Provided by: aeolus_0.9.9-1_amd64 

NAME
aeolus - synthesised pipe organ emulator
DESCRIPTION
Aeolus is a synthesised (i.e. not sampled) pipe organ emulator that should be good enough to make an
organist enjoy playing it. It is a software synthesiser optimised for this job, with possibly hundreds of
controls for each stop, that enable the user to "voice" his instrument.
Main features of the default instrument: three manuals and one pedal, five different temperaments,
variable tuning, MIDI control of course, stereo, surround or Ambisonics output, flexible audio controls
including a large church reverb.
OPTIONS
-h Display this text
-t Text mode user interface
-u Use presets file in user's home dir
-N <name>
Name to use as JACK and ALSA client [aeolus]
-S <stops>
Name of stops directory [stops]
-I <instr>
Name of instrument directory [Aeolus]
-W <waves>
Name of waves directory [waves]
-J Use JACK (default), with options:
-s Select JACK server
-B Ambisonics B format output
-A Use ALSA, with options:
-d <device>
Alsa device [default]
-r <rate>
Sample frequency [48000]
-p <period>
Period size [1024]
-n <nfrags>
Number of fragments [2]
AUTHOR
aeolus was written by Fons Adriaensen <fons.adriaensen@skynet.be>.
This manual page was written by Alessio Treglia <alessio@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be
used by others).
aeolus September 2010 AEOLUS(1)