Pythonic libsndfile wrapper to read and write audio files.
- Wave file resources open and close as context managers (
with
) - Property accessors for format, channels, length, sample rate... and metadata (ID3...)
- Real multichannel (not just mono/stereo, but also surround, ambisonics and virtually any number of channels)
- All libsndfile formats supported, floating point encodings used by default
- Numpy based interface
- Generators for efficient block-by-block access
- Alternative Matlab-like whole-file interface. Less efficient, but convenient for quick and dirty scripts.
- Shortened constant names for formats (Using namespaces instead of prefixes)
- Tools for listing available formats
- Transparent Unicode handling for filenames and text strings
- No module compilation required (wraps the dll using ctypes)
- Compatible with Python >= 3.8
You can find the latest version at: https://github.com/vokimon/python-wavefile
Python dependencies are managed by the setup.py script. But still there are a couple of binary dependencies. In Debian/Ubuntu, you can install them by casting:
sudo apt-get install -y libsndfile1 portaudio19-dev
PortAudio and its Python wrapper, PyAudio, are just required in order to run the examples.
pip install wavefile
If you want to develop, installing editable is recomended. From the source directory:
pip install -e .
Writing and reading whole audio files (like Mathlab primitives do) is not as efficient than block based processing to process long audios. But it could be quite convenient on occassions to have quickly something working.
import wavefile
import numpy as np
def sinusoid(samples, f, samplerate=44100):
return np.sin( np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi*f*samples/samplerate, samples))[:,np.newaxis]
def channels(*args):
return np.hstack(args).T
audio = channels(
sinusoid(100000, 440),
sinusoid(100000, 880),
sinusoid(100000, 1760),
)
wavefile.save("sinusoid.wav", audio, 44100)
loadedsamplerate, loaded = wavefile.load("sinusoid.wav")
loaded.shape() # 3, 100000
from wavefile import WaveWriter, Format
import numpy as np
BUFFERSIZE = 512
NCHANNELS = 2
with WaveWriter(
'synth.ogg',
channels=NCHANNELS,
format=Format.OGG|Format.VORBIS,
) as w:
w.metadata.title = "Some Noise"
w.metadata.artist = "The Artists"
data = np.zeros((NCHANNELS,BUFFERSIZE), np.float32)
for x in range(256):
# First channel: Saw wave sweep
data[0,:] = (x*np.arange(BUFFERSIZE, dtype=np.float32)%BUFFERSIZE/BUFFERSIZE)
# Second channel: Modulated square wave
data[1,BUFFERSIZE-x*2:] = 1
data[1,:BUFFERSIZE-x*2] = -1
# Write it down
w.write(data)
import pyaudio, sys
from wavefile import WaveReader
p = pyaudio.PyAudio()
with WaveReader(sys.argv[1]) as r:
# Print info
print("Title: {r.metadata.title}")
print("Artist: {r.metadata.artist}")
print(f"Channels: {r.channels}")
print(f"Format: 0x{r.format:x}")
print(f"Sample Rate: {r.samplerate}")
# open pyaudio stream
stream = p.open(
format = pyaudio.paFloat32,
channels = r.channels,
rate = r.samplerate,
frames_per_buffer = 512,
output = True,
)
# iterator interface (reuses one array)
# beware of the frame size, not always 512, but 512 at least
for frame in r.read_iter(size=512):
stream.write(frame.flatten(), frame.shape[1])
sys.stdout.write("."); sys.stdout.flush()
stream.close()
import sys
from wavefile import WaveReader, WaveWriter
with WaveReader(sys.argv[1]) as r:
with WaveWriter(
'output.wav',
channels=r.channels,
samplerate=r.samplerate,
) as w:
w.metadata.title = r.metadata.title + " II"
w.metadata.artist = r.metadata.artist
for data in r.read_iter(size=512):
sys.stdout.write("."); sys.stdout.flush()
w.write(.8*data)
read_iter
simplifies the code by transparently:
- allocating the data block for you,
- reusing it for each block, and
- slicing it when the last incomplete block arrives.
The library consists of two layers
libsndfile.py
: a plain ctypes based wrapper that provides 1:1 access to the functions of the sndlib librarywavefile.py
: an interface layer that provides the Pythonic sugar calling the former one.
This is 'yet another' wrapper for sndfile. A lot of them appeared just because the standard 'wave' module is quite limited on what and how it does. But none of the wrappers I found around fully suit my needs and that's because I wrote this small and incomplete one, to fit my needs. So this is a summary of what I found, just in case it is useful to anyone.
-
Standard 'wave' module:
- http://docs.python.org/library/wave.html
- I think this is the main reason why there are many wrappers around. The standard module to do wave file loading is crap.
- Based on sndfile but it just writes .wav files.
- It lacks support for floating point samples, patch provided but ignored see http://bugs.python.org/issue1144504
- unreadable getX() methods instead of properties.
- no numpy integration
- generators, context managers... what?
- no whole-file shortcuts provided
-
scikits.audiolab
- git clone https://github.com/cournape/audiolab
- Cython based + python layer
- Dual interface: matlab like and OO
- Property accessors to samplerate...
- Numpy integration
- Inplace processing
- Not in Ubuntu
- Within a big library
-
pysndfile
- http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/pysndfile/
- Swig based wrapper.
- Direct lib library + python object wrappers
- Unusable because it is not finished (empty read/write methods in wrapper!)
-
libsndfile-python
- http://code.google.com/p/libsndfile-python/
- svn checkout http://libsndfile-python.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ libsndfile-python-read-only
- Implemented in CPython
- numpy support
- cpython purely wraps the library
- wrappers build the interface
- double layered lib and pythonic interface (not that pythonic but supports numpy)
- Implements 'command' sndfile interface
-
libsndfilectypes
- http://code.google.com/p/pyzic/wiki/LibSndFilectypes
- ctypes based wrapper: no compilation required
- numpy supported
- Windows only setup (fixable)
- Long access to constants
- Not inplace read (creates an array every time)
python-wavefile reuses most of the libsndfilectypes ctypes wrapper, as not requiring module compilation was seen as a good point. A pythonic layer was added on the top of it.