

- #Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser install#
- #Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser drivers#
- #Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser update#
- #Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser software#

#Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser install#
We had hoped to devise an easier way to obtain and install plugins in time for this release, and recent survey feedback suggested this would be a very welcome thing for many prospective users. A program that makes you feel stupid is already wrong on some level, though I’m all too aware that Sonic Visualiser can do that sometimes because it is a bit overcomplicated in places. If you run into something and you’re not sure whether it’s a bug or you’re just being stupid, please do report it anyway. In general, listing any steps to take to reproduce a bug (even if it seems to you that the bug must be so obvious that nobody could ever have missed it) is very useful indeed. Use the venerable SourceForge bug tracker, or for quick reports you could just post a comment below, send me an email, tweet at me, etc.įor any problems that arise when using a specific file (audio or annotation), it’s massively helpful if you can attach an example file that exhibits the problem. If you look at the series of commands carried out in the Docker script at deploy/linux/docker/Dockerfile.ubuntu64 in the source tree, you’ll get an idea of what needs to be done to compile as things stand. That process also includes overhauling the INSTALL-file instructions, which are not quite up-to-date. I mentioned above that I’m still working on packaging for Linux.
#Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser drivers#
#Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser software#
The first beta can be downloaded from the Sound Software code site:
#Aubio plugins not loading in sonic visualiser update#
Update – 17th Jan: These are not the latest links any more: there is now a second beta! See here for details. This should be a really good release, but we need to hear about the problems other people have with the beta versions before we can be sure of that. It’s been available for about a decade now, and v3.0 will be one of the most substantial updates it’s ever had. Sonic Visualiser is a free, open-source desktop application for close study and annotation of music audio recordings, developed in the Centre for Digital Music at Queen Mary, University of London.

A first beta release of Sonic Visualiser v3.0 is now available for download, and we’d love to get your feedback.
