diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'audio/lsmi')
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/README | 16 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/lsmi.SlackBuild | 110 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/lsmi.info | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-joystick.1 | 83 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-keyhack.1 | 90 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-monterey.1 | 172 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-mouse.1 | 100 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/rtprio.diff | 153 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/setcap.sh | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | audio/lsmi/slack-desc | 19 |
10 files changed, 758 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/audio/lsmi/README b/audio/lsmi/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..21d8f4b6b0bbf --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/README @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +lsmi (map keyboard/mouse/joystick input to ALSA MIDI sequencer events) + +These simple user-space drivers support using certain homemade, +repurposed, or commercial devices as MIDI controllers on Linux, even +though the devices themselves are not capable of generating MIDI messages; +this does not include things like MIDI-over-serial or PIC based projects, +which are true MIDI devices. + +Reasons for using this software include: achieving MIDI entry on machines +without MIDI ports, reusing old hardware, pure frugality, and fun. + +This package uses POSIX filesystem capabilities to execute with +elevated privileges (required for realtime audio processing). This +may be considered a security/stability risk. Please read +http://www.slackbuilds.org/caps/ for more information. To disable +capabilities, pass SETCAP=no to the script. diff --git a/audio/lsmi/lsmi.SlackBuild b/audio/lsmi/lsmi.SlackBuild new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..9bd4a8ba154aa --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/lsmi.SlackBuild @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +#!/bin/bash + +# Slackware build script for lsmi + +# Written by B. Watson (yalhcru@gmail.com) + +# Licensed under the WTFPL. See http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/ for details. + +PRGNAM=lsmi +VERSION=${VERSION:-0.1} +BUILD=${BUILD:-1} +TAG=${TAG:-_SBo} + +if [ -z "$ARCH" ]; then + case "$( uname -m )" in + i?86) ARCH=i486 ;; + arm*) ARCH=arm ;; + *) ARCH=$( uname -m ) ;; + esac +fi + +CWD=$(pwd) +TMP=${TMP:-/tmp/SBo} +PKG=$TMP/package-$PRGNAM +OUTPUT=${OUTPUT:-/tmp} + +if [ "$ARCH" = "i486" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i486 -mtune=i686" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +elif [ "$ARCH" = "i686" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i686 -mtune=i686" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +elif [ "$ARCH" = "x86_64" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -fPIC" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="64" +else + SLKCFLAGS="-O2" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +fi + +set -e + +rm -rf $PKG +mkdir -p $TMP $PKG/usr/bin $OUTPUT +cd $TMP +rm -rf $PRGNAM +tar xvf $CWD/$PRGNAM-$VERSION.tar.gz +cd $PRGNAM +chown -R root:root . +find . \ + \( -perm 777 -o -perm 775 -o -perm 711 -o -perm 555 -o -perm 511 \) \ + -exec chmod 755 {} \; -o \ + \( -perm 666 -o -perm 664 -o -perm 600 -o -perm 444 -o -perm 440 -o -perm 400 \) \ + -exec chmod 644 {} \; + +# all this seddery could have been done with a diff, I just felt like +# using sed today for some reason. + +# use our flags and install to our directory. +sed -i \ + -e "s/-g/$SLKCFLAGS/" \ + -e "s,/usr/local/bin,$PKG/usr/bin," \ + -e "s,install ,install -s -m0755 ," \ + Makefile + +# fix typo in --help output +sed -i 's/thrree/three/' lsmi-mouse.c + +# make keyhack's --help actually work +sed -i 's/fprintf.*Help.*/usage();/' lsmi-keyhack.c + +# fix possible segfault +sed -i 's/\(char *prog_buf\)\[4\]/\1[5]/' lsmi-keyhack.c + +# As shipped, only lsmi-monterey supports POSIX realtime scheduling. This +# patch (by the SlackBuild author) adds the -R option to the other lsmi-* +# binaries. +patch -p1 < $CWD/rtprio.diff + +make +make install + +# man pages came from the Musix project: +# ftp://musix.ourproject.org/pub/musix/deb/lsmi_0.1-1_i386.deb +# Modified a bit: fixed a typo, rewrote section +# about realtime scheduling so it applies to Slackware. +mkdir -p $PKG/usr/man/man1 +cd $CWD/man +for i in *; do + gzip -9c < $i > $PKG/usr/man/man1/$i.gz +done +cd - + +mkdir -p $PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION +cp -a README $PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION +cat $CWD/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild > $PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild + +mkdir -p $PKG/install +cat $CWD/slack-desc > $PKG/install/slack-desc + +if [ "${SETCAP:-yes}" = "yes" ]; then + cat $CWD/setcap.sh >> $PKG/install/doinst.sh + for i in lsmi-joystick lsmi-keyhack lsmi-monterey lsmi-mouse; do + chown root:audio $PKG/usr/bin/$i + chmod 0750 $PKG/usr/bin/$i + done +fi + +cd $PKG +/sbin/makepkg -l y -c n $OUTPUT/$PRGNAM-$VERSION-$ARCH-$BUILD$TAG.${PKGTYPE:-tgz} diff --git a/audio/lsmi/lsmi.info b/audio/lsmi/lsmi.info new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..8cfe4a9570c63 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/lsmi.info @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +PRGNAM="lsmi" +VERSION="0.1" +HOMEPAGE="http://lsmi-all.sourceforge.net/" +DOWNLOAD="http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/lsmi-all/lsmi-all/lsmi-0.1/lsmi-0.1.tar.gz" +MD5SUM="42e988a854dfc36810193de6c5469f78" +DOWNLOAD_x86_64="" +MD5SUM_x86_64="" +REQUIRES="" +MAINTAINER="B. Watson" +EMAIL="yalhcru@gmail.com" diff --git a/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-joystick.1 b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-joystick.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..72bb02ab80fb8 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-joystick.1 @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ +.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- +.\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps +.\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection +.\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) +.TH LSMI-JOYSTICK 1 "May 15, 2012" +.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. +.\" +.\" Some roff macros, for reference: +.\" .nh disable hyphenation +.\" .hy enable hyphenation +.\" .ad l left justify +.\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins +.\" .nf disable filling +.\" .fi enable filling +.\" .br insert line break +.\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines +.\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) +.SH NAME + +lsmi-joystick \- Linux Pseudo MIDI Input -- Joystick +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B lsmi-joystick +.RI [ options ] " files" ... +.SH DESCRIPTION + +This driver allows any joystick supported by the Linux joydev interface to +be used as a MIDI pitch/modulation controller. Of course, some joysticks are +more suitable than others. I use an old analog flight stick. Holding down +button 1 causes the vertical axis to send pitchbend messages, while button 2 +causes the vertical axis to send modulation messages. Holding down both +buttons causes the vertical axis to send pitchbend messages and the +horizontal axis to send modulation messages. + +.SH USAGE + +Distribution specific init scripts are not included. The drivers may be +started from init, your .bashrc, by qjackctl, etc. In order to be run by a +non-root user the drivers must have access to the device files in /dev/input. +This may be accomplished by adding a group 'input', adding desired users to +this group, and configuring udev to assign the appropriate ownership to files +in /dev/input. It should be perfectly safe to run the drivers as root, +however. + +For realtime scheduling (the \-R option), either use set_rlimits, or set the +appropriate POSIX capabilities on the executable: +.P +/sbin/setcap cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_nice=ep /usr/bin/lsmi-joystick +.P +The lsmi.SlackBuild script already includes RT scheduling support. + +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-h, \-\-help +Show summary of options. +.TP +.B \-d, \-\-device specialfile +Event device to use (instead of js0). +.TP +.B \-R, \-\-realtime rtprio +Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs). +.TP +.B \-v, \-\-verbose +Be verbose (show note events). +.TP +.B \-p, \-\-port client:port +Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup. +.TP +.B \-n, \-\-no-hold +Send controller data even when no joystick button is held. +.TP +.B \-z, \-\-daemon +Fork and don't print anything to stdout. +.SH SEE ALSO +.BR lsmi-keyhack (1), +.BR lsmi-monterey (1), +.BR lsmi-mouse (1). +.br +.SH AUTHOR +lsmi was written by Jonathan Moore Liles. +.PP +This manual page was written by Ariel Errera <ariel@musix.org.ar>, +for the Debian project (but may be used by others). It was then modified +by B. Watson for the SlackBuilds.org project. diff --git a/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-keyhack.1 b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-keyhack.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..17a932c4bb9f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-keyhack.1 @@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ +.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- +.\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps +.\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection +.\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) +.TH LSMI-KEYHACK 1 "May 15, 2012" +.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. +.\" +.\" Some roff macros, for reference: +.\" .nh disable hyphenation +.\" .hy enable hyphenation +.\" .ad l left justify +.\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins +.\" .nf disable filling +.\" .fi enable filling +.\" .br insert line break +.\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines +.\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) +.SH NAME + +lsmi-keyhack \- Linux Pseudo MIDI Input -- Keyboard Hack +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B lsmi-keyhack +.RI [ options ] " files" ... +.SH DESCRIPTION + +This driver is for a hacked AT / PS/2 keyboard functioning as a MIDI +controller. + +It is somewhat specific to the author's own hardware, but, since it relies a learning +capability rather than a fixed keymap, it should be equally useful for +others wishing to build their own fake MIDI keyboard. Of course, such a +keyboard will not be velocity sensitive, but this project is a good way to +salvage both an old QWERTY keyboard and a manual from a decrepit analog +organ or cheap PCM noise-maker. + +The driver supports up to 88 musical keys, three footswitches, and several +additional buttons for control and data entry. It has the rather unfortunate +side-effect of rendering the console useless, unless, of course you have +another (USB) keyboard to type on. + +.SH USAGE + +Distribution specific init scripts are not included. The drivers may be +started from init, your .bashrc, by qjackctl, etc. In order to be run by a +non-root user the drivers must have access to the device files in /dev/input. +This may be accomplished by adding a group 'input', adding desired users to +this group, and configuring udev to assign the appropriate ownership to files +in /dev/input. It should be perfectly safe to run the drivers as root, +however. + +For realtime scheduling (the \-R option), either use set_rlimits, or set the +appropriate POSIX capabilities on the executable: +.P +/sbin/setcap cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_nice=ep /usr/bin/lsmi-joystick +.P +The lsmi.SlackBuild script already includes RT scheduling support. + +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-h, \-\-help +Show summary of options. +.TP +.B \-d, \-\-device specialfile +Event device to use (instead of event0). +.TP +.B \-R, \-\-realtime rtprio +Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs). +.TP +.B \-v, \-\-verbose +Be verbose (show note events). +.TP +.B \-c, \-\-channel n +Initial MIDI channel. +.TP +.B \-p, \-\-port client:port +Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup. +.TP +.B \-k, \-\-keydata file +Name file to read/write key mappings (instead of ~/.keydb). +.SH SEE ALSO +.BR lsmi-joystick (1), +.BR lsmi-monterey (1), +.BR lsmi-mouse (1). +.br +.SH AUTHOR +lsmi was written by Jonathan Moore Liles. +.PP +This manual page was written by Ariel Errera <ariel@musix.org.ar>, +for the Debian project (but may be used by others). It was then modified +by B. Watson for the SlackBuilds.org project. diff --git a/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-monterey.1 b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-monterey.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..67b365f0b5d70 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-monterey.1 @@ -0,0 +1,172 @@ +.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- +.\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps +.\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection +.\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) +.TH LSMI-MONTEREY 1 "May 15, 2012" +.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. +.\" +.\" Some roff macros, for reference: +.\" .nh disable hyphenation +.\" .hy enable hyphenation +.\" .ad l left justify +.\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins +.\" .nf disable filling +.\" .fi enable filling +.\" .br insert line break +.\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines +.\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) +.SH NAME + +lsmi-monterey \- Linux Pseudo MIDI Input -- Monterey +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B lsmi-monterey +.RI [ options ] " files" ... +.SH DESCRIPTION + +Monterey is a userspace driver for Monterey +International MK-9500 / K617W reversible keyboard. + +This device consists of a 104 QWERTY AT computer keyboard on one side and a +37 key, velocity sensitive musical keyboard on the other. In addition to +flipping the unit over, one must flip a switch on the right side in order to +change the mode. + +The keyboard interface is standard, except that the musical side sends +two-scancode packets for each piano key press and release ('make' codes +only). The first scancode indicates the note, the second the velocity: 7 +being the lowest, 1 the highest, and 0 representing a release (or sometimes +a very very light keypress). The musical side also has buttons for keys F1 +through F9, left and right arrow keys, and return--all generating 'make' +codes only with no way to register release. + +This driver creates an ALSA Sequencer port and attempts to fill it with +realtime MIDI data representing input from the musical side of the keyboard, +while passing regular textual data through the uinput interface and on to +Linux console or X Window System. There is no need to load a special +application or even run X in order to generate MIDI events: simply flip the +keyboard over and go nuts. The driver doesn't interfere at all with +multiple/international layouts. You can even use it along +side another (merged input) keyboard (ie. plugged into a laptop) and the +driver should be able to sort everything out (provided that you refrain from +typing on both keyboards simultaneously). + +.SH FUNCTION KEYS + +There's no reliable way to distinguish the function keys on the musical +side from those on the QWERTY side in order to map them to channel, +program change and so on. One solution is to interpret any function key +(including arrows and return) pressed within two seconds of the 'quaver' +key (F9) as a MIDI event. + +.TP +.B Program Change +The first four keys (I-IV) function as patch pages, each page able to +address 32 patches. To change to program number 2 (GM Bright Acoustic +Piano), first press QUAVER, then function key I, then press the second +piano key from the left (the first black key). + +.TP +.B Bank Change +Keys V-VIII work similarly to program change, but alter current bank +instead. Note that you won't see any effect until you change patches as +well. + +.TP +.B Channel Change and Octave Change +The arrow keys are used to change channel or octave. To lower or raise +the octave (from that of middle C) the octave, press QUAVER followed by +the appropriate arrow key. QUAVER may be ommitted between subsequent +arrow presses, if they occur within 2 seconds of each other. To change +the channel, press QUAVER followed by 'R' (return), then an arrow key. + +All of these heuristics are timing critical and might fail to operate under +heavy system loads. To ensure proper performance, use a high realtime +priority, like 99 (and it wouldn't hurt to do the same for your keyboard +controller's IRQ). + +.SH KNOWN ISSUES + +.TP +.B Events +For some reason the kernel event layer drops KEY events, mostly when +switching between a piano key and its associated text key. I believe this +is a due to a bug in the repeat state tracking code, exposed here because +the keyboard generates only 'make' scancodes on the musical side. The +driver works around this by tracking the MSC_SCAN events instead, but it's +kind of a hack and requires massaging the events more than I'm comfortable +with (might not work with PS2->USB adaptors, etc.) + +.TP +.B Repeat Rate +To prevent frustrating "stuck" repeats in X (the console doesn't appear to +suffer from this problem) the driver converts all REPEAT events it passes +to PRESSes. + +.TP +.B LEDs +The LEDs don't work. This little driver is the only example of a real +uinput filter I've seen. I'm not sure the kernel developers anticipated +the problem of managing the LEDs. Ideally it would be transparent. As it +is, it would probably take a large amount of code to get the keyboard LEDs +working again--which seems silly. + +.SH PREREQUISITES + +2.6 series kernel with evdev and uinput modules loaded. +ALSA Sequencer drivers and library. + +An MK-9500 or K617W keyboard... + +.SH USAGE + +Distribution specific init scripts are not included. The drivers may be +started from init, your .bashrc, by qjackctl, etc. In order to be run by a +non-root user the drivers must have access to the device files in /dev/input. +This may be accomplished by adding a group 'input', adding desired users to +this group, and configuring udev to assign the appropriate ownership to files +in /dev/input. It should be perfectly safe to run the drivers as root, +however. + +For realtime scheduling (the \-R option), either use set_rlimits, or set the +appropriate POSIX capabilities on the executable: +.P +/sbin/setcap cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_nice=ep /usr/bin/lsmi-joystick +.P +The lsmi.SlackBuild script already includes RT scheduling support. + +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-h, \-\-help +Show summary of options. +.TP +.B \-d, \-\-device specialfile +Event device to use (instead of event0). +.TP +.B \-v, \-\-verbose +Be verbose (show note events). +.TP +.B \-p, \-\-port client:port +Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup. +.TP +.B \-R, \-\-realtime rtprio +Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs). +.TP +.B \-n, \-\-no-velocity +Ignore velocity information from keyboard. +.TP +.B \-c, \-\-channel n +Initial MIDI channel. +.TP +.B \-z, \-\-daemon +Fork and don't print anything to stdout. +.SH SEE ALSO +.BR lsmi-joystick (1), +.BR lsmi-keyhack (1), +.BR lsmi-mouse (1). +.br +.SH AUTHOR +lsmi was written by Jonathan Moore Liles. +.PP +This manual page was written by Ariel Errera <ariel@musix.org.ar>, +for the Debian project (but may be used by others). It was then modified +by B. Watson for the SlackBuilds.org project. diff --git a/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-mouse.1 b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-mouse.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..d7162d2489035 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/man/lsmi-mouse.1 @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- +.\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps +.\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection +.\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) +.TH LSMI-MOUSE 1 "May 15, 2012" +.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. +.\" +.\" Some roff macros, for reference: +.\" .nh disable hyphenation +.\" .hy enable hyphenation +.\" .ad l left justify +.\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins +.\" .nf disable filling +.\" .fi enable filling +.\" .br insert line break +.\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines +.\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) +.SH NAME + +lsmi-mouse \- Linux Pseudo MIDI Input -- Mouse +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B lsmi-mouse +.RI [ options ] " files" ... +.SH DESCRIPTION + +This driver is capable of generating a stream of MIDI controller and/or note +events from the state of mouse buttons. I have a MouseSystems serial mouse +controller board with footswitches wired to each of its three buttons. You +must have evdev and the kernel driver for your mouse type loaded (in my +case, this is sermouse). Mouse axes, wheels, or additional buttons are not +used (if you can think of something to do with them [rotary encoders for +filter and resonance?], then, by all means, let me know). + +I use this device to control Freewheeling and various softsynths. Much +cheaper than a real MIDI pedalboard, of this I assure you. + +.SH EXAMPLE + +Use mouse device "/dev/input/event4", mapping left button +to Controller #64, middle button to Note #36, and +right button to Note #37 (all on Channel #1): +.br +.B lsmi-mouse -d /dev/input/event4 -1 c:1:64 -2 n:1:36 -3 n:1:37 + +.SH USAGE + +Distribution specific init scripts are not included. The drivers may be +started from init, your .bashrc, by qjackctl, etc. In order to be run by a +non-root user the drivers must have access to the device files in /dev/input. +This may be accomplished by adding a group 'input', adding desired users to +this group, and configuring udev to assign the appropriate ownership to files +in /dev/input. It should be perfectly safe to run the drivers as root, +however. + +For realtime scheduling (the \-R option), either use set_rlimits, or set the +appropriate POSIX capabilities on the executable: +.P +/sbin/setcap cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_nice=ep /usr/bin/lsmi-joystick +.P +The lsmi.SlackBuild script already includes RT scheduling support. + +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-h, \-\-help +Show summary of options. +.TP +.B \-d, \-\-device specialfile +Event device to use (instead of event0). +.TP +.B \-R, \-\-realtime rtprio +Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs). +.TP +.B \-v, \-\-verbose +Be verbose (show note events). +.TP +.B \-p, \-\-port client:port +Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup. +.TP +.B \-1, \-\-button-one 'c'|'n':n:n +Button mapping. +.TP +.B \-2, \-\-button-two 'c'|'n':n:n +Button mapping. +.TP +.B \-3, \-\-button-thrree 'c'|'n':n:n +Button mapping. +.TP +.B \-z, \-\-daemon +Fork and don't print anything to stdout. +.SH SEE ALSO +.BR lsmi-joystick (1), +.BR lsmi-keyhack (1), +.BR lsmi-monterey (1). +.br +.SH AUTHOR +lsmi was written by Jonathan Moore Liles. +.PP +This manual page was written by Ariel Errera <ariel@musix.org.ar>, +for the Debian project (but may be used by others). It was then modified +by B. Watson for the SlackBuilds.org project. diff --git a/audio/lsmi/rtprio.diff b/audio/lsmi/rtprio.diff new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..4322314f9ae19 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/rtprio.diff @@ -0,0 +1,153 @@ +diff -Naur lsmi/lsmi-joystick.c lsmi.patched//lsmi-joystick.c +--- lsmi/lsmi-joystick.c 2012-05-14 20:08:19.000000000 -0400 ++++ lsmi.patched//lsmi-joystick.c 2012-05-14 20:15:16.000000000 -0400 +@@ -46,6 +46,7 @@ + #include <sys/time.h> + #include <signal.h> + #include <getopt.h> ++#include <sched.h> + + #include "seq.h" + #include "sig.h" +@@ -99,6 +100,7 @@ + "Options:\n\n" + " -h | --help Show this message\n" + " -d | --device specialfile Event device to use (instead of js0)\n" ++ " -R | --realtime rtprio Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs)\n" + " -v | --verbose Be verbose (show note events)\n" + " -p | --port client:port Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup\n" + " -n | --no-hold Send controller data even when no joystick button is held\n" ); +@@ -121,6 +123,7 @@ + { "verbose", no_argument, NULL, 'v' }, + { "device", required_argument, NULL, 'd' }, + { "no-hold", no_argument, NULL, 'n' }, ++ { "realtime", required_argument, NULL, 'R' }, + { "daemon", no_argument, NULL, 'z' }, + { NULL, 0, NULL, 0 } + }; +@@ -164,6 +167,23 @@ + case 'z': + daemonize = 1; + break; ++ case 'R': ++ { ++ struct sched_param sp; ++ ++ sp.sched_priority = atoi( optarg ); ++ ++ if ( sched_setscheduler( 0, SCHED_FIFO, &sp ) < 0 ) ++ { ++ perror( "sched_setscheduler()" ); ++ fprintf( stderr, "Failed to get realtime priority!\n" ); ++ exit( 1 ); ++ } ++ ++ fprintf( stderr, "Using realtime priority %i.\n", ++ sp.sched_priority ); ++ } ++ break; + } + + } +diff -Naur lsmi/lsmi-keyhack.c lsmi.patched//lsmi-keyhack.c +--- lsmi/lsmi-keyhack.c 2012-05-14 20:08:19.000000000 -0400 ++++ lsmi.patched//lsmi-keyhack.c 2012-05-14 20:14:07.000000000 -0400 +@@ -111,6 +111,7 @@ + #include <getopt.h> + + #include <linux/input.h> ++#include <sched.h> + #include <stdint.h> + + #include "seq.h" +@@ -261,6 +262,7 @@ + " -h | --help Show this message\n" + " -d | --device specialfile Event device to use (instead of event0)\n" + " -v | --verbose Be verbose (show note events)\n" ++ " -R | --realtime rtprio Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs)\n" + " -c | --channel n Initial MIDI channel\n" + " -p | --port client:port Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup\n" + " -k | --keydata file Name file to read/write key mappings (instead of ~/.keydb)\n" +@@ -281,6 +283,7 @@ + { "channel", required_argument, NULL, 'c' }, + { "device", required_argument, NULL, 'd' }, + { "keydata", required_argument, NULL, 'k' }, ++ { "realtime", required_argument, NULL, 'R' }, + { "verbose", no_argument, NULL, 'v' }, + { NULL, 0, NULL, 0 } + }; +@@ -320,6 +323,23 @@ + case 'v': + verbose = 1; + break; ++ case 'R': ++ { ++ struct sched_param sp; ++ ++ sp.sched_priority = atoi( optarg ); ++ ++ if ( sched_setscheduler( 0, SCHED_FIFO, &sp ) < 0 ) ++ { ++ perror( "sched_setscheduler()" ); ++ fprintf( stderr, "Failed to get realtime priority!\n" ); ++ exit( 1 ); ++ } ++ ++ fprintf( stderr, "Using realtime priority %i.\n", ++ sp.sched_priority ); ++ } ++ break; + } + + } +diff -Naur lsmi/lsmi-mouse.c lsmi.patched//lsmi-mouse.c +--- lsmi/lsmi-mouse.c 2012-05-14 20:08:19.000000000 -0400 ++++ lsmi.patched//lsmi-mouse.c 2012-05-14 20:11:08.000000000 -0400 +@@ -55,6 +55,7 @@ + #include <sys/ioctl.h> + #include <sys/time.h> + ++#include <sched.h> + #include <stdint.h> + + #include <getopt.h> +@@ -144,6 +145,7 @@ + " -h | --help Show this message\n" + " -d | --device specialfile Event device to use (instead of event0)\n" + " -v | --verbose Be verbose (show note events)\n" ++ " -R | --realtime rtprio Use realtime priority 'rtprio' (requires privs)\n" + " -p | --port client:port Connect to ALSA Sequencer client on startup\n" + + " -1 | --button-one 'c'|'n':n:n Button mapping\n" +@@ -169,6 +171,7 @@ + { "button-one", required_argument, NULL, '1' }, + { "button-two", required_argument, NULL, '2' }, + { "button-three", required_argument, NULL, '3' }, ++ { "realtime", required_argument, NULL, 'R' }, + { "daemon", no_argument, NULL, 'z' }, + { NULL, 0, NULL, 0 } + }; +@@ -202,6 +205,23 @@ + case '3': + parse_map( 2, optarg ); + break; ++ case 'R': ++ { ++ struct sched_param sp; ++ ++ sp.sched_priority = atoi( optarg ); ++ ++ if ( sched_setscheduler( 0, SCHED_FIFO, &sp ) < 0 ) ++ { ++ perror( "sched_setscheduler()" ); ++ fprintf( stderr, "Failed to get realtime priority!\n" ); ++ exit( 1 ); ++ } ++ ++ fprintf( stderr, "Using realtime priority %i.\n", ++ sp.sched_priority ); ++ } ++ break; + case 'z': + daemonize = 1; + break; diff --git a/audio/lsmi/setcap.sh b/audio/lsmi/setcap.sh new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..56bb60de0b869 --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/setcap.sh @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +if [ -x /sbin/setcap ]; then + for i in lsmi-joystick lsmi-keyhack lsmi-monterey lsmi-mouse; do + /sbin/setcap cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_nice=ep usr/bin/$i + done +fi diff --git a/audio/lsmi/slack-desc b/audio/lsmi/slack-desc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..5a28c80892e6f --- /dev/null +++ b/audio/lsmi/slack-desc @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +# HOW TO EDIT THIS FILE: +# The "handy ruler" below makes it easier to edit a package description. +# Line up the first '|' above the ':' following the base package name, and +# the '|' on the right side marks the last column you can put a character in. +# You must make exactly 11 lines for the formatting to be correct. It's also +# customary to leave one space after the ':' except on otherwise blank lines. + + |-----handy-ruler------------------------------------------------------| +lsmi: lsmi (map keyboard/mouse/joystick input to ALSA MIDI sequencer events) +lsmi: +lsmi: These simple user-space drivers support using certain homemade, +lsmi: repurposed, or commercial devices as MIDI controllers on Linux, even +lsmi: though the devices themselves are not capable of generating MIDI +lsmi: messages; this does not include things like MIDI-over-serial or PIC +lsmi: based projects, which are true MIDI devices. +lsmi: +lsmi: Reasons for using this software include: achieving MIDI entry on +lsmi: machines without MIDI ports, reusing old hardware, pure frugality, +lsmi: and fun. |