Camomile
awesome-linuxaudio
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Camomile | awesome-linuxaudio | |
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14 | 9 | |
873 | 1,273 | |
- | - | |
3.5 | 7.3 | |
2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
C++ | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Camomile
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Another GUI question, how do you fully custom GUI?
Camomile is (still) the only thing that will do what you want. https://github.com/pierreguillot/Camomile
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Pure Data as a plugin, with a new GUI
I think the first project of this kind was pdvst~ (https://github.com/jyg/PdVst). A more recent effort is Camomile (https://github.com/pierreguillot/Camomile).
PlugData seems to be much more extensive and flexible, though!
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Pure Data: an open source visual language for multimedia
You can compile to vst with camomile as well, I wanted to mention.
https://github.com/pierreguillot/Camomile
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Can you turn a Pure Data project to a VST??
You want Camomile: https://github.com/pierreguillot/Camomile
- Show HN: Glicol(Graph-Oriented Live Coding Language) and DSP Lib Written in Rust
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How to read Pure Data patches to be able to recreate them on VST synths
I have a different suggestion
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continuous order polygonal waveform synthesis
you should definitely check Camomile by Pierre Guillot, i managed to run relatively complex patches as audio plugins through it on several DAWs just fine, with midi mapping and preset saving capabilities, however when running my synths as instrument plugins i found a couple of inconsistencies that made them kind of unreliable... i hope it gets better with future updates, if i ever get good at c++ i'd like to help with its development because it truly is an amazing work
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How difficult is it to code a VST Plug-in?
There is a project called camomile where you can run a Pd patch as a VST with built in support for building a GUI within the patch and integration with basic DAW stuff like BPM sync.
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A few questions about music production on linux
Camomile - fairly easy way to get Pure Data patches in plugin form; incredible rabbit hole to potentially fall down if you want total control
- DIY Audiomulch-ish? (general chatty question)
awesome-linuxaudio
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Reverse-engineering the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer's sound chip from die photos
> Is there a highly-regarded software (or hardware + software) emulator for the DX7?
Dexed is probably what you're looking for, although there are others here: https://github.com/nodiscc/awesome-linuxaudio#synthesizers--...
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Best Free Linux vsts?
These are not all free, but it's worth checking out. https://github.com/nodiscc/awesome-linuxaudio
- Awesome-linuxaudio – Software for audio/video/live events production on Linux
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Ableton Live 11 Suite running on the Steam Deck
regarding Ableton, I know some people are doing it but my advice is don't go for proton/wine if you can go native. there's tons of pro soft for linux: https://github.com/nodiscc/awesome-linuxaudio
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Music production on linux
This awesome-linuxaudio page has a number of quality programs that you can try.
- DAW with split window?
- Please, I'm unable to find an LMMS alternative for playing my MIDI Keyboard
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FMOD Studio 2.02 now offers a native Linux-Version with support for a wide range of distributions
I think the landscape is fairly good now actually. There's tons of good FOSS audio software, and for commercial DAWs we have Bitwig, REAPER, Renoise and Tracktion Waveform. And while there stil aren't that many commercial plugin developers out there that natively support Linux, you can get really far nowadays with the offerings from Bitwig, U-He, TAL, AudioDamage, Loomer, Pianoteq, Audio Assault and many more vendors. You can find are some non-exhaustive lists of vendors supporting Linux here, here and here. Since I too don't want to make compromises if I don't have to, I made yabridge last year which lets you use 32-bit and 64-bit Windows VST2 and VST3 as if they were native 64-bit Linux VST2 and VST3 plugins. I'm really happy with how that turned out, and the reception has been nothing but positive. Wine's getting really good, and the only things that can consistently make things difficult are invasive DRM schemes like iLoK and Waves' DRM. But yeah, even without yabridge there are plenty of good native DAWs and plugins for Linux right now.
What are some alternatives?
FlexASIO - A flexible universal ASIO driver that uses the PortAudio sound I/O library. Supports WASAPI (shared and exclusive), KS, DirectSound and MME.
yabridge - A modern and transparent way to use Windows VST2, VST3 and CLAP plugins on Linux
plugdata - Pure Data as a plugin, with a new GUI
zrythm - a highly automated and intuitive digital audio workstation - official mirror
elkpi-sdk - Yocto cross-compiling toolchains for Elk on Raspberry Pi 3 32 bit
sfizz - SFZ parser and synth c++ library, providing a JACK standalone client
noboilerplate - Code for my talks on the No Boilerplate channel
fluidsynth - Software synthesizer based on the SoundFont 2 specifications
sonobus - Source code for SonoBus, a real-time network audio streaming collaboration tool.
vital - Spectral warping wavetable synth
PipeWire-Guide - PipeWire Guide. Learn about how PipeWire gives your Linux system a Professional Audio/Video Processing workflow.