A collection of emscripten-compiled libraries: opus and speexdsp. It's a low-level library, exposing the native Emscripten interface. You should be familiar with it.
- Use both encoder/decoder/resampler in a single bundle
- Compile latest libraries with latest emscripten
- Integrate libraries into existing building systems, such as Webpack or Browserify
- Enable WebAssembly support by default with a fallback to ASM.js
- Usage of the same assets in different projects for better caching
- Provide an ability to load either production or development build
- Ability to fork the library and use it as a dependency from a git repo
npm install --save fast-sound
or
yarn add fast-sound
The library exposes the same interface as Emscripten MODULARIZE does.
Use
// require production build
const FastSound = requrie('fast-sound')
FastSound({}).then(function(lib) {
const errReference = lib._malloc( 4 );
const decoder = lib._opus_decoder_create( decoderSampleRate, numberOfChannels, errReference );
lib._free( errReference );
});
The library loads asynchroniously either WASM binary file or ASM.js fallback.
By default, it will look at the same folder as the original script. You can pass
locateFile
function to correctly resolve paths:
function locateFile(file) {
return "/assemblies/" + file;
}
FastSound({locateFile: locateFile}).then(function(lib) {
// ...
});
All options passed to FastSound
goes to Emscripten without a change.
The only difference is method
option, which can be wasm
either asm.js
.
It forces the selected method:
// Loads ASM.js despite the WebAssembly browser support
FastSound({method: 'asm.js'}).then(function(lib) {
// ...
});
For development build require the library as further:
// require development build
const FastSound = requrie('fast-sound/unminified')
There is both production and development builds: