On 29 November 2011 07:31, Kurt Taylor kurt.taylor@linaro.org wrote:
Hi everyone,
Last week I did an initial drop of the end to end audio test we have been discussing.
The idea is fairly simple, play a sine wave and test the audio stack by sampling/testing the sine back in via loopback cable. The app is called testfreq and is driven by a script called e2eaudiotest. It opens and configures the audio device, takes a sample and then does a discrete fourier transformation to find the frequency using the fftw3 library. The test script driver uses speaker-test to play a sine wave at A 440, which for now is the test frequency. It's still basic at this point, but it does work on my system. There is a lot of additional things I'd like to do, initial stack configuration, passing in the device, passing the test frequency, doing more auto detection, clean up the code, etc, but I wanted to start getting feedback. Any and all would be appreciated.
Have a look, and if you have a loopback cable, give it a spin:
http://git.linaro.org/gitweb?p=people/kurt-r-taylor/e2eaudiotest.git
You can also read more about it and check my progress here:
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/linaro-multimedia-project/+spec/linaro-mmwg...
Great job!
Though, how bad is the idea of separating out stream capture from DFT analysis part ? That could make testing simpler by just 'piping' in the captured data real-time or from a recorded file using standard apps like 'arecord' or some android app.
cheers! -jassi