39 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
39 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
You downloaded the source code for "dsd2pcm" which is a simple little
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"filter" program, that takes a DSD data stream on stdin and converts
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it to a PCM stream (352.8 kHz, either 16 or 24 bits) and writes it to
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stdout. The code is split into three modules:
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(1) dsd2pcm
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This is where the 8:1 decimation magic happens. It's an
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implementation of a symmetric 96-taps FIR lowpass filter
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optimized for DSD inputs. If you feed this converter with
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DSD64 you get a PCM stream at 352.8 kHz and floating point
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samples. This module is independent and can be reused.
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(2) noiseshape
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A module for applying generic noise shaping filters. It's
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used for the 16-bit output mode in "main" to preserve the
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dynamic range. This module is independent and can be reused.
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(3) main.cpp (file contains the main function and handles I/O)
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The first two modules are pure C for maximum portability. In addition,
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there are C++ wrapper headers for convenient use of these modules in
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C++. The main application is a C++ application and makes use of the
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C++ headers to access the functionality of the first two modules.
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Under Linux this program is easily compiled by typing
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g++ *.c *.cpp -O3 -o dsd2pcm
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provided you have GCC installed. That's why I didn't bother writing
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any makefiles. :-p
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Cheers!
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SG
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