smrec
Minimalist multi-track audio recorder which may be controlled via OSC or MIDI.
I did this because I needed a simple multi-track audio recorder which I could control via OSC or MIDI.
I didn't want and do not have the resources to use a DAW for this purpose in my setup and wanted mono wave files for each channel organized in a directory per recording by date and time
I'm using this recorder in a setup where I use a Behringer XR18 as an audio interface and a LattePanda 3 Delta as a SBC.
Now let's record some sound! 🔔
Installation
cargo install smrec
Installing for Windows and ASIO support
smrec
uses cpal
as the underlying audio API. cpal
supports WASAPI, DirectSound and ASIO on Windows. However, since cargo
builds binaries from source in the target machine and it is not very straight forward to build cpal
with ASIO support due to asio-sys
build script, there is a pre-build script provided in this repository.
To install smrec
on Windows, please follow these steps in order:
- Install the latest Visual Studio (if you don't have it already)
- Install the latest LLVM (if you don't have it already) from here
- Open Command Prompt as administrator
- Set LLVM path in the environment variables (system wide)
setx /M LIBCLANG_PATH "C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin"
- Open PowerShell as administrator
- Check if the environment variable is set correctly
$env:LIBCLANG_PATH
- Source the pre-build script in the repository (assuming you are in the root of the repository)
. .\pre-build-win.ps1
CPAL_ASIO_DIR
variable for the current shell session. - Install as usual
cargo install smrec
If you know what you're doing feel free to skip these steps and consult the cpal
documentation.
Pre-built binaries
Pre-built binaries as an alternative are available for Windows here due to the complicated process of building cpal
with ASIO support on Windows currently.
Tutorial
Simply as a command
smrec
Runs with the default configuration which is:
- The default audio host
- The default audio device
- The default set of input channels
- The default directory to record which is the current working directory
- The recording goes on until
ctrl+c
is pressed and the program is interrupted. - Creates a directory named
rec_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS
in the current working directory and records the audio in that directory. - The audio is recorded in
wav
format. - The audio is recorded in the default sample rate and buffer size and sample format of the audio device.
- For every channel a separate file is created (mono) and the file name for each is
chn_XX.wav
whereXX
is the channel number.
To record for a specific duration, use the --duration
flag and specify the duration in seconds. The following command records for 10 seconds:
smrec --duration 10
By using the --host
and --device
flag , you can specify the audio host and device to use. The following command uses MacBook Pro Microphone
as the audio device:
smrec --device "MacBook Pro Microphone"
Listing midi ports and audio hosts and devices
smrec list
Including and excluding channels from a recording
By default, all channels of the audio device are recorded. You can specify which channels to include or exclude from the recording by using the --include
and --exclude
flags. These flags can not be used together. The following command records only the first two channels of a 4 channel audio device:
smrec --include 1,2
And this command records all channels except the first channel of a 4 channel audio device:
smrec --exclude 1
as seen in the examples, the channel numbers start from 1 and they can be specified as a comma separated list.
Recording to a specific directory
By default, the recording is done in the current working directory. You can specify a directory to record to by using the --directory
flag. The following command records to the ~/Music
directory:
smrec --out ~/Music
Configuring with a configuration file
smrec
uses the cli arguments for configuration and they precede everything. However, you can configure some aspects (probably more to come) of smrec
by using a configuration file so they replace the default configuration. The configuration file is a toml
file and it is named config.toml
. The configuration file is searched in the following order:
.smrec/config.toml
in the current working directory..smrec/config.toml
in the user home directory.- If none of the above is found, the default configuration is used.
The configuration file can configure:
- Channel names
[channel_names]
1 = "Kick"
2 = "Snare"
3 = "Hi-Hat"
- More to come..
OSC control
smrec
normally starts recording as soon as it is run. However it also has options for various control methods.
Running, smrec --osc
will not start recording immediately but instead it will wait for an OSC message to start recording. The default OSC port for receiving and sending is chosen randomly by the os and the default addresses for sending and receiving is 127.0.0.1
and 0.0.0.0
. After running the command above, the output might look like this:
Will be sending OSC messages to 127.0.0.1:61213
Listening for OSC messages on 0.0.0.0:51014
Currently smrec
does not support IPv6.
In the default configuration:
- Listens for OSC messages on a randomly chosen port on all addresses.
- Sends OSC messages to localhost on a randomly chosen port.
To configure OSC further arguments could be added to the flag:
smrec --osc "<listen_address>:<listen_port>;<send_address>:<send_port>"
or
smrec --osc "<listen_address>:<listen_port>"
the second form would keep the default send address and port.
smrec --osc "0.0.0.0:18000;255.255.255.255:18001"
will listen for OSC messages on all addresses on port 18000
and send OSC messages to all addresses on port 18001
. Yes, smrec
can also broadcast OSC messages is the OS and the network allows it.
OSC messages
The messages which smrec
listens for are:
/smrec/start
- Starts the recording, sending a second start will stop the running recording and starts a new one creating a new directory in the specified root./smrec/stop
- Stops the recording if there is a running one.
The messages which smrec
sends are:
/smrec/start
- Sent when a new recording is started./smrec/stop
- Sent when a running recording is stopped./smrec/error <string>
- Sent when some errors occur and the error message is transferred a string in the argument.
MIDI control
smrec
can also be controlled via MIDI. It can even be controlled via OSC and MIDI simultaneously. Though smrec
is a simplistic application to serve a single purpose the MIDI communication the options it provides for configuring MIDI is extensive.
Running, smrec --midi
will not start recording immediately but instead it will wait for a MIDI CC message to start recording.
Here is the default configuration:
- Finds all available MIDI ports and starts listening on them.
- Listens for any channel in those ports.
- Reacts to CC 16 to start the recording and CC 17 to stop the recording.
- As in OSC, sending subsequent CC 16 messages will stop the running recording and start a new one creating a new directory in the specified root.
smrec --midi
is synonymous withsmrec --midi "[*[(*,16,17)]]"
which will be explained below.
Configuration
The --midi
flag accepts a string argument which is parsed as a configuration string which configures the input and output. These strings are separated by a semicolon (;
) and the first part configures the input and the second part configures the output. Any part could be left out.
Deconstruction:
[..]
is a container for an input or output configuration.[port name[..], ..]
a comma separated list of port names whichsmrec
will connect to.[port name[(..), ..], ..]
each port name should contain at least one channel/MIDI CC filter configuration.(<channel number>, <cc number for starting the recording>, <cc number for stopping the recording>)
this is the structure of a channel/MIDI CC filter configuration.(1,2,3)
here is an example, this will listen for CC 2 on channel 2 to start the recording and CC 3 on channel 2 to stop the recording. All other messages in that port is ignored. MIDI channels are 0 indexed![my nice port[(1,2,3), ..], ..]
this is how we use that tuple.[my nice port[(1,2,3), (15, 127, 126), ..], ..]
as all the elements we can have multiples of those.[ my first port[(1,2,3), (15, 127, 126), (12,4,5)], my second port[(1,2,3)] ]
here is a valid configuration string. It will listen for CC 2 on channel 2 to start the recording and CC 3 on channel 2 to stop the recording onmy first port
and listen for CC 2 on channel 2 to start the recording and CC 3 on channel 2 to stop the recording onmy second port
. All other messages in those ports are ignored.
Use of '*' and glob patterns:
- Port names in the configuration string are treated as glob patterns.
*
matches any port. Which in the end means all ports.- All valid glob patterns could be used to match port names.
- Deconstructing the default configuration string:
[*[(*,16,17)]]
now should make sense. - Listen on all ports, do not filter by channel reacting to all MIDI CC messages which are CC 16 to start the recording and CC 17 to stop the recording.
smrec
can also send midi messages on certain events. If the output port is configured with a configuration, the configured CC messages will be sent on the configured port and channels on start and stop events.
Values
MIDI CC values are considered momentary.
Once a value 127
is received through a configured MIDI CC number the action is taken immediately. This is why sending bursts of MIDI CC messages is not a good idea. Every message would trigger a new recording if it is configured to start the recording.
smrec
sends MIDI CC messages with a value of 127
on start and 127
on stop to the configured MIDI CC numbers if output is configured.
As a last example to get the hang of it, this configuration string will listen for CC 2 on channel 2 to start the recording and CC 3 on channel 2 to stop the recording on my first port
and listen for CC 2 on channel 2 to start the recording and CC 3 on channel 2 to stop the recording on my second port
. All other messages in those ports are ignored. On start and stop events, it will send CC 16 with a value of 127 on channel 2 on my first port
and send CC 17 with a value of 127 on channel 2 on my second port
.
[ my first port[(1,2,3), (15, 127, 126), (12,4,5)], my second port[(1,2,3)] ];[ my first port[(1,2,3), (15, 127, 126), (12,4,5)], my second port[(1,2,3)] ]
Next steps
I'm going to make sure,
- Installation gets smoother
- Help is complete
- Documentation is complete
- Bugs are fixed
- Better messages to the user
- That the software is lock free enough and remove unnecessary allocations
But I don't plan to heavily maintain this project, I'll just make sure that it is usable enough and lives.
Support
- Desktop
- macOS:
x86_64
✅aarch64
✅
- linux:
x86_64
(Should work but not checked yet, will be checked though)aarch64
(Should work but not checked yet, will be checked though)
- windows:
x86_64
✅aarch64
✅
- macOS:
Contributing
- Be friendly and productive
- Follow common practice open source contribution culture
- Rust code of conduct applies
Thank you 🙏
Last words
It is something I needed to resolve a specific problem and I shared it publicly. I hope it resolves your problem too.