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authorN.N. <matju@users.sourceforge.net>2010-01-05 22:49:36 +0000
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-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN">
-
-<HTML>
- <HEAD>
- <TITLE>Pd Documentation 3</TITLE>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html">
- <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="pdmanual.css" media="screen">
- </HEAD>
-
-
-<BODY>
-
-<H2>Pd Documentation chapter 3: Getting Pd to run</H2>
-
-<P>
-<A href="index.htm#s3"> back to table of contents </A>
-<BR><BR>
-</P>
-
-<P>Pd runs under Irix, Microsoft Windows, Linux, and MacOS 10.2 (Jaguar).
-How to get Pd up and running depends on your operating system,
-but the overall strategy is the same.
-You must first get and install it, and
-then untangle whatever problems arise in handling audio and MIDI input
-and output, and finally get Pd to meet its real-time obligations reliably.
-
-<P> Installation instructions are platform-specfic; the following four
-sections
-will describe what to do for various operating systems you might have.
-In case of trouble also consult the Pd mailing list archive on
- <A href="http://iem.kug.ac.at/mailinglists/pd-list/">
- http://iem.kug.ac.at/mailinglists/pd-list/</A>
-, which often has late-breaking news about configuration problems and solutions.
-The rest of this section describes how to get audio and MIDI to work.
-
-<H3> <A name=s1.0> 3.1. Audio and MIDI </A> </H3>
-
-<P>
-To test audio and MIDI, start Pd and select "test Audio and MIDI" from the
-"Media" menu. You should see a window like this:
-
-<CENTER><P>
- <IMG src="fig11.1.png" ALT="test tone patch">
-</P></CENTER>
-
-<P> First, try to get Pd to play a sine wave over your speakers. The "TEST
-TONE" control at top left turns this on and off. Normally, all the output
-channels are turned on so that when you turn the tone on (to a soft -40 dB or a
-louder -20 dB) you should get output on the first six of your output channels.
-(If you have fewer than six output channnels open, the extra
-channels aren't played; and if you have more, this particular patch won't
-use them.)
-
-<P> If there's anything wrong, the most likely outcome is that you will hear
-nothing at all. This could be for any of at least three reasons: Pd might
-have failed to open the audio device; the audio card's output volume might
-be set to zero; or your audio system might not be set to amplify the computer
-output.
-
-<P> The number boxes labeled "AUDIO INPUT" show the levels of incoming
-audio, in dB, with 100 being maximum. (Incoming signals may clip at
-RMS levels below 100; for instance, a sinusoid clips at about 97 dB.)
-Any DC present in the input (such as you get with cheap audio hardware)
-will show up as level unless you turn on the "input hipass" toggle
-at right; then the DC component is filtered out before metering.
-
-<P> To test the quality of audio input and output, turn on "monitor"
-(also at right) which causes the inputs to be played to the outputs at
-unit gain. You should hear a faithful, non-distored copy of whatever is
-sent through the patch.
-
-<P> It is easy to get two copies of Pd running by accident; on most machines
-only one at a time may be inputting and outputting sound. (Some copy of Pd
-might have audio or MIDI devices open and prevent the copy you're trying to use
-from getting access to them.) Having extra
-copies of Pd around will also eat CPU cycles uselessly.
-
-<P>
-You may be interested in getting only audio output or audio input, or
-you may need both to run simultaneously. By default, Pd will try to run
-both, but if you don't need either input or output, you may find that Pd
-runs more reliably, or at least more efficiently, with the unused direction
-turned off. This may be specified in Pd's command line flags or using the
-"audio settings" dialog panel.
-
-<P>
-Depending on your application you will have a more or less stringent latency
-requirement. Ideally, when any input (audio, MIDI, keyboard, network) is
-available, the outputs (in particular the audio output) should react instantly.
-In real life, it is necessary to buffer the audio inputs and outputs, trying
-always to keep some number of milliseconds ahead of real time to prepare for the
-inevitable occasions where the CPU runs off to service some different task
-from Pd. How small this latency can be chosen depends on your OS and your
-audio driver.
-
-<P> TIP: If Pd starts up but you get distortion or glitches in the audio
-output, this could be either because the "audio I/O buffer" isn't big enough,
-or else because the CPU load of the patch you're running is too great for the
-machine you have, or else because the ADC and DAC are out of sync or even at
-different sample rates. To test for the first possibility, try increasing the
-audio latency in the command line or the "audio settings" dialog (but see also
-under your OS below.) For the second, start up your favorite performance
-monitor program; and for the third, try starting Pd up with ADCs disabled.
-
-<P> In addition to the "test audio and MIDI" patch, the "Media" menu
-contains items for controlling audio and MIDI settings. The first two
-items, "Audio on" and "Audio off", open or close the audio devices and
-start or stop Pd's audio computation.
-
-<P> If there is a choice of
-audio API to make, the Media menu will display them. (On Linux, they are
-OSS, ALSA, and Portaudio; on Windows, you get MMIO and ASIO). More information
-about the APIs appears in the sections below.
-
-<P> Next is the "Audio settings..." menu item, which opens a dialog like this:
-
-<CENTER><P>
- <IMG src="fig11.2.png" ALT="audio settings dialog">
-</P></CENTER>
-
-The exact choices you get depend on the operating system and API. The sample
-rate controls both audio output and input. The audio throughput delay is
-the nominal amount of time, in milliseconds, that a sound coming into the
-audio input will be delayed if it is copied through Pd straight to the
-output. Naturally you would like this to be as small as possible, but,
-depending on OS, API, and even the specific choice of audio hardware, there
-will be a limit to how small you can make this. You can typically get
-10 msec on linux (and lower still if you use special tricks), 30 msec on Mac
-OSX, and 60 msec on Windows (but note that there might be ways that a
-patient Windows user can reduce this).
-
-<P> Next you get a choice of input and output device. If you want to open
-more than one, hit "use multiple devices" and you'll be allowed up to 4
-in and 4 out. Each audio device is 2 channels by default, but you may
-specify more if your hardware supports it.
-
-Other parameters may be tweaked using the command line; see under
-<A href=#s4> preferences and startup options </A>.
-
-<H6> MIDI </H6>
-
-<A> The "channel message" midi objects in Pd
-such as notein or pgmout will take channels 1-16 to mean the first open MIDI
-port, 17-32 the second one, and so on. The midiin, sysexin, midiout objects
-give you a separate inlet to specify which of the open MIDI port numbers
-you want.
-
-<P> System exclusive MIDI message input and output is theoretically supported
-in version 0.37 but does not work correctly on windows, even in 0.38.
-
-
-<H3> <A name=s1.1> 3.2. Installing Pd in Microsoft Windows </A> </H3>
-
-<P> Pd should work under any version of Windows since 95. You can download as
-a self-extracting archive (a ".exe" file). Run this and select a destination
-directory when prompted, such as "\pd" or "Program Files\pd".
-
-<P> If for example you put Pd in "C:Program Files\pd", the executable program
-will be "C:Program Files\pd\bin\pd". You can simply adjust your path to
-include C:\pd\bin and then invoke "pd" in a command prompt window. You can also
-make a shortcut to the executable program (left-click on it and drag to the
-desktop, for example.)
-
-<P> Pd requires "TCP/IP networking" to be turned on. This doesn't mean you
-have to be on a real network, but simply that Pd actually consists of two
-programs that make a "network link" (locally) to intercommunicate.
-
-<H4> Audio in Microsoft Windows </H4>
-
-<P>
-You can ask for a list of audio and MIDI devices by typing
-"pd -listdev"; you can then specify which audio and MIDI device to use.
-Type "pd -help" (or make any mistake) to get the syntax for specifying
-which device to use. You can modify the Pd shortcut (or batch file) to
-set these, or else use the "startup" dialog (file menu) to specify
-startup arguments.
-
-<P>
-Alternatively, (and especially when just starting out) you can experiment
-with different audio configurations using the "audio settings"
-item in the Media menu.
-
-<P>
-You can list and
-choose MIDI devices in the same way as audio; note that, by default, MIDI
-input is disabled in Windows (because it's possible to hang up some MIDI
-devices if Pd exits unexpectedly).
-
-<P>
-MIDI timing is very poor if you are using simultaneous audio input and output;
-if you suppress either audio input or output things will improve somewhat under
-NT; you can apparently get the jitter down to ~40 msec. On W95 performance is
-simply terrible. W98, with either audio input or output suppressed, offers
-fairly good MIDI timing (~5 msec jitter). The "first edition" used to crash
-occasionally; this might be fixed in the "second edition".
-
-<H4> ASIO </H4>
-
-<P> As of version 0.35 Pd supports ASIO. Invoke Pd as "pd -asio" and, if
-needed, specify "-sounddev" (etc.) flags to specify which device (see
-"the Pd command line" below.) You can also specify a "-blocksize" different
-from the default (256 samples) and "-audiobuf" in milliseconds. Pd will
-round this down to a power of two buffers, each of "-blocksize" in sample
-frames.
-
-<H3> <A name=s1.2> 3.3. Installing Pd in Linux </A> </H3>
-
-<P> What to do depends on which flavor of Linux you are running (e.g., Debian
-or Red Hat). The instructions here should work for Pd 0.33 and up regardless of
-your situation. (If not, you can read the Pd mailing list archives for
-recent problems; if you have found a new problem you're welcome to post it
-to the list.)
-
-<P> If you're running RedHat or Mandrake you might want to use RPM to install
-Pd. For other linux distributions, download the "tar.gz" version and compile
-Pd.
-
-<H4> Getting Pd as an RPM </H4>
-
-<P> Download Pd, perhaps from
- <a href="http://www.crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html">
- http://www.crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html</A> ,
-to a file such as "pd-0.33-0.i386.rpm".
-Open a "shell" window, cd to
-the directory containing the file, and type the command,
-<PRE>
- rpm -i pd-0.33-0.i386.rpm
-</PRE>
-
-<P> (substituting the real file name.) Then you should be able to type "pd"
-to a shell and watch the Pd main window appear.
-
-<H4> Getting Pd as a .tar.gz </H4>
-
-<P> Before you start, you might want to check that you have the resources Pd
-needs. The main things you need are the C compiler, X windows (including
-the X development package for Pd to link against) and TK. If you're running
-Redhat or Mandrake 7.x or up, I think these are all present by default.
-The RedHat X client developer "RPM" package is called XFree86-devel.
-
-<P>
-Download Pd, perhaps from
- <a href="http://www.crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html">
- http://www.crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html</A> ,
-to file such as "pd-linux-033.tar.gz". Open a "shell"
-window, cd to
-the directory containing the file, and type the command,
-<PRE>
- tar xzf pd-linux-033.tar.gz
-</PRE>
-<P>which creates a directory named "pd". I do this from my home directory.
-Next, compile it. "CD" to pd and read the INSTALL.txt, or else just cd
-to "pd/src" and type
-
-<P>
-<BR> ./configure
-<BR> make depend
-<BR> make
-</P>
-
-<P> You can pass flags to "configure" to customize your compilation:
-
-<PRE>
- To enable debugging (and losing code optimization) add "--enable-debug".
- To use Portaudio version 19 (experimental), add "--enable-portaudio".
- To put Pd in /usr/bin instead of /usr/local/bin, add "--prefix=/bin".
-</PRE>
-
-Alsa and Jack support should auto-configure, but "--enable-alsa" od
-"--enable-jack" will force their inclusion.
-
-<P> After "make", just type "~/pd/bin/pd" to run pd.
-
-<P> Alternatively, as superuser, you can run "make install" after "make depend"
-and then anyone on your system can just type "pd" to run it.
-
-<H4> Testing audio and MIDI. </H4>
-
-<P>
-Next try audio. We want to know whether audio output works, whether audio
-input works, and whether they work simultaneously. First run "aumix" (or
-any newer audio mixer app) to
-check audio input and output gains and learn which input (mic; line;
-etc.) is "recording".
-Then test audio output by running
-<PRE>
- pd -noadc
-</PRE>
-<P>and selecting "test audio and MIDI" from the "Media" menu. You should see
-a patch. Turn on the test tone and listen. Do the usual where's-the-signal
-business.
-
-<P>
-Then quit Pd and test audio input via
-<PRE>
- pd -nodac
-</PRE>
-<P>Re-open the test patch and hit "meter"; look at the levels. 100 dB is a
-hard clip; arrange gains so that the input signal tops out around 80 or 90,
-but no higher.
-
-<P> Now see if your audio driver can do full duplex by typing "pd" with no
-flags. If you see error messages involving /dev/dsp or /dev/dsp2, you're
-probably not able to run audio in and out at the same time. If on the other
-hand there's no complaint, and if the audio test patch does what you want, you
-might wish to experiment with the "-audiobuffer" flag to see what values of
-audio latency your audio system can handle.
-
-<H3> Audio hardware in Linux </H3>
-
-<P>
-Be forewarned: installing and testing audio and MIDI drivers in Linux can take
-days or weeks. There apears to be no single place where you can get detailed
-information on Linux audio. One good source of information lives at:
-<A href=http://www.djcj.org/LAU/guide/index.php>
-http://www.djcj.org/LAU/guide/index.php </A>.
-
-<P>
-There are two widely-used driver sets, called "OSS" and "ALSA". OSS is
-included in the standard Linux kernels since version 2.2. However, for some
-audio cards you can find newer versions than are included in the kernel
-releases. You can get ALSA from
-
- <a href="http://www.alsa-project.org/">
- http://www.alsa-project.org/</A> .
-
-<P> ALSA is able to emulate OSS, so that you can usually run Pd using the
-default "OSS" settings even if it's actually ALSA that's running.
-ALSA is newer, hence less stable and harder to use, than OSS.
-Installing ALSA can be tricky and/or confusing.
-
-<P> By default, Pd uses OSS. If you are running ALSA, Pd will use ALSA's OSS
-emulation. To make Pd use ALSA "natively", i.e., the way ALSA is designed
-to be used, include the "-alsa" flag in the command line or bang on the "media"
-menu items.
-
-<P> You can add ALSA devices by name on the Pd command line:
-<PRE>
- pd -alsaadd loupgarou
-</PRE>
-instructs Pd to offer the 'loupgarou' audio device in the Audio Settings panel.
-
-<H4> Experiences with particular soudcards </H4>
-
-<P>
-Here are some of my own experiences with sound cards so far. See
-also the Pd mailing list archives.
-
-<H6> RME 9652 (Hammerfall) </H6>
-
-<P> This is the best sound card out there; it costs around $500 and has 3 ADAT
-I/O ports and one SPDIF. There is a "baby hammerfall" also, which I think is
-the "9632." DO NOT CONFUSE THE 9652/9632 WITH OTHER RME BOARDS WHICH MIGHT
-NOT WORK WITH PD.
-
-<P> The easiest way to use
-Hammerfall boards in Pd is via ALSA and jack; but you can use ALSA alone:
-<PRE>
- pd -alsa -channels 26
-</PRE>
-works for me. If you don't specify the number of channels correctly Pd crashes.
-
-<H6> MIDIMAN </H6>
-
-<P>Midiman sells PCI devices (delta 44, 66, 1010, and 1010LT)
-with between 4 and 10 channels in and out, for
-which there are ALSA drivers. These are also very good, and they are a
-bit cheaper than Hammerfalls. The driver name is "ice1712".
-
-<P> Alsa provides an "envy24control" program (in "utils". You should run
-this and check that your ice1712's sync source is internal if you have no
-SPDIF input, or "SPDIF" if you do. I think the default is now "internal"
-but don't take it for granted...
-
-<H6> warning about i810/i815 drivers...</H6>
-
-<P>As of RedHat 7.0, motherboards with native i810 audio systems didn't work in
-full duplex (they crashed linux). Either run Pd -noadc or else (better)
-install ALSA. This ought to be fixed by now...
-
-<H3> <A name="s1.3"> 3.4. Installing Pd in Macintosh OSX </A> </H3>
-
-<P>Pd version 0.35 and up support Macintosh OSX. You need the OSX Jaguar
-distribution (10.2) or later.
-
-<P> To install Pd you can always just download the sources and compile them
-yourself, or (easier) just download the Mac binary from the download page:
-
-<A href="http://crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html">
-http://crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/software.html</A>.
-
-This is in the form of a compressed Tar archive; just click on it and the Max
-will extract the Pd application. Open this and you should be running.
-
-<P> The package by Hans-Christoph Steiner, on
-
-<A href="http://at.or.at/hans/pd/installers.html">
-http://at.or.at/hans/pd/installers.html</A>,
-
-has many updates and extensions
-which are not included in the original Pd distribution. Download this and
-follow the (simple) instructions found there.
-</P>
-
-<H4> To install on OSX from source: </H4>
-
-<P>
-Whether you've downloaded the source or the "package" you can
-always compile Pd for yourself, whether to make your own improvements, or
-possibly so that you can get the newest version before it shows up compiled for
-Mac OS X.
-
-<P> To be able to compile Pd, you must have installed Tcl/Tk
-specifically in
-/Applications/Wish Shell.app
-and /Library/Frameworks/Tk.framework and /Library/Frameworks/Tcl.framework.
-
-<P> First download and install TK for OSX. I get it from:
-<A href=http://tcltkaqua.sourceforge.net/>
-http://tcltkaqua.sourceforge.net/. </A>
-
-
-<P> Then, just as for linux, just unload pd-whatever.tar.gz into a directory
-such as ~/pd-0.36-0, cd to pd-0.36-0/src, type "./configure"
-and "make". Then type ~/pd-0.36-0/bin/pd to a shell and enjoy!
-
-<P> If you wish you can put a line such as,
-
-<pre>
- alias pd ~/pd/bin/pd
-</pre>
-
-<P>in the file, ~/.tcshrc, so that you can later just type "pd" to a shell.
-(The
-shell only reads the ~/.tcshrc file on startup, so this won't take effect in
-any existing shells unless you specially type
-<pre>
- source ~/.tcshrc
-</pre>
-<P>to them.)
-
-<P> Follow the general directions above for testing audio and/or MIDI
-as needed.
-
-<P> To get MIDI working, you have to do the Mac OSX magic to get a USB
-MIDI interface installed. I've seen this done with Midisport devices and
-I think you just download the OSX driver and follow directions.
-
-<H3> <A name=s1.4> 3.5. Installing Pd in IRIX (SGI machines) </A> </H3>
-
-<P> (NOTE: as of release 0.35 I haven't had an IRIX machine to compile
-Pd on. Soeren Bovbjerg has kindly compiled 0.35 and 0.36 for IRIX;
-you can find these at
-<A href="http://www.cvmt.dk/~sb/"> http://www.cvmt.dk/~sb/ </A>.)
-
-<P> Download Pd, which will be a "tar.Z" file. You can unpack this by
-typing "zcat [name].tar.Z | tar xf -" to a shell. This creates a directory
-named "pd".
-
-<P>
-Starting with release 0.25, Pd should come in "n32" and "o32" versions.
-"o32" is the default and will run on IRIX 5.x and up. "n32" runs faster,
-but only on 6.x and up. Also, "externs" have to be updated for n32. The
-"pd" executable (bin/pd in the distribution) is a symbolic link to either
-"pd-o32" or "pd-n32."
-
-<P> NOTE: "externs" appear to be broken in the N32 version... I'm not sure
-how long this has been true. If you want to use external objects, you have
-to use the O32 version.
-
-<P>
-If for example you put Pd in ~, the executable program
-will be ~/pd/bin/pd. The program looks at its command line to
-figure out where it is, so it's best to invoke Pd by its full pathname.
-You should always invoke Pd from a Unix shell because many important
-messages appear on the standard error.
-
-<P>
-The simplest way to invoke Pd is to
-make an alias in your ".cshrc" file (assuming you use the "c" shell) such as:
-</P>
-<PRE>
-
- alias pd ~/pd/bin/pd
-
-</PRE>
-<P>(assuming your Pd distribution landed in ~, for example).
-
-<P>
-Pd will open the "default" audio input and output devices, without regard
-for whether they are in sync or not. This will be bad if they aren't; use
-the "-noadc" or "-nodac" flag to disable either the input or output. Pd is
-supposed to handle up to 8 channels of audio in and/or out. (But at least
-one user had to recompile Pd on his Onyx to get 8 channels working.)
-
-<P>
-As to MIDI, Pd simply attempts to open all available MIDI devices for input and
-output, which is probably very bad on anything more recent than my Indy. If
-any MIDI ports fail to open either for input or output, all MIDI is disabled.
-
-<P> Pd has not been fixed to request real-time priority from Irix; it will
-compete with all other processes on your machine for CPU time.
-
-<H4> Audio and MIDI in IRIX </H4>
-
-<P>
-Pd takes command line arguments to set the number of input and output channels
-and the sample rate. These don't affect the SGI's audio settings, which you
-have to set separately using the "audio panel." Pd does detect the audio
-sample rate if you don't specify one on the command line.
-
-<P>
-On SGI machines, you have to work to get MIDI running. Before you start Pd, verify
-that least one MIDI port is configured open. Pd opens the FIRST MIDI port
-that's open. You might want to get rid of the "software" MIDI port if you're
-running 6.x. On Indys, the usual practice is to open serial port number 2
-because some systems configure port 1 as "console" by default. You can use the
-GUI if you want, or else just type
-<PRE>
-
- startmidi -d /dev/ttyd2
-
-</PRE>
-
-<P>to get port 2 speaking MIDI, and
-
-<PRE>
-
- stopmidi
-
-</PRE>
-
-<P>to stop it. You can test whether MIDI is configured by typing,
-
-<PRE>
-
- ps -dafe | grep midi
-
-</PRE>
-
-<P>and looking for "startmidi" processes.
-
-<P>
-It's a good idea to connect your serial port to your MIDI interface before
-typing the "startmidi" command, not afterward, at least in 5.x. We use the
-Opcode Studio 3 interface but in principle any Mac-compatible one should work.
-
-<P>
-The O2 apparently has RS232 ports, not RS422. I think SGI's web site says
-something about how to deal with this.
-
-<H3> <A name=s4> 3.6. Preferences and startup options </A> </H3>
-
-<P> Pd's behavior may be customized to instruct it where to find files, which
-audio devices to open, what font size to use, and so on. Most of
-these may also be changed using the various dialogs you can open from Pd's
-menus. Others take effect only when Pd starts up; some of these appear
-on the ``startup" dialog and some of them, too cranky to put in a GUI, must
-be typed as <I> command line arguments </I>.
-
-<P> In addition to the Audio and MIDI settings (see
-<A href="#s1.0"> Audio and MIDI </A>), you can customize font size (from the
-``edit" menu), directories to search for files (see
-<A href="#s5"> How Pd searches for files </A>), and additional startup
-parameters described below.
-
-<P> All of these settings may be saved automatically between Pd sessions.
-It is also possible to specify settings directly via the <I> command
-line </I>. (A third mechanism, using configuration files, is deprecated and
-isn't described here.) The Pd command line is described in the next
-section. Command line settings, if given, each override the corresponding
-setting that was saved from Pd.
-
-<P> The startup settings (i.e., those that take effect only when Pd is started)
-are controlled using the ``startup..." dialog from the File menu. The
-dialog appears as follows:
-
-<CENTER><P>
- <IMG src="fig11.3.png" ALT="startup dialog">
-</P></CENTER>
-
-The slots at top each specify a binary ``library" for Pd to load on startup.
-These may be for Gem, pdp, zexy, iemlib, cyclone, and so on. Typically, a
-single binary object (an ``extern") is left for Pd to load automatically;
-startup library loading is appropriate for collections of many objects
-specified by a single binary library.
-
-<P> The ``defeat real-time scheduling" contol, if enabled, makes Pd run without
-its usual effort to become a real-time process (whatever this means in the
-operating system you are using.) In Unix, Pd must usually be setuid to allow
-real-time scheduling at all.
-
-<P> The ``startup flags" allow you to add to Pd's command line on startup. This
-is specified as described below, except that the initial word, ``pd", is
-understood. For example, putting ``-rt" in this field sets real-time
-scheduling; ``-sleepgrain 1" sets the sleep grain to 1 (see under MIDI below),
-and typing "-rt -sleepgrain 1" does both.
-
-<P> You may save the current settings for future Pd sessions with the
-``save all settings" button; this saves not only the path but all other
-settings as well.
-
-<H6> Command line arguments </A> </H3>
-
-<P>Pd may be run as a "command line" program from your "terminal emulator,"
-"shell," or "MSDOS prompt." In Windows, if Pd is started using a "shortcut"
-it is also run from a command line which you can edit using the ``properties"
-dialog for the shortcut. In any operating system, Pd can be called from a
-script (called a <I> batch file </I> on Windows or a <I> shell script </I>
-on OSX or unix). The command line is just a line of text, which should be
-of the form:
-
-<PRE>
-
- pd [options] [patches to open]
-
-</PRE>
-
-<P>although you may have to specify a path (such as "~/pd/bin/pd" or
-"C:\program files\pd\bin\pd") so your command interpreter can find
-Pd. Possible options include:
-
-<PRE>
-
-audio configuration flags:
--r &lt;n&gt; -- specify sample rate
--audioindev ... -- sound in device list; e.g., "2,1" for second and first
--audiooutdev ... -- sound out device list, same as above
--audiodev ... -- specify both -audioindev and -audiooutdev together
--inchannels ... -- number of audio in channels (by device, like "2" or "16,8")
--outchannels ... -- number of audio out channels (by device)
--channels ... -- specify both input and output channels
--audiobuf &lt;n&gt; -- specify size of audio I/O buffer in msec
--blocksize &lt;n&gt; -- specify audio I/O block size in sample frames
--sleepgrain &lt;n&gt; -- specify number of milliseconds to sleep when idle
--nodac -- suppress audio output
--noadc -- suppress audio input
--noaudio -- suppress audio input and output (-nosound is synonym)
--listdev -- list audio and MIDI devices
-
-(linux specific audio:)
--frags &lt;n&gt; -- specify number of audio fragments (defeats audiobuf)
--fragsize &lt;n&gt; -- specify log of fragment size ('blocksize' is better...)
--oss -- use ALSA audio drivers
--alsa -- use ALSA audio drivers
--pa -- use portaudio (experimental version 19)
--alsadev &lt;n&gt; ----- obsolete: use -audiodev
--32bit ---- (probably obsolete) -- use 32 bit OSS extension
-
-(Windows specific audio:)
--mmio -- use MMIO drivers and API
--asio -- use ASIO drivers and API
-
-MIDI configuration flags:
--midiindev ... -- midi in device list; e.g., "1,3" for first and third
--midioutdev ... -- midi out device list, same format
--mididev ... -- specify -midioutdev and -midiindev together
--nomidiin -- suppress MIDI input
--nomidiout -- suppress MIDI output
--nomidi -- suppress MIDI input and output
-
-general flags:
--path &lt;path&gt; -- add to file search path
--nostdpath -- don't search standard ("extra") directory
--stdpath -- search standard directory (true by default)
--helppath &lt;path&gt; -- add to help search path
--open &lt;file&gt; -- open file(s) on startup
--lib &lt;file&gt; -- load object library(s)
--font &lt;n&gt; -- specify default font size in points
--verbose -- extra printout on startup and when searching for files
--version -- don't run Pd; just print out which version it is
--d &lt;n&gt; -- specify debug level
--noloadbang -- suppress all loadbangs
--stderr -- send printout to standard error instead of GUI
--nogui -- suppress starting the GUI
--guiport &lt;n&gt; -- connect to pre-existing GUI over port 'n'
--guicmd "cmd..." -- substitute another GUI program (e.g., rsh)
--send "msg..." -- send a message at startup (after patches are loaded)
--rt or -realtime -- use real-time priority (needs root privilege)
--nrt -- don't use real-time priority
-
-</PRE>
-
-<P>Here are some details on some of the audio, MIDI, and scheduler options (but
-see also the next section on file management.)
-
-<H4> multiple devices. </H4>
-
-<P> You can specify multiple MIDI input and output devices. For example,
-"pd -midiindev 3 -midioutdev 4,2" asks for the third MIDI input device and the
-fourth and second MIDI output device.
-
-<P> Audio device selection is similar, except that you can also specify
-channels by device: "-audioindev 1,3 -inchannels 2,8" will try to open device 1
-(2 channels) and device 3 (8 channels.)
-
-<H4> sample rate. </H4>
-
-<P>The sample rate controls Pd's logical sample rate which need not be that of
-the audio input and output devices. If Pd's sample rate is wrong, time will
-flow at the wrong rate and synthetic sounds will be transposed. If the output
-and input devices are running at different rates, Pd will constantly drop frames
-to re-sync them, which will sound bad. You can disable input or output if this
-is a problem.
-
-<H4> audio buffer size and block size </H4>
-
-<P>You can specify an audio buffer size in milliseconds, typically between 10 and
-300, depending on how responsive your OS and drivers are. If this is set too
-low there will be audio I/O errors ("data late"). The higher the value is,
-on the other hand, the more throughput delay you will hear from the audio
-and/or control inputs (MIDI, GUI) and the audio coming out.
-
-<P> You can also specify the audio block size in sample frames. This is 64 by
-default (except for MMIO for which it's 256), and may be 64, 128, or 256.
-
-<H4> MIDI and sleepgrain</H4>
-
-<P> In Linux, if you
-ask for "pd -midioutdev 1" for instance, you get /dev/midi0 or /dev/midi00
-(or even /dev/midi). "-midioutdev 45" would be /dev/midi44. In NT, device
-number 0 is the "MIDI mapper", which is the default MIDI device you selected
-from the control panel; counting from one, the device numbers are card
-numbers as listed by "pd -listdev."
-
-<P> The "sleepgrain" controls how long (in milliseconds) Pd sleeps between
-periods of computation. This is normally the audio buffer divided by 4, but
-no less than 0.1 and no more than 5. On most OSes, ingoing and outgoing MIDI
-is quantized to this value, so if you care about MIDI timing, reduce this to 1
-or less.
-
-<H3> <A name="s5"> 3.7. How Pd searches for files </A> </H3>
-
-<P>Pd has a search path feature; you specify the path on the command line
-using the "-path" option. Paths may contain any number of files. If you
-specify several files in a single "-path" option they're separated by colons
-in unix or semicolons in NT.
-
-<P> You can see and edit the path while Pd is running using the "path..."
-item in the "File" menu:
-
-<CENTER><P>
- <IMG src="fig11.4.png" ALT="startup dialog">
-</P></CENTER>
-
-<P> The path must be correctly set before you load
-a patch or it may fail to find abstractions, etc., that are needed to
-construct the patch. When Pd searches for an abstraction or an
-"extern" it uses the path to try to find the necessary file. The "read"
-messages to qlists and arrays (aka tables) do this too.
-
-<P> If ``use standard extensions" is enabled, the usual ``extras" directory
-is also searched. This contains standard external objects like ``expr" and
-``fiddle", and perhaps much more depending on the distribution of Pd
-you're using.
-
-<P> You may save the current settings for future Pd sessions with the
-``save all settings" button; this saves not only the path but all other
-settings as well.
-
-<P> Path entries may be relative to the patch directory; for instance,
-if your path has an item, "../sound", and your patch is in "my stuff/all mine",
-then Pd will look in "my stuff/sound". Spaces should be OK in the path to
-the patch, but not in the path entry (../sound) itself. This is useful if
-you have a patch and supporting files (even a supporting snapshot of pd)
-that you want to distribute or carry around together.
-
-<P> Regardless of path, Pd should look first in the directory containing
-the patch before searching down the path. Pd does not automatically look
-in the <I> current directory </I> however; to enable that, include ``." in
-the path. The ``extra" directory, if enabled, is searched last.
-
-<P> Filenames in Pd are always separated by (unix-style) forward slashes, even
-if you're on Windows (which uses backslashes). This is so that patches can be
-ported more easily between operating systems. On the other hand, if you
-specify a filename on the command line (as in "pd -path c:\pdlib") the file
-separator should agree with the operating system. <BR>
-
-<P> If a filename specified in a patch has any "/" characters in it, the "path"
-is not used; thus, "../sounds/sample1.wav" causes Pd only to look relative to
-the directory containing the patch. You may also invoke externs that way.
-
-<P> As of version 0.35, there may be spaces in the path to Pd itself; also,
-the "openpanel" and "savepanel" objects can handle spaces. Spaces in the
-path should work as of version 0.38.
-
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