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Ogg support on my WMA11B
Noodles kindly passed
on the Linksys
WMA11B Wireless Media Adapter that he'd promised me. This is a
little ARM-based Linux box with wired and wireless network inputs and
TV and audio outputs. With the software that comes with the little
media box, you can play Windows media and MP3 audio and display a
variety of image formats.
There's just one problem with this software - it claims to work
only on Windows, needing a .Net runtime to serve both software and
media files to the box. We don't have any Windows machines in the
house any more, so that clearly wasn't going to wash!
Various Free Software hackers have acquired these boxes and played
with them, and there's now a complete set of Free tools available (to
play audio, at least):
- Andy Wild has written wmaloader,
a replacement program to download software to the WMA11B. I've
packaged this for Debian.
- James Pitts has written wmamp, an
iTunes client that runs on the WMA11B. Simply replace the
"squishguava" software image from the WMA11B CD with wmamp.img.
- Alexander Oberdörster has written a free iTunes-compatible server
called daapd
that runs on Linux, serving up MP3 files. This is packaged in Debian
too.
With this selection of excellent programs, I managed to get my
WMA11B up and running a couple of weeks back without once using the
supplied Windows software. I could play MP3 music through my new
hi-fi, spooling the files directly off the network. Yay! Well,
almost. The problem is that almost all the music I have is now in Ogg
Vorbis format. :-(
I didn't want to re-rip and re-encode all of my CDs into an
inferior, encumbered format, so I decided to extend the toolchain to
support Ogg Vorbis. This turned out to be really quite easy, and after
just a few hours of hacking at the weekend I have it working now.
There were a few issues and bugs to solve along the way:
- daapd didn't know anything about Ogg at all. That was easily
solved - add code to use libogg and libvorbis to extract header info
from Ogg files.
- daapd always sent music files as
Content-Type:
text/html , which seemed a little silly. I've fixed this so that
it will now use audio/mpeg and
application/ogg as appropriate.
- Setting up an arm cross compiler. In the past I've spent many
many hours doing this, so I was really impressed by
the Debian toolchain-source package. It Just Worked first time.
- wmamp would only play MP3 files; I've now extended it to recognise
the
Content-Type header and use either the original MP3
code or the new Ogg code as appropriate.
- My first attempt to use libvorbis in wmamp almost
worked, but playback was very jerky. The little Arm processor in the
WMA11B doesn't have hardware floating-point support, and the normal
libvorbis uses floating point for decoding. Noodles pointed me at
Tremor, the simplified fixed-point Vorbis decoder. A few minutes more
hacking and I was done.
My very first attempt to play Ogg files worked, just slowly. My
first attempt at playback with the Tremor library worked
perfectly. Monitoring the system using top, I can see it uses about
20-25% CPU when playing back Ogg files, leaving enough spare cycles to
do other stuff.
To do:
- At the moment I only have rudimentary Ogg playback working. I want
to make all the remote control functions work (e.g. pausing
playback).
- Ogg Flac support should be quite easy to add too.
- The MP3 decoder currently drives a visualiser - a simple spectrum
analyser. The Ogg code should be able to do the same at least. In
fact, I'd like to add more visualisation options, maybe using
xmms-style plugins if I can.
- I need to check that the changes I've made to daapd haven't broken
support for existing iTunes clients.
- Last, but not least: I need to push the changes
I've made upstream!
Longer term, I'm thinking of hacking apart wmamp and essentially
rewriting it. I've got several ideas on how I'd like it to look and
behave. It's been a while since I've worked on GUI code, but I'll
muddle through somehow.
I've had a great time so far hacking on the WMA11B. Plugging
together the fruits of multiple projects has proven to me again just
how powerful Free Software can be. I have a neat new toy to play with,
and as I have source to all the main components I can customise and
improve them as I see fit. How cool is that? :-)
01:26 ::
# ::
/wma ::
10 comments
Re: Re: Re: Ogg support on my WMA11B
Jim
wrote on Wed, 06 Apr 2005 11:21 |
Linksys have finally released the GPL source to the wma11b. Although your comment comparing the PS2 Mips processor to the 400Mhz ARM are reasonable, the video processor in the wma11b is very poor indeed.
Reply
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