox was originally written and maintained by Lance Norskog but unfortunetly he has stopped maintaining it since 1995. I, Chris Bagwell (cbagwell@sprynet.com), have started maintaining it since 1996 to the present. Lance may take supporting it back up in the future but until that time I will keep pushing its development forward. Caveats: SoX is intended as the Swiss Army knife of sound processing tools. It doesn't do anything very well, but sooner or later it comes in very handy. SoX is really only usable day-to-day if you hide the wacky options with one-line shell scripts. Installing: Unless your using a precompiled binary version, you will need to compile SoX as described in the INSTALL file. Please read that file for further instructions. Now, read TIPS, CHEAT.eft and CHEAT. These give a background on how SoX deals with sound files and how to convert this format to that format, and apply various effects with examples for the most popular formats. SoX uses file suffices to determine the nature of a sound sample file. If it finds the suffix in its list, it uses the appropriate read or write handler to deal with that file. You may override the suffix by giving a different type via the '-t type' argument. See the manual page for more information. SoX has an auto-detect feature that attempts to figure out the nature of an unmarked sound sample. It works very well. This is the 'auto' file format. I hope to inspire the creation of a common base of sound processing tools for computer multimedia work, similar to the PBM toolkit for image manipulation. Sound Tools may be used for any purpose. Source distributions must include the copyright notices. Binary distributions must include acknowledgements to the creators. Files are copyright by their respective authors. If you have bug fixes/enhancements, please send it to me as I would like to coordinate the releases. Please document your changes. I don't possess every kind of computer currently sold, and SoX is now beyond the phase where I can understand and test most of your contributions. The majority of SoX features and source code are contributed by you the user. Thank you very much for making SoX a success! Creator: Lance Norskog thinman@meer.net (inactive currently) Mantainer: Chris Bagwell cbagwell@sprynet.com Contributors: Juergen Mueller jmueller@uia.ua.ac.be chorus, echo, echos, flanger, phaser, and reverb effects. Guido Van Rossum guido@cwi.nl AU, AIFF, AUTO, HCOM, reverse, many bug fixes Jef Poskanzer jef@well.sf.ca.us original code for u-law and delay line Bill Neisius bill%solaria@hac2arpa.hac.com DOS port, 8SVX, Sounder, Soundtool formats Apollo fixes, stat with auto-picker Rick Richardson rick@digibd.com WAV and SB driver handlers, fixes David Champion dgc3@midway.uchicago.edu Amiga port Pace Willisson pace@blitz.com Fixes for ESIX Leigh Smith leigh@psychokiller.dialix.oz.au SMP and comment movement support. AIFF Loop/MIDI support David Sanderson dws@ssec.wisc.edu AIX3.1 fixes (Note that to my knowledge AIX on RS/6000s has NO SUPPORT for playing any sort of sound file, so please don't write to me any more to ask "how do I play sound files on my AIX box". I ported sox to AIX solely to use it to translate between sound file formats.) Glenn Lewis glewis@pcocd2.intel.com AIFF chunking fixes Brian Campbell brianc@quantum.qnx.com QNX port and 16-bit fixes Chris Adams gt8741@prism.gatech.edu DOS port fixes John Kohl jtkohl@kolvir.elcr.ca.us BSD386 port, VOC stereo support Ken Kubo ken@hmcvax.claremont.edu VMS port, VOC stereo support Frank Gadegast <phade@cs.tu-berlin.de> Microsoft C 7.0 & C Borland 3.0 ports David Elliot <dce@scmc.sony.com> CD-R format support David Sears <dns@essnj3.essnjay.com> Linux support Tom Littlejohn <tlit@seq1.loc.gov> Raw textual data Boisy G. Pitre boisy@microware.com OS9 port Sun Microsystems, Guido Van Rossum CCITT G.711, G.721, G.723 implementation Graeme Gill graeme@labtam.labtam.oz.au A-LAW format, Good .WAV handling, avg channel expansion Allen Grider grider@hfsi.hfsi.com VOC stereo mode, WAV file handling Michel Fingerhut Michel.Fingerhut@ircam.fr Upgrade 'sf' format to current IRCAM format. Float file support. Chris Knight Achimedes Acorn support Richard Caley R.Caley@ed.ac.uk Psion WVE handler Lutz Vieweg lkv@mania.RoBIN.de MAUD (Amiga) file handler Tim Gardner timg@tpi.com Windows NT port for V7 Jimen Ching jiching@wiliki.eng.hawaii.edu Libst porting bugs Lauren Weinstein lauren@vortex.com DOS porting, scripts, professional use Chris Bagwell cbagwell@sprynet.com OSS and Sun players, bugfixes, ADPCM support, patch collection and maintance. (your name could be here, too) (I've probably lost a few, and several people fixed the same bugs.)