iem-projects / scalacollider-trace   0.3.0

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A small library that will provide debugging facilities for ScalaCollider synths (tracing UGen values)

Scala versions: 2.12 2.11 2.10

ScalaCollider-Trace

Build Status Maven Central

A library for ScalaCollider to aids in debugging synth graphs by providing abstractions that monitor the values of UGens graph. This project is (C)opyright 2016–2017 by the Institute of Electronic Music and Acoustics (IEM), Graz. Written by Hanns Holger Rutz. This software is published under the GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1+.

linking

The following artifact is available from Maven Central:

"at.iem" %% "scalacollider-trace" % v

The current stable version v is "0.3.0".

building

This project builds with sbt and Scala 2.12, 2.11. To compile sbt test:compile. To print the test output, sbt test:run.

contributing

Please see the file CONTRIBUTING.md

documentation

We introduce a new graph element Trace that explicitly enables the tracing of an input signal, associated with a label:

Trace(in, label = "foo")

For this to work, we require a specific UGen graph builder that extends TracingUGenGraphBuilder. All Trace instances participating are receiving offsets to a debugging bus (or two debugging buses, one for control rate signals and one for audio rate signals). The builder's companion object has a specific build function that not only expands a UGen graph but also returns a debugging object that encapsulates the knowledge of the tracing instances. This object can then be used to issue recordings of the values. A separate GUI display component is available for then browsing the recorded data.

Example:

import de.sciss.synth._
import ugen._
import trace._
import trace.ugen._
import TraceOps._

Server.run() { s =>
  import s.clientConfig.executionContext
  
  val x = tracePlay {
    val n = WhiteNoise.ar
    Trace(n, "noise")
    Pan2.ar(n)
  }
  
  val fut = x.traceFor(numFrames = 8)
  fut.foreach { traces =>
    traces.foreach(_.print())
  }
}

Here, tracePlay returns an enhanced Synth, more precisely TraceSynth that encapsulates the running runs as well as the debug traces and buses. traceFor returns a future to the data objects containing the trace. The type is List[Data], containing one Data instance for control-rate and one for audio-rate traces (if any of these rates are used). The Trace graph element automatically uses the rate of its input argument.

The print method on Data is a convenience method for creating a nicely formatted text, a short cut for println(mkString). A possible output from the above example is:

-------------------------
audio-rate data: 8 frames
-------------------------
noise    :      -0.00180101     -0.266668      0.0157881      0.00469923     -0.880886     -0.242413      0.812972     -0.205941

Synchronous trace start

In order to start playing and tracing synchronously, one can use traceGraph to build the enhanced graph-function (TraceGraphFunction), and then use traceFor in a similar way:

val x = traceGraph {
  RandSeed.ir
  val n = WhiteNoise.ar
  Trace(n, "noise")
  Pan2.ar(n)
}

val fut = x.traceFor(numFrames = 8)
fut.foreach { traces =>
  traces.foreach(_.print())
}

This variant frees the synth automatically after the trace has been recorded. The correct output here would be:

-------------------------
audio-rate data: 8 frames
-------------------------
noise    :      -0.0793402      0.608976     -0.491325      0.387161     -0.563370      0.307421      0.290958      0.928846

Control rate traces

Here is an example for control rate debugging:

val y = tracePlay {
  val tr    = "trig".tr
  val count = PulseCount.kr(tr)
  Trace(count, "count")
  val sweep = Sweep.kr(tr, 1)
  Trace(sweep, "sweep")
}

y.set("trig" -> 1)

y.set("trig" -> 1)

y.traceFor(numBlocks = 2).foreach { traces =>
  traces.foreach(_.print())
}

With an example output:

---------------------------
control-rate data: 2 frames
---------------------------
count    :       2.00000        2.00000  
sweep    :       3.25224        3.25370  

Auxiliary infra-structure with bundle-builder

If you need to feed external synchronized input to the synth, one way to do so is using the bundle argument of type BundleBuilder. It allows to add asynchronous preparation messages as well as the add synchronous messages (such as synth.newMsg or node.setMsg) to the start or to the end of the overall bundle that is generated by the tracing commands.

The following more intricate example shows how a timed control signal can be fed into the synth that is being traced, using an auxiliary group, an auxiliary control generator synth, and a bus mapping:

val x = traceGraph {
  val in  = "in".kr
  val sig = Integrator.kr(in)
  Trace(sig, "integ")
}

val c = Bus.control(s)
val g = Group.head(s)

val genDef = SynthDef("gen") {
  val sig = Phasor.kr(lo = 0, hi = 5)
  Out.kr(c.index, sig)
}

val gen = Synth(s)

val b = new BundleBuilder
b.addAsync(genDef.recvMsg)
b.addSyncToStart(gen.newMsg(genDef.name, target = g, addAction = addToHead))
b.addSyncToEnd(g.mapMsg("in" -> c.index))

val fut = x.traceFor(target = g, addAction = addToTail, numBlocks = 5, bundle = b)
fut.foreach { traces =>
  traces.foreach(_.print())
  c.free()
}

The output from this:

---------------------------
control-rate data: 5 frames
---------------------------
integ    :     0.00000      1.00000      3.00000      6.00000     10.00000