views:

43

answers:

2

I have trouble getting sound output on my iPhone experiment and I'm out of ideas.

Here is my callback to fill the Audio Queue buffer

void AudioOutputCallback(void *user, AudioQueueRef refQueue, AudioQueueBufferRef inBuffer)
{
     NSLog(@"callback called");
     inBuffer->mAudioDataByteSize = 1024;

     gme_play((Music_Emu*)user, 1024, (short *)inBuffer->mAudioData);

     AudioQueueEnqueueBuffer(refQueue, inBuffer, 0, NULL);
}

I setup the audio queue using the following snippet

    // Create stream description
    AudioStreamBasicDescription streamDescription;
    streamDescription.mSampleRate = 44100;
    streamDescription.mFormatID = kAudioFormatLinearPCM;
    streamDescription.mFormatFlags = kLinearPCMFormatFlagIsSignedInteger | kLinearPCMFormatFlagIsPacked;
    streamDescription.mBytesPerPacket = 1024;
    streamDescription.mFramesPerPacket = 1024 / 4;
    streamDescription.mBytesPerFrame = 2 * sizeof(short);
    streamDescription.mChannelsPerFrame = 2;
    streamDescription.mBitsPerChannel = 16;

    AudioQueueNewOutput(&streamDescription, AudioOutputCallback, theEmu, NULL, NULL, 0, &theAudioQueue);

    OSStatus errorCode = AudioQueueAllocateBuffer(theAudioQueue, 1024, &someBuffer);

    if( errorCode )
    {
        NSLog(@"Cannot allocate buffer");
    }

    AudioOutputCallback(theEmu, theAudioQueue, someBuffer);

    AudioQueueSetParameter(theAudioQueue, kAudioQueueParam_Volume, 1.0);

    AudioQueueStart(theAudioQueue, NULL);

The library I'm using is outputting linear PCM 16bit 44hz.

A: 

Allocate two buffers instead.

AudioQueues are very finicky.

Rhythmic Fistman
A: 

I usually use 3 buffers. You need at least 2 because as one gets played, the other one is filled by your code. If you have only one, there's not enough time to fill the same buffer and re-enqueue it and have playback be seamless. So it probably just stops your queue because it ran out of buffers.

lucius