Provided by: alsa-utils_1.2.2-1ubuntu2.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       arecord, aplay - command-line sound recorder and player for ALSA soundcard driver

SYNOPSIS

       arecord [flags] [filename]
       aplay [flags] [filename [filename]] ...

DESCRIPTION

       arecord  is  a  command-line  soundfile  recorder for the ALSA soundcard driver. It supports several file
       formats and multiple soundcards with multiple devices. If recording with  interleaved  mode  samples  the
       file is automatically split before the 2GB filesize.

       aplay is much the same, only it plays instead of recording. For supported soundfile formats, the sampling
       rate, bit depth, and so forth can be automatically determined from the soundfile header.

       If filename is not specified, the standard output or input is used. The aplay  utility  accepts  multiple
       filenames.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Help: show syntax.

       --version
              Print current version.

       -l, --list-devices
              List all soundcards and digital audio devices

       -L, --list-pcms
              List all PCMs defined

       -D, --device=NAME
              Select PCM by name

       -q --quiet
              Quiet mode. Suppress messages (not sound :))

       -t, --file-type TYPE
              File type (voc, wav, raw or au).  If this parameter is omitted the WAVE format is used.

       -c, --channels=#
              The number of channels.  The default is one channel.  Valid values are 1 through 32.

       -f --format=FORMAT
              Sample format
              Recognized  sample  formats  are:  S8  U8  S16_LE S16_BE U16_LE U16_BE S24_LE S24_BE U24_LE U24_BE
              S32_LE  S32_BE  U32_LE  U32_BE  FLOAT_LE   FLOAT_BE   FLOAT64_LE   FLOAT64_BE   IEC958_SUBFRAME_LE
              IEC958_SUBFRAME_BE MU_LAW A_LAW IMA_ADPCM MPEG GSM SPECIAL S24_3LE S24_3BE U24_3LE U24_3BE S20_3LE
              S20_3BE U20_3LE U20_3BE S18_3LE S18_3BE U18_3LE
              Some of these may not be available on selected hardware
              The available format shortcuts are:
              -f cd (16 bit little endian, 44100, stereo) [-f S16_LE -c2 -r44100]
              -f cdr (16 bit big endian, 44100, stereo) [-f S16_BE -c2 -f44100]
              -f dat (16 bit little endian, 48000, stereo) [-f S16_LE -c2 -r48000]
              If no format is given U8 is used.

       -r, --rate=#<Hz>
              Sampling rate in Hertz. The default rate is 8000 Hertz.  If the value specified is less than  300,
              it is taken as the rate in kilohertz.  Valid values are 2000 through 192000 Hertz.

       -d, --duration=#
              Interrupt  after  #  seconds.   A  value  of zero means infinity.  The default is zero, so if this
              option is omitted then the record/playback process will run until it is killed.   Either  '-d'  or
              '-s' option is available exclusively.

       -s, --samples=#
              Interrupt  after  tranmission  of  #  PCM frames.  A value of zero means infinity.  The default is
              zero, so if this options is omitted then the record/playback process will run until it is  killed.
              Either '-d' or '-s' option is available exclusively.

       -M, --mmap
              Use memory-mapped (mmap) I/O mode for the audio stream.  If this option is not set, the read/write
              I/O mode will be used.

       -N, --nonblock
              Open the audio device in  non-blocking  mode.  If  the  device  is  busy  the  program  will  exit
              immediately.  If this option is not set the program will block until the audio device is available
              again.

       -F, --period-time=#
              Distance between interrupts is # microseconds.  If no period time and no period size is given then
              a quarter of the buffer time is set.

       -B, --buffer-time=#
              Buffer  duration  is # microseconds If no buffer time and no buffer size is given then the maximal
              allowed buffer time but not more than 500ms is set.

       --period-size=#
              Distance between interrupts is # frames If no period size and no  period  time  is  given  then  a
              quarter of the buffer size is set.

       --buffer-size=#
              Buffer duration is # frames If no buffer time and no buffer size is given then the maximal allowed
              buffer time but not more than 500ms is set.

       -A, --avail-min=#
              Min available space for wakeup is # microseconds

       -R, --start-delay=#
              Delay for automatic PCM start is # microseconds (relative to buffer size if <= 0)

       -T, --stop-delay=#
              Delay for automatic PCM stop is # microseconds from xrun

       -v, --verbose
              Show PCM structure and setup.  This option is accumulative.  The VU meter is displayed  when  this
              is given twice or three times.

       -V, --vumeter=TYPE
              Specifies  the  VU-meter  type,  either stereo or mono.  The stereo VU-meter is available only for
              2-channel stereo samples with interleaved format.

       -I, --separate-channels
              One file for each channel.  This option  disables  max-file-time  and  use-strftime,  and  ignores
              SIGUSR1.  The stereo VU meter is not available with separate channels.

       -P     Playback.  This is the default if the program is invoked by typing aplay.

       -C     Record.  This is the default if the program is invoked by typing arecord.

       -i, --interactive
              Allow  interactive  operation  via  stdin.   Currently only pause/resume via space or enter key is
              implemented.

       -m, --chmap=ch1,ch2,...
              Give the channel map to override or follow.  Pass channel position strings like FL, FR, etc.

              If a device supports the override of the channel map, aplay tries to pass the given  channel  map.
              If  it doesn't support the channel map override but still it provides the channel map information,
              aplay tries to rearrange the channel order in the buffer to match with the  returned  channel  map
              from the device.

       --disable-resample
              Disable automatic rate resample.

       --disable-channels
              Disable automatic channel conversions.

       --disable-format
              Disable automatic format conversions.

       --disable-softvol
              Disable software volume control (softvol).

       --test-position
              Test ring buffer position.

       --test-coef=<coef>
              Test  coefficient  for  ring  buffer position; default is 8.  Expression for validation is: coef *
              (buffer_size / 2).  Minimum value is 1.

       --test-nowait
              Do not wait for the ring buffer ‐ eats the whole CPU.

       --max-file-time
              While recording, when the output file has been accumulating sound for this long, close it and open
              a new output file.  Default is the maximum size supported by the file format: 2 GiB for WAV files.
              This option has no effect if  --separate-channels is specified.

       --process-id-file <file name>
              aplay writes its process ID here, so other programs can send signals to it.

       --use-strftime
              When recording, interpret %-codes in the file name parameter using the strftime facility  whenever
              the  output file is opened.  The important strftime codes are: %Y is the year, %m month, %d day of
              the month, %H hour, %M minute and %S second.  In addition, %v is the file number, starting  at  1.
              When  this  option  is  specified,  intermediate  directories  for  the  output  file  are created
              automatically.  This option has no effect if --separate-channels is specified.

       --dump-hw-params
              Dump hw_params of the device preconfigured status to stderr. The dump lists  capabilities  of  the
              selected  device such as supported formats, sampling rates, numbers of channels, period and buffer
              bytes/sizes/times.  For raw device hw:X this option basically lists hardware capabilities  of  the
              soundcard.

       --fatal-errors
              Disables  recovery  attempts  when  errors  (e.g. xrun) are encountered; the aplay process instead
              aborts immediately.

SIGNALS

       When recording, SIGINT, SIGTERM and SIGABRT will close the output file and exit.  SIGUSR1 will close  the
       output   file,   open  a  new  one,  and  continue  recording.   However,  SIGUSR1  does  not  work  with
       --separate-channels.

EXAMPLES

       aplay -c 1 -t raw -r 22050 -f mu_law foobar
              will play the raw file "foobar" as a 22050-Hz, mono, 8-bit, Mu-Law .au file.

       arecord -d 10 -f cd -t wav -D copy foobar.wav
              will record foobar.wav as a 10-second, CD-quality wave file, using the PCM "copy" (which might  be
              defined in the user's .asoundrc file as:
              pcm.copy {
                type plug
                slave {
                  pcm hw
                }
                route_policy copy
              }

       arecord -t wav --max-file-time 30 mon.wav
              Record  from  the  default  audio source in monaural, 8,000 samples per second, 8 bits per sample.
              Start a new file every 30 seconds.  File names are mon-nn.wav, where nn increases  from  01.   The
              file after mon-99.wav is mon-100.wav.

       arecord -f cd -t wav --max-file-time 3600 --use-strftime %Y/%m/%d/listen-%H-%M-%v.wav
              Record  in  stereo  from  the  default audio source.  Create a new file every hour.  The files are
              placed in directories based on their start dates and have names which include  their  start  times
              and file numbers.

SEE ALSO

        alsamixer(1), amixer(1)

BUGS

       Note that .aiff files are not currently supported.

AUTHOR

       arecord   and   aplay  are  by  Jaroslav  Kysela  <perex@perex.cz>  This  document  is  by  Paul  Winkler
       <zarmzarm@erols.com>.  Updated for Alsa 0.9 by James Tappin <james@xena.uklinux.net>

                                                 1 January 2010                                         APLAY(1)