MrsWatson is a command-line audio plugin host. It takes an audio and/or MIDI file as input, and processes it through one or more audio plugins. Currently MrsWatson only supports VST 2.x plugins, but more formats are planned in the future. MrsWatson was designed for primarily three purposes:
- Audio plugin development and testing
- Automated audio processing for servers or other applications
- Unit testing audio plugins
Say you have an audio file which you would like processed through a group of mastering plugins.
mrswatson --input mysong.pcm --output out.pcm --plugin plugin1;plugin2
This will print the following output:
- 00000000 000000 Plugin 'plugin1' is of type VST2.x
- 00000000 000000 Plugin 'plugin2' is of type VST2.x
- 00000000 000000 MrsWatson version 0.1.0 initialized
- 00000000 000000 Opening VST2.x plugin 'plugin1'
- 00000000 000029 Opening VST2.x plugin 'plugin2'
- 00000000 000144 Processing with samplerate 44100, blocksize 512, 2 channels
- 03532800 000204 Total processing time 60ms, approximate breakdown by component:
- 03532800 000204 plugin1: 38ms
- 03532800 000204 plugin2: 11ms
- 03532800 000204 MrsWatson: 11ms
- 03532800 000204 Read 3528000 frames from mysong.pcm, wrote 3532800 frames to out.pcm
- 03532800 000204 Shutting down
- 03532800 000210 Closing plugin 'plugin1'
- 03532800 000212 Closing plugin 'plugin2'
- 03532800 000212 Goodbye!
To see more or less logging output, use the --verbose
or --quiet
options,
respectively. MrsWatson generates colored output (if your terminal supports
it) with two times per line, the first for the current sample and the second
for the time in milliseconds since processing began. The sample time also
changes colors after every 44100 samples to help visually break up processing
times. This value can be changed with the --zebra-size
option.
To process a MIDI file through an instrument, you'd do something like this:
mrswatson --midi-file mysong.mid --output out.pcm --plugin piano,soft.fxp
Like the first example, a list of plugins separated with semi-colons can be given here so that the audio generated by the instrument can be processed through any number of effects. Each plugin name can be followed by a comma and the location to a preset file to be loaded before processing.
Complete help for MrsWatson can be found by running the program with no
arguments, or with --help
. The --help
switch prints quite a lot of output,
so you can also use --options
to see all supported options and their default
values.
Currently, MrsWatson loads plugins by their short name by searching in the
standard installation locations for your platform, as well as the current
working directory and by absolute path. Use the --list-plugins
option to see
the order of locations searched and the plugins found there.
While MrsWatson has some understanding of getting and setting plugin parameters, it does not extend this functionality to the end user. Rather than passing a huge list of parameters on the command line, one should instead create a preset for the plugin and load it with the comma-separated syntax as shown above.
As MrsWatson is a new codebase, there are lots of missing features, some more important than others. To encourage a quick initial release, the following features are not yet present in MrsWatson, but may be added at some point in the future:
- AudioUnit plugins on Mac OSX
- File support for compressed audio
- Resampling of input source if desired
- True realtime mode
I have also tried to identify incomplete areas of the code and log them to the console, which means that we are aware that this feature is missing and will be added soon. If you see some other missing functionality or experience a crash or other bug, please report an issue on the project page.
If you believe you have found a bug in MrsWatson, please try first running it
with the --verbose
argument. This will generate extra logging output which
may help to solve the problem.
The easiest way to report a bug is to send an email to Teragon Audio's support
address: support (at) teragonaudio (dot) com. MrsWatson has a special
command-line switch to aid in diagnosing runtime problems, --error-report
.
When enabled it will create a zipfile on the desktop containing the input,
output, logs, and optionally the plugins themselves. Please include these
reports for bugs resulting in incorrect behavior or crashes.
A test suite program, named mrswatsontest
, can be found in the Mrswatson
zipfile. If tests fail on your platform, please report this along with your
bug.
MrsWatson uses GitHub issues for bug reporting, if you would like to submit an issue yourself.
Instructions for building MrsWatson can be found in the file Building.txt.
MrsWatson takes its name from a prior product from Teragon Audio called MissWatson (and the original name there, in case you were wondering, is a bit of a joke on the Dr. Watson utility).
In 2009 I sold the exclusive rights to MissWatson to a company interested in using it for server-side audio processing. As per the terms of our agreement, I made one last public release, and removed the code from my website. Since then, I have received numerous emails and inquiries regarding the project, mostly from plugin developers or people interested in VST technology. Though I have no regrets about discontinuing the original MissWatson (particularly since I didn't have time to properly maintain it), I felt that it was a useful utility which should be made available and open-sourced.
In 2011, my NDA with the aforementioned company expired, and I started working on a new MissWatson. MrsWatson is the result of this labor.
As I no longer have the source code for MissWatson, MrsWatson is a black-box implementation. They share only the name and concept in common. The two programs are incompatible and have fundamentally different behavior. They are also written in different languages (the original in C++, MrsWatson in C), and have completely different internal architecture.
But just as wildfires usher in new growth, the rewrite of MissWatson to MrsWatson has had some advantages as well. Benchmarking the old application against the new one shows that the rewrite performs over twice as fast as the previous version! Additionally, the new version is much more portable, easier to maintain, and extensible than its predecessor.
If you have built some system which used the original MissWatson, then you will likely have to make some big changes to migrate to MrsWatson. Likewise, if you were using some of the original MissWatson code in your project, you will not be able to replace it with MrsWatson without significant work on your end. Migration to the new MrsWatson is strongly encouraged.
If you are using MrsWatson to do something cool, please send me a link to your project! If you appreciate MrsWatson and would like to donate money, please instead make a donation to a charity on our behalf, and let us know about it. The organizations which have helped us the most are:
- EFF: Without the EFF, programs like MrsWatson would be significantly harder to create and distribute.
- Wikipedia: Writing MrsWatson involves a lot of research as well as coding, and Wikipedia is an essential part of this.
Big additional thanks to:
- Andrew McCrea, (@thrusong)
- Michael Pruett, (@mpruett)
MrsWatson is made available under the BSD license. For more details, see the
LICENSE.txt
file distributed with the source code. MrsWatson also uses the
following third-party libraries, which are licensed under the respective
agreements:
- VST: Licensed under Steinberg's VST SDK license agreement, version 2.4. For more information, see Steinberg's developer portal.
- libaudiofile: Written by Michael Pruett, licensed under GNU Library General Public License.