Provided by: siggen_2.3.10-11_amd64 bug

NAME

       siggen.conf - the siggen configuration files

SYNOPSIS

       siggen.conf

DESCRIPTION

       As  from  siggen version 2.3 onwards a versatile configuration file scheme has been introduced. It allows
       parameters for the siggen programs  to  be  specified  either  across  the  board,  or  specifically  for
       particular programs.

       Three  possible  configuration  files  can be used: a LOCAL config file (usually in current directory), a
       HOME config file in user's $HOME directory and a GLOBAL config file.

       All the programs are compiled with the names of the config files built in.  The filenames are set in  the
       config.h  header file and can be changed. The LOCAL and GLOBAL config files are specified by the settings
       of:

       LOCAL  #define DEF_CONF_FILENAME ".siggen.conf"

       GLOBAL #define DEF_GLOBAL_CONF_FILE "/etc/siggen.conf"

       And can be set to any file name or to NULL to disable the file. The HOME config filename is created using
       the  $HOME environment variable and the DEF_CONF_FILENAME together, i.e. using the above, the HOME config
       file for a user whose home directory is at /home/jj, would be

       HOME   /home/jj/.siggen.conf

       The config files do not have to exist. If they exist and are readable  by  the  program  they  are  used,
       otherwise they are simply ignored.

       The  config  files  are  always  searched for configuration values in the order LOCAL, HOME, GLOBAL. This
       allows a scheme where the sysadmin sets up default config values in the GLOBAL config file, but allows  a
       user  to  set  some  or  all different values in their own HOME config file, and to set yet more specific
       values when run from a particular directory.

       If no configuration files exist, the programs themselves provide builtin  default  values  (see  config.h
       etc), and most of these values can be set by appropriate command line switches and flags.

CONFIGURATION VALUES

       A  configuration  value  has a name and a value, and values for all programs are set by simply entering a
       line in the appropriate config file where the first word is the name, followed by arbitrary  spaces/tabs,
       followed  by the value. The value is all the rest of that line. e.g. to set the global default samplerate
       of 44100 samples per sec, the following line would be entered in the GLOBAL config file:

       SAMPLERATE     44100

       Config value names are case insensitive.

       A config value can be set for a specific program, by prefixing the config value  name  with  the  program
       name and a ':'. e.g. to specify a samplerate of only 8000 samples per sec for the tones program enter

       TONES:SAMPLERATE    8000

       in the relevant config file. If both lines above were in the config file, all programs except tones would
       use a samplerate of 44100, and tones would use 8000.

       You do not have to specify all configuration values in the  config  files.   If  a  particular  value  is
       missing, the programs will simply use their builtin defaults (see config.h etc).

       Configuration  values  set  by  command  line switches or flags take precedence over values in any of the
       config files.

       Beware the programs do not have their 'name' built-in, but use the name they were invoked by. So  if  you
              change  the name of a program, remember to change the config file entries. However this does means
              that by using links to a program, it can be made to pick  up  a  different  set  of  configuration
              values, depending on the name it is invoked by.

EXAMPLE CONFIGURATION FILE

       A  sample  config  file  is  provided  in  ".siggen.conf"  in  the  distribution.  This  may  also  be at
       /etc/siggen.conf . Any line whose first non-whitespace character is a '#',  is  a  comment  line  and  is
       ignored.

WHAT CONFIGURATION VALUES ARE THERE?

       Not  all  of  the siggen programs use all the values described here.  See the relevant man page for which
       values are used by which programs.

       CHANNELS
              In all programs except tones and fsynth, channels specifies the number of output channels to  use,
              i.e. 1 for Mono and 2 for Stereo.

              For  tones,  channels  specifies  the  number  of  'voices'  on which tones can generate different
              waveforms before mixing them into the one output channel.

              For fsynth, channels specifies the numbers of separately configurable oscillators used to mix  the
              single output channel.

       DACFILE
              The Digital to Analogue Converter (or PCM or DSP) device on which to output the generated samples.
              This must be a real OSS PCM device, otherwise the ioctls used will fail.

       FRAGMENTS
              The number of Audio Buffer fragments to configure in the driver.  The interactive programs respond
              to  changes  made  to  parameters  from the keyboard immediately, but data will be buffered in the
              driver in the buffer fragments. If the amount of data buffered is too much then  there  will  very
              noticeable  delays  before  the  output sound is altered. Against that, insufficient buffering may
              mean that there is not enough data buffered for output to cover the time when other processes  are
              being  run  by  the  scheduler. The programs set the buffer size to the nearest power of 2 to give
              aprox. 100millisecs of sound. Hence if FRAGMENTS is set to 3, there will be aprox. 0.3 secs  worth
              of  sound  buffered for output. On a lightly loaded fast machine this, or 2, should be sufficient.
              To cover periods of heavy load or on a less powerful  machine  use  4  or  5.   But  remember  the
              interactive programs will appear sluggish in responding to the keyboard.

       SAMPLERATE
              The  number  of  samples  per second to use. If output is to the DAC then the DAC device is set to
              output samples at this rate.
              BEWARE: not all cards can support all samplerates.  SoundBlasters  are  fairly  flexible  in  this
              respect.  Other  cheaper cards are not. Indeed some cards can only handle a very restricted set of
              related samplerates e.g. 11025, 22050, 44100 & 8000, 16000, 32000, 48000. When writing to  DACFILE
              all  programs  will  attempt to set the samplerate given, but use the actual samplerate the device
              used. Use the verbose command line flag to check actual samplerates used.

       Some common samplerates used are:

           8000
              is the samplerate used in the phone system with 8 bit samples, and is  adequate  for  voice  range
              frequencies.

           44100
              is the samplerate used in audio CDs

           48000
              is the samplerate used in DAT systems, I think, and for much professional kit.

           32000
              is also used, but I forget where, minidisc?.

              In  general,  the  higher the samplerate the larger the memory and processing requirement, but the
              higher the frequency range and the more accurate the signals generated.

       SAMPLESIZE
              Number of bits per sample. Only two values are allowed currently, 8 or 16.

           8  bit samples are unsigned, with decimal value 128 being the ´zero´ level.

           16 bit samples are signed little endian values, i.e. the least significant byte comes before the most
              significant byte either in a file, or in the byte stream to an output device.

              If  samplesize if left completely unspecified, then all programs will attempt to do 16 bit samples
              to DACFILE, and if that isn't possible will do 8 bit samples. Or if writing  to  a  file,  16  bit
              samples will be written.

       VERBOSE
              sets verbosity level.

           0  is quiet

           1  is be a bit verbose  (equiv. to -v  switch)

           2  is be very verbose   (equiv. to -vv switch)

       VI_KEYS
              if set to a non-zero value, then the VI cursor moving keys "HJKL" are enabled.

SEE ALSO

       sgen(1), swgen(1)

BUGS


COPYING

       Copyright 1995-2008 Jim Jackson

       The software described by this manual is covered by the GNU General Public License, Version 2, June 1991,
       issued by :

              Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
              675 Mass Ave,
              Cambridge, MA 02139, USA

       Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice
       and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

       Permission  is  granted  to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for
       verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under  the  terms  of  a
       permission notice identical to this one.

       Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the
       above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be included in translation
       instead of in the original English.

AUTHOR

       Jim Jackson

       Email: jj@franjam.org.uk