Skip to content

erlsci/osc

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

91 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

osc

Erlang support for the Open Sound Control protocol

Build Status Erlang Versions Tag

Project Logo

This is an implementation of the Open Sound Control (OSC) protocol written in Erlang with OTP. The project provides the following:

  • osc_lib: an API for encoding and decoding OSC messages
  • osc_client: a manageed UDP client for OSC servers
  • osc: an OTP application (release-baseed) for creeating custom OSC servers

For more information about OSC, see the links below in the Resources section.

Setup

Include one of the following in your project's rebar.config:

%% Latest Release
{deps, [
    {osc, {git, "https://github.com/erlsci/osc", {tag, "2.1.0"}}}
]}.

%% Unstable
{deps, [
    {osc, {git, "https://github.com/erlsci/osc", {branch, "release/2.2.x"}}}
]}.

Encoding / Decoding OSC Messagees

TBD

Connecting to OSC Servers

The following is a demonstration using the Erlang OSC server, but first we need to add the default addresses to the server:

1> osc:add_addresses().

Now we can create a client connection manager and send a message to the default address:

2> osc_client:start().
3> {ok, Pid} = osc_client:connect("localhost", 2357).
4> osc_client:cast_msg(Pid, "/debug/log_message").
ok

No value is expected from the server, so cast_msg is used.

The Erlang OSC server will then log the output:

=INFO REPORT==== 27-Nov-2020::14:02:22.687276 ===
Received message: []

Here's an example of connecting to a SuperCollider server:

1> osc_client:start().
2> {ok, Pid} = osc_client:connect("localhost", 57110).
3> osc_client:call_msg(Pid, "/status").
{message,"/status.reply",
         [1,0,0,1,0,0.8447946310043335,8.175622940063477,4.41e4,
          44101.72468382008]}

call_msg was used here since we expect a value back from the server.

For more example usage, you may be interested in viewing the source for the LFE project undertone. While written in LFE, it make extensive use of osc_client and might offer the curious coder significant insights.

Running Project Tests

rebar3 as test check

Running the Default Server

Start an interactive Erlang shell:

rebar3 shell

Note: that will automatically start all the release dependency applications as well as osc itself.

Then you can use the simple API for adding OSC addresses to the default server:

1> osc:get_addresses().
[]
2> osc:add_addresses().
[ok]
3> osc:get_addresses().
["/debug/log_message"]
4> osc:remove_addresses().
[ok]
5> osc:get_addresses().
[]

See the osc module for example payloads in adding and removing OSC addresses.

Using erlsci/osc Fork as Custom Server

Update the code in apps/osc/src/osc.erl to add the OSC addresses you want to support (which will require creating the callback code those addreessese will need). Update osc_server:init to call osc:add_addresses/0 upon startup.

Create and run a release:

rebar3 release
cp -r _build/default/rel/osc INSTALL_DIR
INSTALL_DIR/osc/bin/osc start

You can confirm osc is running with:

INSTALL_DIR/osc/bin/osc ping

That should return pong.

To connect to the running release and get an interactive Erlang shell:

INSTALL_DIR/osc/bin/osc attach
Attaching to /tmp/erl_pipes/osc@MM-MAC-7744/erlang.pipe.1 (^D to exit)

(osc@nodename)1>

Resources

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Erlang 100.0%