/*! \file MidiConsumer.h \ingroup midi2 \brief Defines consumer classes for the MIDI Kit. */ /*! \class BMidiConsumer MidiConsumer.h \ingroup midi2 \brief Receives MIDI events from a producer A consumer is an object that knows how to deal with incoming MIDI events. A consumer can be connected to multiple producers at the same time. There is no way to find out which producers are connected to this consumer just by looking at the BMidiConsumer object; you will have to consult BMidiRoster for that. A BMidiConsumer either represents a local consumer, i.e. a class extending from BMidiLocalConsumer, or is a proxy for a remote object published by another app. */ /*! \fn bigtime_t BMidiConsumer::Latency() const \brief Returns the latency of this consumer The latency is measured in microseconds. Producers should attempt to get MIDI events to this consumer by (when - latency). You do this by subtracting the latency from the performance time when you spray the events (provided that you spray these events ahead of time, of course). You cannot set the latency on a BMidiConsumer, only on a BMidiLocalConsumer. The latency issue gets slightly more complicated when multiple endpoints are chained together, as in the following picture: \verbatim +-------+ +-------------+ +-------+ | | | | | | | prodA |---->| consB prodB |---->| consC | | | | | | | +-------+ +-------------+ +-------+ appA appB (filter) appC \endverbatim Suppose consC has 200ms latency, and consB has 100ms latency. If consB simply reports 100ms, then prodA will schedule its events for (t - 100), which is really 200ms too late. (Of course, producers send out their events as soon as possible, so depending on the load of the system, everything may work out just fine.) ConsB should report the latency of the consumer that is hooked up to its output, consC, in addition to its own latency. In other words, the full downstream latency. So, the reported latency in this case would be 300ms. This also means that appB should change the latency of consB when prodB makes or breaks a connection, and when consC reports a latency change. (If multiple consumers are connected to prodB, you should take the slowest one.) Unfortunately, the Midi Kit provides no easy mechanism for doing any of this, so you are on your own here. */ /*! \class BMidiLocalConsumer MidiConsumer.h \ingroup midi2 \brief A consumer endpoint that is created by your own application. If you want to create a consumer that reacts to MIDI events, you should subclass BMidiLocalConsumer. Each local consumer has its own thread that receives and dispatches the MIDI events. Whenever MIDI data arrives, the Data() hook passes the MIDI event on to a more specific hook function: NoteOn(), NoteOff(), SystemExclusive(), and so on. Calls to these hook functions are serialized -- they will never have to be re-entrant. They also should not be called from outside the thread that is invoking them. Your subclass can override any of the MIDI event hooks. BMidiLocalConsumer doesn't provide default implementations for them, so you don't have to call a hook's default implementation if you override it. For complete control, you can also override Data(). Most hook functions take a channel argument. Even though MIDI channels are really numbered 1 through 16, the hook functions work with channels 0 through 15. The performance time for the event is specified in microseconds relative to the system time base. A performance time that is 0 (or really any time in the past) means "play as soon as possible". See the \ref midi2time "introduction" for more information about timing and consumers. The thread driving the consumer's events is a very high priority real time thread. Events should be handled as quickly as possible (not counting snoozing). If non-time-critical computation is needed it may be wise to queue events up for a lower priority thread to handle them external to the main event thread. */ /*! \fn BMidiLocalConsumer::BMidiLocalConsumer(const char *name = NULL) \brief Creates a new local consumer endpoint The new endpoint is not visible to other applications until you Register() it. You can tell the constructor what the name of the new consumer will be. If you pass NULL (or use the default argument), then the consumer's name will be an empty string. It won't be NULL, since endpoint names cannot be NULL. There is no guarantee that the endpoint will be successfully created. For example, the Midi Server may not be running. Therefore, you should always call IsValid() after creating a new endpoint to make sure that everything went okay. If not, Release() the object to reclaim memory and abort gracefully. \code MyConsumer* cons = new MyConsumer(...); if (!cons->IsValid()) { cons->Release(); ...exit gracefully... } \endcode */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::SetLatency(bigtime_t latency) \brief Changes the published latency of the consumer. \sa Latency() */ /*! \fn int32 BMidiLocalConsumer::GetProducerID() \brief Returns the ID of the producer that most recently sent a MIDI event to this consumer. You can call this from one of the hooks to determine which producer the event came from. */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::SetTimeout(bigtime_t when, void* data) \brief Requests that the Timeout() hook will be called at some point. This method asks the consumer thread to call the Timeout() hook as soon as possible after the timeout expires. For every call to SetTimeout(), the Timeout() hook is only called once. Note: the term "timeout" may be a little misleading; the hook will always be called, even if events are received in the mean time. Apparently, this facility is handy for dealing with early events. Note that the event thread blocks on the consumer's port as long as no events arrive. By default no timeout is set, and as a result the thread blocks forever. Your call to SetTimeout() doesn't change this. The new timeout value will go into effect the next time the thread tries to read from the port, i.e. after the first event has been received. If no event ever comes in, the Timeout() hook will never be called. This also means that you cannot cancel a timeout once you have set it. To repeat, calling SetTimeout() only takes effect after at least one new event has been received. \param when An absolute time that's measured against the system clock. \param data A pointer to a "cookie" that you can pass along to Timeout(). The data is not copied, so you must ensure that the pointer remains valid until Timeout() is called. You typically delete the data inside Timeout(). */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::Timeout(void* data) \brief Hook function that is called per your own request. \sa SetTimeout() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::Data(uchar* data, size_t length, bool atomic, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when raw MIDI is received. What the default implementation of Data() does depends on the value of atomic. If atomic is true, the data received comprises a single MIDI event; i.e. one status byte followed by the appropriate number of data bytes and nothing else. In this case, Data() calls the event-specific hook function that corresponds to that status byte. This optimization is used by the Midi Kit to allow faster dispatch of events generated by the specific Spray functions from BMidiLocalProducer. If atomic is false, Data() ignores the MIDI event. If you want a consumer to handle non-atomic events, you have to override Data() and program this yourself. In that case, you probably also want to call the default implementation to handle the "normal" MIDI events. Data() is rarely overridden, but you can override it if you want to. If you do, remember that the data buffer is owned by the Midi Kit. Do not attempt to modify or free it, lest you wish to be laughed at by other developers. \param data the MIDI event data \param length byte size of the data buffer \param atomic whether the data buffer contains a single complete MIDI event \param time the requested performance time of the event \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayData() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::NoteOff(uchar channel, uchar note, uchar velocity, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Note Off event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayNoteOff() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::NoteOn(uchar channel, uchar note, uchar velocity, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Note On event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayNoteOn() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::KeyPressure(uchar channel, uchar note, uchar pressure, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Polyphonic Pressure (Aftertouch) event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayKeyPressure() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::ControlChange(uchar channel, uchar controlNumber, uchar controlValue, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Controller Change event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayControlChange() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::ProgramChange(uchar channel, uchar programNumber, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Program Change event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayProgramChange() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::ChannelPressure(uchar channel, uchar pressure, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Channel Pressure event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayChannelPressure() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::PitchBend(uchar channel, uchar lsb, uchar msb, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Pitch Bend event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayPitchBend() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::SystemExclusive(void* data, size_t length, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a System Exclusive event is received. The data does not include the sysex start and end control bytes (0xF0 and 0xF7), only the payload of the sysex message. The data belongs to the Midi Kit and is only valid for the duration of this event. You may not modify or free it. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SpraySystemExclusive() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::SystemCommon(uchar status, uchar data1, uchar data2, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a System Common event is received. Not all data bytes are used for all common events. Unused bytes are set to 0. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SpraySystemCommon() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::SystemRealTime(uchar status, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Real Time event is received. \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SpraySystemRealTime() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::TempoChange(int32 beatsPerMinute, bigtime_t time) \brief Invoked when a Tempo Change event is received \sa BMidiLocalProducer::SprayTempoChange() */ /*! \fn void BMidiLocalConsumer::AllNotesOff(bool justChannel, bigtime_t time) \brief Not used. */