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Realtime Audio Graph Engine (RAGE)

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RAGE provides an audio processing graph implementation tailored towards distributed audio workstations. The audio graph within RAGE is composed of processing elements and connections between elements which are managed by the RAGE host.

Rage processing elements can be both traditional data transforms (effects, mixers, etc) as well as data producers (samplers, synthesizers, etc) and data consumers (recorders, analysis plugins). The RAGE host manages the scheduling of both the low-latency audio commutations and the higher latency subtasks such as loading a file from disk for sample replay. Additionally, RAGE provides session time interpolated parameters, freeing individual elements from this responsibility.

Project goals:

  • Easy to synchronise serialisable graph representation.
  • Managed low overhead worker threads per-element.
  • Sample-accurate control data interpolation.
  • Dynamic plugin loading.
  • Simple interface to audio plugins.

What RAGE will not do:

  • Serialize elements and the element graph. RAGE will provide the needed information to implement this functionality, but a higher level component built upon RAGE's interface is planned to perform this task.
  • Provide traditional "local UI" support for elements. Traditional in-process LV2/VST/etc GUIs work well for purely local DAWs, however they introduce significant complexity and don't immediately suit the goals of a cross-platform distributed audio workstation.

RAGE Elements

The RAGE audio graph is built out of a collection of audio processing elements. Each element provides a series of callbacks which at runtime specify:

  • A description of a tuple of type specialisation parameters
  • A list of input and output ports
  • A description of a tuple of instance time series
  • A way to allocate and free element instance state
  • An audio callback
  • Optional worker thread callbacks

Elements have two "play time" threads: one that runs in a soft-realtime context (which is allowed to do IO), and another that runs in a stricter, hard-realtime, context (and isn't allowed to do anything realtime-hazardous).

Both threads of an element are provided with identical sample-accurate interpolated views of the element instance's parameter series. The "soft" thread runs first in order to prepare a buffer of data for the realtime thread. The preparation routine reports how many frames may be consumed before it needs to be called again (allowing for efficient, batched, interleaved scheduling).

The buffer presented to both threads may be arbitrarily long in session time. For instance, a file playing element may know it doesn't need to play anything for ten minutes, but can buffer up the first second of audio it will need ten minutes from now and specify that it does not need to be run until that second of data is in use. Filling the audio buffer early makes it possible to leave the file player's "soft" thread inactive, or offline for a prolonged period of time which helps in minimising context switches.

When playing back a pre-prepared sequence, computing data in advance is an efficient option. However should this sequence be modified some stale data may have been created. RAGE is built to make it possible to easily apply these sorts of control value changes in a timely manner. An (incompletely implemented) feature of RAGE is the ability to rewind elements to insert parameter changes if they have pre-computed outputs after the change.

Cleanup operations on this sequence will see what the realtime processing callback was presented with regardless of any subsequent changes. This helps with clean up as any buffers filled by the realtime (or preparatory) operations will be seen in the context of the control sequence that created them.

RAGE Engine

The RAGE host manages the scheduling of the elements efficiently and exposes a high-level, asynchronous interface for managing elements and changing control data series. The host also contains a loader which allows elements to be loaded dynamically; currently the loader only loads RAGE elements, but wrapping LV2 plugins into RAGE elements is planned for a future release.

Wishlist

  • Different sections of the audio flow graph to run at different period sizes (e.g. prerecorded segments run in large periods whilst live audio processing runs with lower latency).
  • Automatic static analysis and testing (especially of elements), since the functions that should be RT safe are explicitly known and the parameters are introspectable and some sane output invariants can be chosen allowing some basic "it doesn't crash or pop" type tests can be generated.

Debian build/install

apt-get install libjack-jackd2-dev libsndfile1-dev ninja-build
pip install meson
meson setup build
DESTDIR=fake_install ninja -C build install

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