OpenAudio
vst-rs
OpenAudio | vst-rs | |
---|---|---|
6 | 7 | |
1,692 | 1,033 | |
2.7% | - | |
8.0 | 1.7 | |
11 days ago | 11 months ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
- | MIT License |
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.
OpenAudio
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Cardinal/WASM: In-Browser Modular Synth Based on VCV Rack
Added it to the big list of Open Audio! https://github.com/webprofusion/OpenAudio
- VST development - basic questions
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Open Source Video Production Related Software
A quite extensive list of open source audio plugins (au/vst) on GitHub
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Learning to develop a plug-in …
If you want to look at examples, here's a list of open source ones: Github OpenAudio. For start I would choose a small one. Start with something simple, but at least includes some simple audio part.
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Bespoke Juce
I started by going through a list I found of open source audio projects on Github, working my way through synths specifically because that's what I'm most interested in starting with. I decided to give JUCE another shot as well with the confidence gained from having troubleshot and figured out so many pieces of software throughout my open source journey, and found it much more forgiving this time. I checked out a couple projects with it, which ended up being very straightforward as JUCE has a dedicated build system. You just open a .jucer file and it lets you configure and generate projects for your given IDE. After checking out a few I decided to take another look at Bespoke.
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What are some decent vaporwave plugins for LMMS?
Also, mostly there are no vaporwave-specific plugins, producers of the genre just use samples from old songs slowed down, vintage synths, drone synths (remembering vaporwave's origin from noise-style music) and reverb to achieve that specific style Btw, some free and open source plugins, many of which should probably work fine in LMMS are also listed here: https://github.com/webprofusion/OpenAudio
vst-rs
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What would you rewrite in Rust?
https://github.com/RustAudio/vst-rs this what you mean?
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How do you go about making VSTs?
I hate to "uhhmm ackchyually" this, but unless you need native VST3 support* (which uses the C++ ABI directly) other options are available, a favourite of mine would be Rust!
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OctaSine v0.7.0 released (free and open source FM synth VST plugin for macOS/Windows/Linux) with major improvements
VST2 bindings exist (https://github.com/RustAudio/vst-rs) but the VST3 and AU situation is rougher around the edges. There is work being done on abstracting over different plugin standards and easing parameter handling, notably https://github.com/wrl/baseplug and https://github.com/robbert-vdh/nih-plug, but nothing completely stable yet.
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Announcing Audio Limiter: automatically lower the volume of loud sounds on your computer in real-time
One limitation that they mention is "Only one GFX and one LFX APO can be registered for an output device and only one LFX APO can be registered for an input device." which could be a problem for people who are already using one like Equalizer APO. What you could do is make a VST version of your limiter using vst-rs and use Equalizer APO to handle the APO part.
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Elementary Audio: a modern platform for writing high performance audio software
I agree with the first half. For the second half, I think for beginners, the examples are very important. From this perspective, many Rust projects comes with examples:
https://github.com/RustAudio/vst-rs
Once following the readme, it is very easy to get it work in your own machine. Then beginners can edit things while learning new stuffs with books or online resources.
Rust audio has also got a very helpful Discord community where beginners can always ask questions.
For the GUI part, I am not an expert, but there are more and more Rust GUI libraries (egui, iced, druid, rui): among them, egui-rs and iced-rs can all be used for VST. Still, there are some examples to get started with.
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Show HN: Glicol(Graph-Oriented Live Coding Language) and DSP Lib Written in Rust
https://youtu.be/yFKH9ou_XyQ
If you want your own vst (with your name on the author and you can sell),you can start with vst-rs:
https://github.com/RustAudio/vst-rs
Wanna some GUI, here is a template:
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OctaSine, a FM-based VST2 synthesizer written in Rust
When I came across the vst-rs, I realised that I could try out writing an audio plugin. Since I was already familiar with FM synthesis from Elektron Monomachine and FM8, I decided to go with it. It has worked out pretty well.
What are some alternatives?
noise-suppression-for-voice - Noise suppression plugin based on Xiph's RNNoise
glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust