Platforms: SunOS
Deprecated since version 2.6: The sunaudiodev module has been removed in Python 3.
This module allows you to access the Sun audio interface. The Sun audio hardware is capable of recording and playing back audio data in u-LAW format with a sample rate of 8K per second. A full description can be found in the audio(7I) manual page.
The module SUNAUDIODEV defines constants which may be used with this module.
This module defines the following variables and functions:
This exception is raised on all errors. The argument is a string describing what went wrong.
This function opens the audio device and returns a Sun audio device object. This object can then be used to do I/O on. The mode parameter is one of 'r' for record-only access, 'w' for play-only access, 'rw' for both and 'control' for access to the control device. Since only one process is allowed to have the recorder or player open at the same time it is a good idea to open the device only for the activity needed. See audio(7I) for details.
As per the manpage, this module first looks in the environment variable AUDIODEV for the base audio device filename. If not found, it falls back to /dev/audio. The control device is calculated by appending “ctl” to the base audio device.
The audio device objects are returned by open() define the following methods (except control objects which only provide getinfo(), setinfo(), fileno(), and drain()):
This method explicitly closes the device. It is useful in situations where deleting the object does not immediately close it since there are other references to it. A closed device should not be used again.
Returns the file descriptor associated with the device. This can be used to set up SIGPOLL notification, as described below.
This method waits until all pending output is processed and then returns. Calling this method is often not necessary: destroying the object will automatically close the audio device and this will do an implicit drain.
This method discards all pending output. It can be used avoid the slow response to a user’s stop request (due to buffering of up to one second of sound).
This method retrieves status information like input and output volume, etc. and returns it in the form of an audio status object. This object has no methods but it contains a number of attributes describing the current device status. The names and meanings of the attributes are described in <sun/audioio.h> and in the audio(7I) manual page. Member names are slightly different from their C counterparts: a status object is only a single structure. Members of the play substructure have o_ prepended to their name and members of the record structure have i_. So, the C member play.sample_rate is accessed as o_sample_rate, record.gain as i_gain and monitor_gain plainly as monitor_gain.
This method returns the number of samples that are buffered on the recording side, i.e. the program will not block on a read() call of so many samples.
This method returns the number of samples buffered on the playback side. Unfortunately, this number cannot be used to determine a number of samples that can be written without blocking since the kernel output queue length seems to be variable.
This method reads size samples from the audio input and returns them as a Python string. The function blocks until enough data is available.
This method sets the audio device status parameters. The status parameter is an device status object as returned by getinfo() and possibly modified by the program.
Write is passed a Python string containing audio samples to be played. If there is enough buffer space free it will immediately return, otherwise it will block.
The audio device supports asynchronous notification of various events, through the SIGPOLL signal. Here’s an example of how you might enable this in Python:
def handle_sigpoll(signum, frame):
print 'I got a SIGPOLL update'
import fcntl, signal, STROPTS
signal.signal(signal.SIGPOLL, handle_sigpoll)
fcntl.ioctl(audio_obj.fileno(), STROPTS.I_SETSIG, STROPTS.S_MSG)
Platforms: SunOS
Deprecated since version 2.6: The SUNAUDIODEV module has been removed in Python 3.
This is a companion module to sunaudiodev which defines useful symbolic constants like MIN_GAIN, MAX_GAIN, SPEAKER, etc. The names of the constants are the same names as used in the C include file <sun/audioio.h>, with the leading string AUDIO_ stripped.