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SIDPLAYFP

NAME

sidplayfp − a C64 and SID chip emulator for playing Commodore 64 music.

SYNOPSIS

sidplayfp [ OPTIONS ] datafile

DESCRIPTION

Sidplayfp is a music player that emulates various components from a Commodore 64 (C64) computer. The result is a program which can load and execute C64 machine code programs which produce music and sound. Sidplayfp has been designed for accuracy which results in a quite high cpu usage. Additional playback modes have however been provided to allow playback on low specification machines at the cost of accuracy.

OPTIONS

−h, −−help

Display help.

−f<num>

Set frequency in Hz (default: 48000).

−nf

No filter emulation. This will reduce CPU overhead at the cost of reduced sound quality.

−o<num>

Select track number (default: preset).

−s

Stereo playback. If the tune is identified as stereo then sid 1 and 2 become the left and right channels respectively.

−v[num]

Verbose output while playing.

−b<num>

Set start time in [mins:]secs format (compatible with sid2wav).

−ds<addr>

Force dual sid environment by adding a second chip at specified address. This forces emulation of 2 sid-chips for stereo playback even if datafile is identified as only being mono. This occurs in the case of the stereo prg format as currently there is no way to identify them. Stereo MUS and SID files are however automatically detected. The second sid may be installed in the 0xD420−0xD7FF or 0xDE00−0xDFFF address range. Address may be specified in exadecimal (e.g −ds0xd420) or decimal (e.g. −ds54304) format.

−ts<addr>

Add a third chip at specified address. The sid may be installed in the 0xD420−0xD7FF or 0xDE00−0xDFFF address range. Address may be specified in exadecimal (e.g −ts0xd440) or decimal (e.g. −ts54336) format.

−u<num>

Mute a channel. May be used more than one time. Channel 1 to 3 are for the first SID chip while channels from 4 to 6 are for the second one on stereo tunes.

−p<num>

Set bit precision for wav saving. The default is 32 (32 bit float), but can be set to 16 to create 16 bit little endian wavs. Other values cause invalid output.

−o<l|s>

Option ’l’ will select continuous track looping while ’s’ will select the current track instead of all. This option can be combined with the track selection to form −ols<num>.

−q

Quiet output while playing (opposite of verbose).

−s<l|r>

Playback the left or right stereo channel only.

−t<num>

Set play length in [mins:]secs format (0 is endless).

−v<n|p>[f]

Set VIC clock speed. ’n’ is NTSC (America, 60Hz) and ’p’ is PAL (Europe, 50Hz). Providing an ’f’ will prevent speed fixing that tries to compensate automatically for the speed difference. Removing speed fixing simulates what happens on a real C64. Options can be written as: −vnf or −vn −vf.

−m<o|n>[f]

Set SID chip model. ’o’ is the old 6581 and ’n’ is the new 8580. Providing an ’f’ will force the selected model overriding the one specified from the tune.

−r<i|r>[f]

Set resampling mode. ’i’ is interpolation (less expensive) and ’r’ resampling (accurate). Providing an ’f’ will provide faster resampling sacrificing quality. Fast resampling is available only for reSID emulation. Options can be written as: −rif or −ri −rf.

−w, −−wav[name]

Create WAV-file. The default output filename is <datafile>[n].wav where [n] is the tune number should there be more than one in the sid. This allows batch conversion of sid tunes without them overwriting each other. By providing a name you override this default behavior. The output file will be <name> with no tune number is added and <name> IS NOT checked for or appended with a legal wav file extension.

−−resid

Use Dag Lem’s reSID emulation engine.

−−residfp

Use Antti Lankila’s reSIDfp emulation engine.

−−hardsid

Use HardSID device.

Key bindings

1−9

Mute/unmute voice.

f

Toggle filter.

p

Pause/unpause playback.

Esc

Quit player.

Up/Down Arrows

Increase/reset playback speed.

Left/Right Arrows

Move to previous/next subtune.

Home/End Arrows

Go to first/last subtune.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

HVSC_BASE

The path to the HVSC base directory. If specified the songlength DB will be loaded from here and relative SID tune paths are accepted.

FILES

sidplayfp.ini

The per-user configuration file. See sidplayfp.ini(5) for further details.

kernal

The c64 kernal rom dump file.

basic

The c64 basic rom dump file.

chargen

The c64 character generator rom dump file.

BUGS

The upstream bug tracker can be found at <http://sourceforge.net/p/sidplay−residfp/bugs/>.

SEE ALSO

sidplayfp.ini(5)

NOTES

ROM dumps are no longer embedded but must be supplied by the user. Check the sidplayfp.ini(5) documentation for configuration details and default search paths.

AUTHORS

Leandro Nini

Current maintainer.

Simon White

Wrote the original Sidplay2.

Dag Lem

Wrote the reSID emulation engine.

Antti S. Lankila

Wrote the reSIDfp emulation engine as a fork of reSID 0.16.

The Vice team

Large part of the emulation is based on the VICE ’s code.

Andre Fachat

Wrote the original reloc65 utility.

Michael Schwendt

Wrote the original SidTune library and MD5 class (based on work by L. Peter Deutsch).

Mikko Kilponen

Wrote the original man page.

RESOURCES

SourceForge project: <http://sourceforge.net/projects/sidplay−residfp/>
Sidplay2 homepage: <http://sidplay2.sourceforge.net/>
High Voltage Sid Collection ( HVSC ): <http://hvsc.c64.org/>

COPYING

Copyright (C) 2000−2004 Simon White
Copyright (C) 2007−2010 Antti Lankila
Copyright (C) 2009−2015 VICE Project
Copyright (C) 2010−2016 Leandro Nini

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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110−1301, USA.

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