ref: d9ae1ddfa60693082e7bf4521dfea5e7f31bd4df
dir: /INSTALL/
SoX Installation ---------------- SoX should compile and run on any POSIX compatible system (Linux, BSD, Solaris, Xcode on Mac OS X, Cygwin on MS-Windows, etc.). For other compilers/systems, it is often possible to manually construct a custom `soxconfig.h' and `Makefile' for that system (the minimum requirements are 32-bit CPU, 64-bit FPU, C89 compiler). Note that the `play', `rec', and `soxi' programs are in fact just copies-of or links-to (depending on OS) `sox'. SoX optionally makes use of some external libraries to obtain support for additional file formats and/or effects. Optional libraries should be installed before compiling SoX. The current list of supported libraries, where to get them (if not from your OS distribution), and their licence types, is as follows: OpencoreAMR-NB/WB http://sourceforge.net/projects/opencore-amr Apache VisualOn AMR-WB http://sourceforge.net/projects/opencore-amr Apache AO http://xiph.org/ao GPL FLAC http://flac.sourceforge.net BSD LADSPA http://www.ladspa.org LGPL + plugins' licence Lame MP3 encoder http://lame.sourceforge.net LGPL Twolame MP2 enc. http://www.twolame.org LGPL libltdl http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool LGPL MAD MP3 decoder http://www.underbit.com/products/mad GPL MP3 ID3 tags http://www.underbit.com/products/mad GPL Magic http://www.darwinsys.com/file BSD Ogg Vorbis http://www.vorbis.com BSD Opus http://www.opus-codec.org/ BSD PNG http://www.libpng.org/pub/png zlib (BSD-like) Sndfile http://www.mega-nerd.com/libsndfile LGPL WavPack http://www.wavpack.com BSD Compiling and installing on a POSIX system ------------------------------------------ First install any optional libraries that you need for SoX. Some libraries may require pkg-config to be installed to be properly detected by SoX. [Only if you're compiling the git sources, first make sure you have the GNU autotools (automake >= 1.9, autoconf >= 2.62, autoconf-archive) installed, then run autoreconf -i ] To compile and install SoX (executables, libraries, manual pages) with a default configuration for your platform, run the following commands: ./configure make make install There should be no errors and few, if any, warnings during the `make' stage. Any warnings about pointer mismatch or conversion should be treated with deep suspicion. The `make install' command may require `root' priviliges. To run a selection of tests on the installed sox executable: make installcheck Optionally, HTML & PDF versions of the manual pages can be built and installed as follows: make html make install-html make pdf make install-pdf Again, `root' priviliges may be needed at the install stages. Custom build options -------------------- Selection of optional libraries and of other build options can be made by adding parameters to the `./configure' command line (above). Run ./configure --help for a complete list of options. Each optional file-format may be configured to be loaded statically (the default) or dynamically. The dynamic option may be useful for distribution packaging reasons -- for example, to keep separate `free' and `non-free' software. If you are building SoX for a `distribution' (i.e. the build will be used by others), please use --with-distro to identify the distribution as this information is useful in helping to diagnose SoX bug reports. For example, ./configure --with-distro='Super Linux OS 6.1' If any libraries are installed in a non-standard locations in your system, the compiler and linker must be informed of this. Often, environment variables can be used for this purpose. For example, if using the GNU or Clang/LLVM toolchains, the following might be used in a Bourne-compatible shell: export CPATH=/usr/local/include export LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib For other compilers and shells, consult their respective manuals. Optional features ----------------- Support for some file formats is optional and controlled by --enable-* flags to configure. If the value "dyn" is passed to these flags, e.g. --enable-flac=dyn, the corresponding code is built as a module and loaded at runtime. Use of external libraries is controlled by --with-* flags. Some of these accept the value "dyn" to enable runtime loading of the library. The runtime loading feature is mainly useful for distributing the "sox" executable to systems that may not have all the external libraries installed. For a complete list of optional formats and libraries, including which support runtime loading, refer to the "configure --help" output. Testing ------- N.B.: If SoX is configured and compiled to load some file-formats dynamically, then it will not be able to load them when running SoX executables from within the source file directory until after SoX has been installed (temporarily configuring with --without-libltdl removes this restriction). After successfully compiling SoX, try translating a sound file. You should also playback the new file to make sure it sounds like the original. You can either use an external program or SoX itself if compiled with playback support. To work with widest range of playback programs, you should chose a format that is native to your OS; such as .wav for Windows or .aiff for MacOS. In the following example, we'll use .xxx as the extension of your preferred format. cd src ./sox monkey.wav monkey.xxx You may have to give the sample format 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 16-bit signed integers: ./sox monkey.wav -r 12500 -b 16 -e signed-integer monkey.xxx If playback support was compiled in then it can be played like this: ./play monkey.xxx or, equivalently: ./sox monkey.xxx -d If monkey.xxx plays properly (it's a very short monkey screech), congratulations! SoX works. If you're 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.