I would like to perform a FFT on frames of an MP3 file using Java (think spectrum analyzer). I found JLayer which seems to fit the requirement of MP3 Decoding, but I'm not sure how to use it (Most examples are simply players that use the higher level helper, but that's not what I am looking for). FFT seems easy compared to decoding MP3 files ;)
My question is basically this: How would I take an MP3 file in java, and decode it to raw audio data for analysis in Java using JLayer
I am on the same Boat - trying to decode and analyze MP3 files using Java. You may want to check out MP3 SPI from the same author. There is a good example of getting the raw decoded PCM data from an MP3 file in his page:
http://www.javazoom.net/mp3spi/documents.html
Good luck,
Uri
Related
I'm getting started with lwjgl and openal, so I want to be able to decode an ogg vorbis file and play it with openal. My question is: how can I decode an ogg file from java, get the frequency, pcm data, etc. and send it over to openal so I can play it? I found jorbis to do this, but it seemed just too difficult to use, and the tutorials online are kinda messy. I was thinking of something like alutLoadWavFromFile but for ogg(and java).
Thanks!
EDIT: Ok, I'll clarify my question. I want to decode an ogg file. And then send the data to openal. But the only part I don't know how to do is the decoding part.
VorbisJava does exactly this. There is a reasonable example in the tools directory.
https://github.com/Gagravarr/VorbisJava/blob/master/tools/src/main/java/org/gagravarr/vorbis/tools/VorbisCommentTool.java
VorbisFile vf = new VorbisFile(new File(inFile));
Also, Java Sound API has an extensible service provider model. You can add OggVorbis as a provider.
See How can I decode OGG vorbis data from a ByteBuffer?
I want to create a media player in Java. The mp3 support already works with the JLayer library but which library can play m4a files?
I read about vlcj here on stackoverflow, but this seems to depend on Swing/AWT which I wouldn't use because I want to port the application to Android later on.
Have you looked at JAAD? It's a Javasound SPI that decodes AAC audio, I've used it with success previously.
Note that m4a is a container format, and while it usually contains (in my experience) AAC audio, in theory it could contain other formats instead.
You can find some information about getting it working without Javasound (and a test case) here.
This answer is indirect. I don't really know anything about m4a files. But what I have found is an open source library that can stream them as a flash server named red5. It's written in Java so theoretically you should be able to browse their code to figure out how to do it.
Hopefully someone here can give a more direct answer, this is the best I can do.
If you have Java 7 or later, you have access to the Javafx library. You can also use your media player (like iTunes or Windows Media Player) to convert to the simpler mp3 version and run that. I wouldn't recommend .wav files as they have significantly more data usage than mp3s, (which condense the file size by compressing the .wav data and omitting inaudible and otherwise garbage-y data).
import javafx.scene.media.*;
String name = "song.mp3";
Media song = new Media(name);
MediaPlayer player = new MediaPlayer(song);
player.play();
Actually, we need to convert a WMA audio file into FLAC. But there's a lack of ways to convert WMA into more convenient formats. Can you recommend us a library, that can help us, or something like that?
What you need is JAVE:
The JAVE (Java Audio Video Encoder) library is Java wrapper on the
ffmpeg project. Developers can take take advantage of JAVE to
transcode audio and video files from a format to another. In example
you can transcode an AVI file to a MPEG one, you can change a DivX
video stream into a (youtube like) Flash FLV one, you can convert a
WAV audio file to a MP3 or a Ogg Vorbis one, you can separate and
transcode audio and video tracks, you can resize videos, changing
their sizes and proportions and so on. Many other formats, containers
and operations are supported by JAVE.
MFSampledSP supports WMA.
It's suitable for Windows 7 or later.
I need to convert mp4/flv files info mp3 in my Android application, but I don't know C/C++ and Android NDK. Do you know libraries/methods for easy converting on Java? Thank you for anyway.
Your question is how to extract audio from MP4/ FLV files and save as mp3 file. Right ?
Then, very sorry, Android SDK does not provide any API for transformating or track extraction.
Also using available media framework to achieve the same is also not trivial (and even if you do, you will lose portability).
What I would suggest is to use your MP4 & FLV Parser to extract audio track, do transcoding (if audio track is non-mp3), and save the transcoded (if audio track extracted is mp3, then extracted data) data.
Or you can port FFMPEG code base and use the same. This again may be overkill for your small task.
Suppose you just want to extract mp3 track from MP4, then you understand the native mp4 parser and use the APIs for extraction. You may have to replicate some code from stagefright / opencore.
Shash
it's probably irrelevant for you anymore but if some one still need a mp4 to mp3 parser here's an api that can do the job
We have a requirement where we need to convert from .wav file to .mp3 and we are currently using "Tritonus" library to do that . The concern with that library is that requires "installation" of some "dll" files to the class path.
I am wondering are there any API's those allow better processing without local installation.
And other question is ,having mp3 format files will make it easier to join the files into a single file than having .wav files ?
As a former contributor to the JLayer MP3 Library, I'm fairly sure that it doesn't do WAV to MP3 - just MP3 playback and conversion to WAV. (I spent some time optimizing the decoder :-)
Regarding appending files (and possibly other operations), it is generally better to perform edit operations using the uncompressed format, and compress at the end.
I think the spec allows mp3 files to be concatenated, since they are a series of frames, but behaviour may vary from player to player.
So, to be safe, and maintain quality, I'd concat using WAVs and then compress the final result to MP3. Concating files is not so straightforward - you have to at least make sure they are at the same percieved volume, or you will get a noticible shift in volume from one file to the next. Such operations are definitely best performed on the uncompressed data.
The JLayer MP3 Library appears to support several operations on MP3 and WAV files including conversion, with no native libraries to install.
You can use MP3SPI to do this. This is a java sound plugin, just include the jar into the classpath, and you can use java sound api to convert between wav and mp3.