vorbisfile documentation |
vorbisfile version 1.25 - 20000615 |
declared in "vorbis/vorbisfile.h";
This is the main function used to open and initialize an OggVorbis_File structure. It sets up all the related decoding structure.
The first argument must be a file pointer to an already opened file or pipe (it need not be seekable--though this obviously restricts what can be done with the bitstream). vf should be a pointer to the OggVorbis_File structure--this is used for ALL the externally visible vorbisfile functions. Once this has been called, the same OggVorbis_File struct should be passed to all the vorbisfile functions.
Also, you should be aware that ov_open(), once successful, takes complete possession of the file resource. After you have opened a file using ov_open(), you MUST close it using ov_clear(), not fclose() or any other function.
It is often useful to call ov_open()
simply to determine whether a given file is a vorbis bitstream. If the
ov_open()
call fails, then the file is not recognizable as such. When you use ov_open()
for
this, you should fclose() the file pointer if, and only if, the
ov_open()
call fails. If it succeeds, you must call ov_clear() to clear
the decoder's buffers and close the file for you.
int ov_open(FILE *f,OggVorbis_File *vf,char *initial,long ibytes); |
0 for success less than zero for failure:
- OV_EREAD - A read from media returned an error.
- OV_ENOTVORBIS - Bitstream is not Vorbis data.
- OV_EVERSION - Vorbis version mismatch.
- OV_EBADHEADER - Invalid Vorbis bitstream header.
- OV_EFAULT - Internal logic fault; indicates a bug or heap/stack corruption.
If your decoder is threaded, it is recommended that you NOT call
ov_open()
in the main control thread--instead, call ov_open() IN your decode/playback
thread. This is important because ov_open() may be a fairly time-consuming
call, given that the full structure of the file is determined at this point,
which may require reading large parts of the file under certain circumstances
(determining all the logical bitstreams in one physical bitstream, for
example).
copyright © 2000 vorbis team |
|
vorbisfile documentation |
vorbisfile version 1.25 - 20000615 |