Development/Tutorials/Debugging/Phonon: Difference between revisions

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Set these environment variables:
Set these environment variables:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
$ export PHONON_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_DEBUG=5
$ export PHONON_BACKEND_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_BACKEND_DEBUG=5
$ export PHONON_SUBSYSTEM_DEBUG=2
export PHONON_SUBSYSTEM_DEBUG=2
$ export PHONON_PULSEAUDIO_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_PULSEAUDIO_DEBUG=5
$ export PHONON_VLC_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_VLC_DEBUG=5
$ export PHONON_GST_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_GST_DEBUG=5
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>



Revision as of 17:57, 12 June 2015

Environment Variables

In general, there is one easy way to give Phonon devs all the information they need to help fix your problem.

Set these environment variables:

export PHONON_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_BACKEND_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_SUBSYSTEM_DEBUG=2
export PHONON_PULSEAUDIO_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_VLC_DEBUG=5
export PHONON_GST_DEBUG=5

Then run your program. The terminal will fill up with gobs of debugging output.

Phonon-GStreamer debugging

Drawing a dot diagram

$ export GST_DEBUG_DUMP_DOT_DIR=/tmp
$ # run your program
$ dot -Tpng -oimage.png < /tmp/one-of-the-dot-files.dot

Even more verbose output

Phonon-gst has some fancier debug options available. In addition to PHONON_GST_DEBUG, there is PHONON_GST_GST_DEBUG. Setting it to 8 or so will cause the gstreamer libraries to produce copious quantities of debug output. We're talking thousands of lines of what seems to be useless noise. Roughly 1% of it is useful, but the phonon-gst devs can easily decipher it and drill down to the important bits.

Pulseaudio

Pulseaudio and phonon try their hardest to get along. Sometimes, it doesn't work. Luckily, there is a way to test gstreamer and pulseaudio to see who is at fault.

$ gst-launch filesrc location=/usr/share/sounds/KDE-Sys-Log-In.ogg ! decodebin2 ! audioresample ! audioconvert ! pulsesink
$ gst-launch filesrc location=/usr/share/sounds/KDE-Sys-Log-In.ogg ! decodebin2 ! audioresample ! audioconvert ! alsasink

If they both work flawlessly, blame Phonon-GStreamer.

If the first works but the second doesn't, you might have an exotic sound setup that involves tweaking the alsasink parameters to reflect what pulseaudio does to alsa.

If the second works but the first doesn't, you can blame pulseaudio.

Another way to confirm this is by setting the PHONON_GST_AUDIOSINK environment variable. Setting it to e.g. "pulsesink" uses the pulseaudio sink.

Recreating the phonon-gst pipeline

Phonon-GStreamer creates predicable pipelines. In general, they look like this:


filesrc -> decodebin2 -> queue -> audioresample -> audioconvert -> pulsesink
                   \
                    -> ffmpegcolorspace -> queue -> xvimagesink

If the input stream isn't coming from a file, it is likely coming in via KIO which pipes it into an abstractmediastream. If pulseaudio isn't used, then replace pulsesink with something of alsasink, osssink, or somesuch.

Recreating the playback stream of some video file can be done as such:

$ gst-launch filesrc location=/path/to/video ! decdebin2 name=dec ! audioresample ! audioconvert ! pulsesink \
    dec. ! ffmpegcolorspace ! xvimagesink

DVD playback is a bit different:

  (subpicture stream)
      /--->---\
rsndvdbin -> dvdspu -> ffmpegcolorspace -> queue -> xvimagesink
      \-> queue -> audioresample -> audioconvert -> pulsesink

This is built with the following:

$ gst-launch rsndvdbin ! dvdspu ! ffmpegcolorspace ! queue ! xvimagesink \
    rsndvdbin0 ! dvdspu0.subpicture \
    rsndvdbin0 ! queue ! audioresample ! audioconvert ! pulsesink

Building Phonon from source

If you want to have a newer Phonon build than 4.4.3 which is currently shipped by most distributions in KDE 4.6, you can build from source (git). Phonon is now located on git.kde.org.

Get Dependencies

Deb-based distros, run

sudo apt-get build-dep phonon

to be sure you have all dependencies installed.


OpenSuSE:

sudo zypper si -d phonon

Install git

In Kubuntu, Debian, etc.:

sudo apt-get install git-core

In Archlinux:

sudo pacman -Sy git

In Gentoo:

sudo emerge -av dev-util/git

In OpenSuSE:

sudo zypper install git

Install ccache to speed up compilation

Install the package from your distribution and set the size of the cache to 2 GB with the command

ccache -M 2G

This will take 2Gb of space in your local directory. Enable the use of ccache by adding it to your local .bashrc, described below.

Define the PATH and local environment

Append the following to $HOME/.bashrc:

export PATH=$HOME/kde/bin:$PATH
export PATH=/usr/lib/ccache:$PATH
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/kde/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH

Reload your edited .bashrc:

source $HOME/.bashrc

NOTE: if you are not using the bash shell, edit your proper shell config file (~/.zshrc or ~/.tcshrc or whatever it may be).

Make KDE aware of Phonon’s location

echo 'export KDEDIR=$HOME/kde' >> $HOME/.kde/env/myenv.sh
echo 'export KDEDIRS=$KDEDIR' >> $HOME/.kde/env/myenv.sh

Some distributions call the above folder $HOME/.kde4/, such as OpenSuSE.

Install locally

Install in your $HOME dir):

mkdir $HOME/kde && cd kde && mkdir src && cd src
git clone git://anongit.kde.org/phonon
cd phonon && mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=debugfull $HOME/kde/src/phonon
sudo make install

To update your build, it's even easier:

cd ~/kde/src/phonon
git pull
cd build && sudo make install

Build locally from a tarball

This is 4.4.4 for example:

cd ~/kde/src/
wget http://download.kde.org/download.php?url=stable/phonon/4.4.4/src/phonon-4.4.4.tar.bz2
tar xf phonon-4.4.4.tar.bz2
cd phonon-4.4.4 && mkdir build && cd build 
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=debugfull $HOME/kde/src/phonon-4.4.4
sudo make install