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/*==LICENSE==*
CyanWorlds.com Engine - MMOG client, server and tools
Copyright (C) 2011 Cyan Worlds, Inc.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Additional permissions under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
If you modify this Program, or any covered work, by linking or
combining it with any of RAD Game Tools Bink SDK, Autodesk 3ds Max SDK,
NVIDIA PhysX SDK, Microsoft DirectX SDK, OpenSSL library, Independent
JPEG Group JPEG library, Microsoft Windows Media SDK, or Apple QuickTime SDK
(or a modified version of those libraries),
containing parts covered by the terms of the Bink SDK EULA, 3ds Max EULA,
PhysX SDK EULA, DirectX SDK EULA, OpenSSL and SSLeay licenses, IJG
JPEG Library README, Windows Media SDK EULA, or QuickTime SDK EULA, the
licensors of this Program grant you additional
permission to convey the resulting work. Corresponding Source for a
non-source form of such a combination shall include the source code for
the parts of OpenSSL and IJG JPEG Library used as well as that of the covered
work.
You can contact Cyan Worlds, Inc. by email legal@cyan.com
or by snail mail at:
Cyan Worlds, Inc.
14617 N Newport Hwy
Mead, WA 99021
*==LICENSE==*/
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// //
// plWAVClipBuffer - Helper class for writing out WAV data in a buffered //
// manner, with support for clipping off the specified //
// amount at the end, but without knowing beforehand //
// exactly how much data we'll have. //
// //
// The algorithm goes something like this: we keep two buffers, both the //
// size of the amount we want to clip. We then start filling in the first //
// buffer, overflowing into the second buffer and wrapping back to the //
// first again in a circular fashion. When we fill up one buffer and are //
// about to advance to the next, we write that next buffer out. Why? //
// Because we know that, even if we got no more data in, we have enough //
// data in the first buffer to clip out the amount we want, so the other //
// half (which will have older data, being a circular buffer) can be //
// written out safely. //
// //
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#ifndef _plWAVClipBuffer_h
#define _plWAVClipBuffer_h
//// Class Definition ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
class CWaveFile;
class plWAVClipBuffer
{
public:
plWAVClipBuffer( UInt32 clipSize, CWaveFile *outFile );
~plWAVClipBuffer();
// Inits the buffer. Can re-init if you wish
void Init( UInt32 clipSize, CWaveFile *outFile );
// Writes/adds data to the buffer
hsBool WriteData( UInt32 size, UInt8 *data );
// Call at the end, flushes the buffer and performs the clipping
hsBool Flush( void );
protected:
UInt8 *fBuffers[ 2 ];
UInt8 fWhichBuffer; // 0 or 1
UInt32 fCursor, fBufferSize;
hsBool fFirstFlip, fFlushCalled;
CWaveFile *fOutFile;
void IShutdown( void );
};
#endif //_plWAVClipBuffer_h