On Big Sur or newer, it is possible to join the audio threads to the
same OS workgroup as the audio output device, improving response.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
For legacy systems that do not support Metal. The Metal SceneKit view
does work on even 10.13.6, if a Metal GPU is present in the system.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Update all project files with new upgrade version number, and add the
dead code stripping option. Don't touch MASShortcut because it's not my
project.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
When visualizer windows are created, but not actually visible, stop the
update timer, to save processing, especially if the vis is enabled in
one or the other main/mini windows.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Replace overlap-add vDSP/Accelerate implementation with a faster PFFFT
overlap-save implementation, using fewer FFT steps as well.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Rewrite some of the output and a lot of the downmixer to use Accelerate
framework instead of dumb for loops.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Apparently this simpler API already existed on a minimum of 10.11 for
creating a system font with monospaced digits.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Use delayed dispatching on expensive operations which occur every time
the "heard" track end happens, and when audio metadata is changed by a
stream, so that they are inserted into the main thread queue after the
invoking callback returns control execution back to the audio thread.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Since the existing code already supports setting any arbitrary track as
a stopping point, add a menu interface to toggle Stop After for any
track in the playlist. Stop After will be removed from the given track
after it has been played. Stop After will not be remembered on disk.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Gate registering observers behind a check variable in the object state,
which will be zero initialized by the Objective-C runtime, and will
prevent the class from erroneously unregistering observers without them
being registered in the first place. Apparently, services cannot be
unregistered if they were never registered first, or else an exception
will be thrown upon attempting to unregister them. This fixes a crash on
startup in the now several times running failure to work properly on
legacy Macs without Metal graphics, now that the new visualization
system has been implemented.
It's probably not worth bringing back the previous Core Graphics based
visualizer method anyway, as on those same legacy machines, it was
causing out of control CPU usage by WindowServer. At least on modern
Macs, any amount of 60fps UI updating will cause WindowServer to use
about 45% of a core, regardless of how many apps are drawing that much
at once.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Apparently, PFFFT double is much faster than vDSP, and I didn't even
notice. Thanks to Aleksey Vaneev for testing this properly.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
When resampling the impulse according to the playback rate, it becomes
necessary to normalize the resulting impulse by the inverse of the
sample ratio, as resampling adds more or less loudness by virtue of
interpolating samples.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
This will be proper at least unless I get this commit merged upstream.
Squashed the changes to a single commit, and removed extraneous
whitespace that crept into the code.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
If the system has no working Metal devices, disable the visualization.
The legacy visualization was also too slow for said systems to handle
reasonably anyway, so I guess it's safe to say that they shouldn't have
to handle any visualizers at all. At least have working audio playback,
of course, since that is the primary function of the application. Too
bad that the OpenGL renderers don't work on my scene, it would be nice
to have a fallback there. GL 4.1 crashes on an M1, and both GL 4.1 and
3.2 crash with SIGFPE division by zero error on Intel Macs without Metal
devices. Meh.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Remove the default Metal device option, as it can return nil on systems
where it won't be expected to work.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
The frequency mode, apparently the default, doesn't like that the code
was setting the width of the spectrum data to 11 instead of the default
1000. This was causing it to overwrite freed memory when the spectrum
started processing audio.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
The OpenGL fallback was causing division by zero errors on Intel Macs
running macOS High Sierra.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Apparently, old macOS wants to divide something by the scale size, so
setting it to zero causes division by zero errors? Let's set it to a
really small number instead.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
The function I added only works for non-interleaved real/imaginary pairs
and not the interleaved setup that r8brain expects. Fix that by removing
the multiply implementation and using the original one.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
The used fork of r8brain now uses the Accelerate vDSP FFT functions for
resampling, which should provide a slight speedup, or significant for
large sample ratios.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Adding a cast here silences a warning from passing a long to a function
accepting an int. It doesn't really matter here anyway, as the long in
question is hard coded to initialize to a fixed sample rate. Even when
sample rate configuration is eventually added, this will still be hard
capped to well within the range of 32-bit integers.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Metadata logic code should be using this dictionaryWithDictionary method
so that the resulting dictionary is actually immutable, like it claims
to be, rather than simply casting it. Safety coding, all that jazz. Not
really a major issue, just feels right.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Most file formats the player supports may or may not have UTF-8 safe
strings in their metadata. This should not be assumed to be UTF-8, and
when it is assumed, it results in nil NSString objects, which results in
inline initializers crashing due to uncaught exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Moved the string encoding guesser/converter to the Plugin.h header, so
it may be accessible from any plugin. I may make it a global member of
something eventually, but a static inline for such a simple function
should be fine for now.
This function facilitates converting arbitrary 8 bit encoded strings to
Unicode NSString objects. It should be used anywhere that UTF-8 is
expected, but not necessarily guaranteed, and where other 8-bit
encodings may also be supplied by a user's files.
Not using this setup for string inputs has already led to failed UTF-8
decoding resulting in nil NSStrings being passed to the inline array or
dictionary initializers, which results in crashes due to uncaught
exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
On legacy OSes, and legacy GPUs, it should use OpenGL and not Metal,
otherwise there could be horrible performance, or even crashes.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
When the visualization window is not open, it should not continue to run
the scene until the app is quit. Apparently, the windowed mode is really
slow on old Intel machines, too. Full screening it is enough to bodge
the entire system session until the machine is remotely rebooted.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Change the peak sphere positions so they float on top of the bottom or
the bars, instead of clipping into them.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Add a dedicated spectrum visualization window, and add the necessary
hooks to start its event timer if playback is already running when it is
first opened.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Enable 8x multisampled anti-aliasing, to improve the appearance of the
spectrum on non-Retina/HiDPI displays. It can't really hurt on HiDPI,
either. Hopefully this won't cause it to use a whole load of GPU
resources, more than is reasonable.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Disable color fringing and motion blurring, which were causing artifacts
with the transparent background.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Since we use a non-default path in the repository to store shared hooks,
it needs to be configured on a freshly cloned repository before it can
be usable.
Yeah, I forgot to follow my own directions before working on the project
for quite some time. The error crept in at the following commit:
2aa3ddd545 - Icon replacement, and team ID
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Add options to the Appearance preferences page to allow changing the
spectrum's projection between a 2D-like one and 3D perspective, and add
options to change the bar and peak dot colors.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
Introduced a brand new spectrum view based on SceneKit, with a scene
created by @kddlb and then altered by me to add the peak spheres. This
new scene should be lighter on display resources, even though it's fully
3D instead of a vector 2D scene done in Cocoa drawing primitives.
Co-authored-by: Kevin Lopez Brante <kevin@kddlb.cl>
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>
FFmpeg processed files may also contain the LAME tag magic of 'Lavf' or
'Lavc', not just 'LAME'. Missed this when I was maintaining the FFmpeg
code that handles this, or at least adding iTunes support to it.
Fixes#250 again.
Signed-off-by: Christopher Snowhill <kode54@gmail.com>