@prefix lv2: . @prefix doap: . @prefix foaf: . @prefix rdfs: . a doap:Project ; doap:license ; doap:name "LV2" ; doap:homepage ; doap:created "2004-04-21" ; doap:shortdesc "An extensible open standard for audio plugins" ; doap:programming-language "C" ; doap:developer , ; doap:maintainer ; lv2:documentation """ LV2 is an interface for writing audio plugins in C or compatible languages, which can be dynamically loaded into many _host_ applications. This core specification is simple and minimal, but is designed so that _extensions_ can be defined to add more advanced features, making it possible to implement nearly any feature. LV2 maintains a strong distinction between code and data. Plugin code is in a shared library, while data is in a companion data file written in [Turtle](https://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/). Code, data, and any other resources (such as waveforms) are shipped together in a bundle directory. The code contains only the executable portions of the plugin. All other data is provided in the data file(s). This makes plugin data flexible and extensible, and allows the host to do everything but run the plugin without loading or executing any code. Among other advantages, this makes hosts more robust (broken plugins can't crash a host during discovery) and allows generic tools written in any language to work with LV2 data. The LV2 specification itself is distributed in a similar way. An LV2 plugin library is suitable for dynamic loading (for example with `dlopen()`) and provides one or more plugin descriptors via `lv2_descriptor()` or `lv2_lib_descriptor()`. These can be instantiated to create plugin instances, which can be run directly on data or connected together to perform advanced signal processing tasks. Plugins communicate via _ports_, which can transmit any type of data. Data is processed by first connecting each port to a buffer, then repeatedly calling the `run()` method to process blocks of data. This core specification defines two types of port, equivalent to those in [LADSPA](http://www.ladspa.org/), lv2:ControlPort and lv2:AudioPort, as well as lv2:CVPort which has the same format as an audio port but is interpreted as non-audible control data. Audio ports contain arrays with one `float` element per sample, allowing a block of audio to be processed in a single call to `run()`. Control ports contain single `float` values, which are fixed and valid for the duration of the call to `run()`. Thus the _control rate_ is determined by the block size, which is controlled by the host (and not necessarily constant). ### Threading Rules To facilitate use in multi-threaded programs, LV2 functions are partitioned into several threading classes: | Discovery Class | Instantiation Class | Audio Class | |----------------------------------|-------------------------------|------------------------------- | | lv2_descriptor() | LV2_Descriptor::instantiate() | LV2_Descriptor::run() | | lv2_lib_descriptor() | LV2_Descriptor::cleanup() | LV2_Descriptor::connect_port() | | LV2_Descriptor::extension_data() | LV2_Descriptor::activate() | | | | LV2_Descriptor::deactivate() | | Hosts MUST guarantee that: * A function in any class is never called concurrently with another function in that class. * A _Discovery_ function is never called concurrently with any other function in the same shared object file. * An _Instantiation_ function for an instance is never called concurrently with any other function for that instance. Any simultaneous calls that are not explicitly forbidden by these rules are allowed. For example, a host may call `run()` for two different plugin instances simultaneously. Plugin functions in any class MUST NOT manipulate any state which might affect other plugins or the host (beyond the contract of that function), for example by using non-reentrant global functions. Extensions to this specification which add new functions MUST declare in which of these classes the functions belong, define new classes for them, or otherwise precisely describe their threading rules. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Specification lv2:documentation """ An LV2 specification typically contains a vocabulary description, C headers to define an API, and any other resources that may be useful. Specifications, like plugins, are distributed and installed as bundles so that hosts may discover them. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Markdown lv2:documentation """ This datatype is typically used for documentation in [Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax) syntax. Generally, documentation with this datatype should stay as close to readable plain text as possible, but may use core Markdown syntax for nicer presentation. Documentation can assume that basic extensions like codehilite and tables are available. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:documentation lv2:documentation """ Relates a Resource to extended documentation. LV2 specifications are documented using this property with an lv2:Markdown datatype. If the value has no explicit datatype, it is assumed to be a valid XHTML Basic 1.1 fragment suitable for use as the content of the `body` element of a page. XHTML Basic is a W3C Recommendation which defines a simplified subset of XHTML intended to be reasonable to implement with limited resources, for example on embedded devices. See [XHTML Basic, Section 3](http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-basic/#s_xhtmlmodules) for a list of valid tags. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:PluginBase lv2:documentation """ An abstract plugin-like resource that may not actually be an LV2 plugin, for example that may not have a lv2:binary. This is useful for describing things that share common structure with a plugin, but are not themselves an actual plugin, such as presets. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Plugin lv2:documentation """ To be discovered by hosts, plugins MUST explicitly have an rdf:type of lv2:Plugin in their bundle's manifest, for example: :::turtle a lv2:Plugin . Plugins should have a doap:name property that is at most a few words in length using title capitalization, for example Tape Delay Unit. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:PortBase lv2:documentation """ Similar to lv2:PluginBase, this is an abstract port-like resource that may not be a fully specified LV2 port. For example, this is used for preset "ports" which do not specify an index. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Port lv2:documentation """ All LV2 port descriptions MUST have a rdf:type that is one of lv2:Port, lv2:InputPort or lv2:OutputPort. Additionally, there MUST be at least one other rdf:type which more precisely describes type of the port, for example lv2:AudioPort. Hosts that do not support a specific port class MUST NOT instantiate the plugin, unless that port has the lv2:connectionOptional property set. A port has two identifiers: a (numeric) index, and a (textual) symbol. The index can be used as an identifier at run-time, but persistent references to ports (for example in presets or save files) MUST use the symbol. Only the symbol is guaranteed to refer to the same port on all plugins with a given URI, that is the index for a port may differ between plugin binaries. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:AudioPort lv2:documentation """ Ports of this type are connected to a buffer of `float` audio samples, which the host guarantees have `sample_count` elements in any call to LV2_Descriptor::run(). Audio samples are normalized between -1.0 and 1.0, though there is no requirement for samples to be strictly within this range. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:CVPort lv2:documentation """ Ports of this type have the same buffer format as an lv2:AudioPort, except the buffer represents audio-rate control data rather than audio. Like a lv2:ControlPort, a CV port SHOULD have properties describing its value, in particular lv2:minimum, lv2:maximum, and lv2:default. Hosts may present CV ports to users as controls in the same way as control ports. Conceptually, aside from the buffer format, a CV port is the same as a control port, so hosts can use all the same properties and expectations. In particular, this port type does not imply any range, unit, or meaning for its values. However, if there is no inherent unit to the values, for example if the port is used to modulate some other value, then plugins SHOULD use a normalized range, either from -1.0 to 1.0, or from 0.0 to 1.0. It is generally safe to connect an audio output to a CV input, but not vice-versa. Hosts must take care to prevent data from a CVPort port from being used as audio. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:project lv2:documentation """ This property provides a way to group plugins and/or related resources. A project may have useful metadata common to all plugins (such as homepage, author, version history) which would be wasteful to list separately for each plugin. Grouping via projects also allows users to find plugins in hosts by project, which is often how they are remembered. For this reason, a project that contains plugins SHOULD always have a doap:name. It is also a good idea for each plugin and the project itself to have an lv2:symbol property, which allows nice quasi-global identifiers for plugins, for example `myproj.superamp` which can be useful for display or fast user entry. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:prototype lv2:documentation """ This property can be used to include common properties in several descriptions, serving as a sort of template mechanism. If a plugin has a prototype, then the host must load all the properties for the prototype as if they were properties of the plugin. That is, if `:plug lv2:prototype :prot`, then for each triple `:prot p o`, the triple `:plug p o` should be loaded. This facility is useful for distributing data-only plugins that rely on a common binary, for example those where the internal state is loaded from some other file. Such plugins can refer to a prototype in a template LV2 bundle which is installed by the corresponding software. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:minorVersion lv2:documentation """ This, along with lv2:microVersion, is used to distinguish between different versions of the same resource, for example to load only the bundle with the most recent version of a plugin. An LV2 version has a minor and micro number with the usual semantics: * The minor version MUST be incremented when backwards (but not forwards) compatible additions are made, for example the addition of a port to a plugin. * The micro version is incremented for changes which do not affect compatibility at all, for example bug fixes or documentation updates. Note that there is deliberately no major version: all versions with the same URI are compatible by definition. Replacing a resource with a newer version of that resource MUST NOT break anything. If a change violates this rule, then the URI of the resource (which serves as the major version) MUST be changed. Plugins and extensions MUST adhere to at least the following rules: * All versions of a plugin with a given URI MUST have the same set of mandatory (not lv2:connectionOptional) ports with respect to lv2:symbol and rdf:type. In other words, every port on a particular version is guaranteed to exist on a future version with same lv2:symbol and at least those rdf:types. * New ports MAY be added without changing the plugin URI if and only if they are lv2:connectionOptional and the minor version is incremented. * The minor version MUST be incremented if the index of any port (identified by its symbol) is changed. * All versions of a specification MUST be compatible in the sense that an implementation of the new version can interoperate with an implementation of any previous version. Anything that depends on a specific version of a plugin (including referencing ports by index) MUST refer to the plugin by both URI and version. However, implementations should be tolerant where possible. When hosts discover several installed versions of a resource, they SHOULD warn the user and load only the most recent version. An odd minor _or_ micro version, or minor version zero, indicates that the resource is a development version. Hosts and tools SHOULD clearly indicate this wherever appropriate. Minor version zero is a special case for pre-release development of plugins, or experimental plugins that are not intended for stable use at all. Hosts SHOULD NOT expect such a plugin to remain compatible with any future version. Where feasible, hosts SHOULD NOT expose such plugins to users by default, but may provide an option to display them. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:microVersion lv2:documentation """ Releases of plugins and extensions MUST be explicitly versioned. Correct version numbers MUST always be maintained for any versioned resource that is published. For example, after a release, if a change is made in the development version in source control, the micro version MUST be incremented (to an odd number) to distinguish this modified version from the previous release. This property describes half of a resource version. For detailed documentation on LV2 resource versioning, see lv2:minorVersion. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:binary lv2:documentation """ The value of this property must be the URI of a shared library object, typically in the same bundle as the data file which contains this property. The actual type of the library is platform specific. This is a required property of a lv2:Plugin which MUST be included in the bundle's `manifest.ttl` file. The lv2:binary of a lv2:Plugin is the shared object containing the lv2_descriptor() or lv2_lib_descriptor() function. This probably may also be used similarly by extensions to relate other resources to their implementations (it is not implied that a lv2:binary on an arbitrary resource is an LV2 plugin library). """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:appliesTo lv2:documentation """ This is primarily intended for discovery purposes: bundles that describe resources that work with particular plugins (like presets or user interfaces) SHOULD specify this in their `manifest.ttl` so the host can associate them with the correct plugin. For example: :::turtle a ext:Thing ; lv2:appliesTo ; rdfs:seeAlso . Using this pattern is preferable for large amounts of data, since the host may choose whether/when to load the data. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Symbol lv2:documentation """ The first character of a symbol must be one of `_`, `a-z` or `A-Z`, and subsequent characters may additionally be `0-9`. This is, among other things, a valid C identifier, and generally compatible in most contexts which have restrictions on string identifiers, such as file paths. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:symbol lv2:documentation """ The value of this property MUST be a valid lv2:Symbol, and MUST NOT have a language tag. A symbol is a unique identifier with respect to the parent, for example a port's symbol is a unique identifiers with respect to its plugin. The plugin author MUST change the plugin URI if any port symbol is changed or removed. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:name lv2:documentation """ Unlike lv2:symbol, this is unrestricted, may be translated, and is not relevant for compatibility. The name is not necessarily unique and MUST NOT be used as an identifier. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:shortName lv2:documentation """ This is the same as lv2:name, with the additional requirement that the value is shorter than 16 characters. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Designation lv2:documentation """ A designation is metadata that describes the meaning or role of something. By assigning a designation to a port using lv2:designation, the port's content becomes meaningful and can be used more intelligently by the host. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Channel lv2:documentation """ A specific channel, for example the left channel of a stereo stream. A channel may be audio, or another type such as a MIDI control stream. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Parameter lv2:documentation """ A parameter is a designation for a control. A parameter defines the meaning of a control, not the method of conveying its value. For example, a parameter could be controlled via a lv2:ControlPort, messages, or both. A lv2:ControlPort can be associated with a parameter using lv2:designation. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:designation lv2:documentation """ This property is used to give a port's contents a well-defined meaning. For example, if a port has the designation `eg:gain`, then the value of that port represents the `eg:gain` of the plugin instance. Ports should be given designations whenever possible, particularly if a suitable designation is already defined. This allows the host to act more intelligently and provide a more effective user interface. For example, if the plugin has a BPM parameter, the host may automatically set that parameter to the current tempo. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:freeWheeling lv2:documentation """ If true, this means that all processing is happening as quickly as possible, not in real-time. When free-wheeling there is no relationship between the passage of real wall-clock time and the passage of time in the data being processed. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:enabled lv2:documentation """ If this value is greater than zero, the plugin processes normally. If this value is zero, the plugin is expected to bypass all signals unmodified. The plugin must provide a click-free transition between the enabled and disabled (bypassed) states. Values less than zero are reserved for future use (such as click-free insertion/removal of latent plugins), and should be treated like zero (bypassed) by current implementations. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:control lv2:documentation """ This should be used as the lv2:designation of ports that are used to send commands and receive responses. Typically this will be an event port that supports some protocol, for example MIDI or LV2 Atoms. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:Point lv2:documentation """ * A Point MUST have at least one rdfs:label which is a string. * A Point MUST have exactly one rdf:value with a type that is compatible with the type of the corresponding Port. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:default lv2:documentation """ The host SHOULD set the port to this value initially, and in any situation where the port value should be cleared or reset. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:minimum lv2:documentation """ This is a soft limit: the plugin is required to gracefully accept all values in the range of a port's data type. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:maximum lv2:documentation """ This is a soft limit: the plugin is required to gracefully accept all values in the range of a port's data type. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:optionalFeature lv2:documentation """ To support this feature, the host MUST pass its URI and any additional data to the plugin in LV2_Descriptor::instantiate(). The plugin MUST NOT fail to instantiate if an optional feature is not supported by the host. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:requiredFeature lv2:documentation """ To support this feature, the host MUST pass its URI and any additional data to the plugin in LV2_Descriptor::instantiate(). The host MUST check this property before attempting to instantiate a plugin, and not attempt to instantiate plugins which require features it does not support. The plugin MUST fail to instantiate if a required feature is not supported by the host. Note that these rules are intentionally redundant for resilience: neither host nor plugin should assume that the other does not violate them. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:ExtensionData lv2:documentation """ This is additional data that a plugin may return from LV2_Descriptor::extension_data(). This is generally used to add APIs to extend that defined by LV2_Descriptor. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:extensionData lv2:documentation """ If a plugin has a value for this property, it must be a URI that defines the extension data. The plugin should return the appropriate data when LV2_Descriptor::extension_data() is called with that URI as a parameter. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:isLive lv2:documentation """ This feature is for plugins that have time-sensitive internals, for example communicating in real time over a socket. It indicates to the host that its input and output must not be cached or subject to significant latency, and that calls to LV2_Descriptor::run() should be made at a rate that roughly corresponds to wall clock time (according to the `sample_count` parameter). Note that this feature is not related to hard real-time execution requirements (see lv2:hardRTCapable). """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:inPlaceBroken lv2:documentation """ This feature indicates that the plugin may not work correctly if the host elects to use the same data location for both input and output. Plugins that will fail to work correctly if ANY input port is connected to the same location as ANY output port MUST require this feature. Doing so should be avoided whenever possible since it prevents hosts from running the plugin on data in-place. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:hardRTCapable lv2:documentation """ This feature indicates that the plugin is capable of running in a hard real-time environment. This should be the case for most audio processors, so most plugins are expected to have this feature. To support this feature, plugins MUST adhere to the following in all of their audio class functions (LV2_Descriptor::run() and LV2_Descriptor::connect_port()): * There is no use of `malloc()`, `free()` or any other heap memory management functions. * There is no use of any library functions which do not adhere to these rules. The plugin may assume that the standard C math library functions are safe. * There is no access to files, devices, pipes, sockets, system calls, or any other mechanism that might result in the process or thread blocking. * The maximum amount of time for a `run()` call is bounded by some expression of the form `A + B * sample_count`, where `A` and `B` are platform specific constants. Note that this bound does not depend on input signals or plugin state. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:portProperty lv2:documentation """ States that a port has a particular lv2:PortProperty. This may be ignored without catastrophic effects, though it may be useful, for example to provide a sensible user interface for the port. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:connectionOptional lv2:documentation """ This property means that the port does not have to be connected to valid data by the host. To leave a port unconnected, the host MUST explicitly connect the port to `NULL`. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:reportsLatency lv2:documentation """ This property indicates that the port is used to express the processing latency incurred by the plugin, expressed in samples. The latency may be affected by the current sample rate, plugin settings, or other factors, and may be changed by the plugin at any time. Where the latency is frequency dependent the plugin may choose any appropriate value. If a plugin introduces latency it MUST provide EXACTLY ONE port with this property set. In fuzzy cases the value should be the most reasonable one based on user expectation of input/output alignment. For example, musical delay plugins should not report their delay as latency, since it is an intentional effect that the host should not compensate for. This property is deprecated, use a lv2:designation of lv2:latency instead, following the same rules as above: :::turtle lv2:port [ a lv2:OutputPort , lv2:ControlPort ; lv2:designation lv2:latency ; lv2:symbol "latency" ; ] """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:toggled lv2:documentation """ Indicates that the data item should be considered a boolean toggle. Data less than or equal to zero should be considered off or false, and data above zero should be considered on or true. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:sampleRate lv2:documentation """ Indicates that any specified bounds should be interpreted as multiples of the sample rate. For example, a frequency range from 0 Hz to the Nyquist frequency (half the sample rate) can be specified by using this property with lv2:minimum 0.0 and lv2:maximum 0.5. Hosts that support bounds at all MUST support this property. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:integer lv2:documentation """ Indicates that all the reasonable values for a port are integers. For such ports, a user interface should provide a stepped control that only allows choosing integer values. Note that this is only a hint, and that the plugin MUST operate reasonably even if such a port has a non-integer value. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:enumeration lv2:documentation """ Indicates that all the rasonable values for a port are defined by lv2:scalePoint properties. For such ports, a user interface should provide a selector that allows the user to choose any of the scale point values by name. It is recommended to show the value as well if possible. Note that this is only a hint, and that the plugin MUST operate reasonably even if such a port has a value that does not correspond to a scale point. """^^lv2:Markdown . lv2:isSideChain lv2:documentation """ Indicates that a port is a sidechain, which affects the output somehow but should not be considered a part of the main signal chain. Sidechain ports SHOULD be lv2:connectionOptional, and may be ignored by hosts. """^^lv2:Markdown .