FluidSynth
FluidSynth is a real-time software synthesizer based on the SoundFont 2 specifications. It is required by gst-plugins-bad, and thus is installed as a dependency of the gnome group.
Contents
Installing FluidSynth
The first step is to install the fluidsynth package.
However, FluidSynth will not produce any sound yet. This is because FluidSynth does not include any instrument samples. To produce sound, instrument patches and/or soundfonts need to be installed and fluidsynth configured so it knows where to find them. You can install SoundFont sample.
How to use FluidSynth
There are two ways to use FluidSynth. Either as MIDI player or as daemon adding MIDI support to ALSA.
Standalone mode
You can simply use fluidsynth to play MIDI files:
$ fluidsynth -a alsa -m alsa_seq -l -i /usr/share/soundfonts/FluidR3_GM.sf2 example.midi
assuming than you installed soundfont-fluid.
There are many other options to fluidsynth; see manpage or use -h to get help.
One may wish to use pulseaudio instead of alsa as the argument to the -a option.
ALSA daemon mode
If you want fluidsynth to run as ALSA daemon, edit /etc/conf.d/fluidsynth
and add your soundfont along with any other changes you would like to make. For e.g., fluidr3:
SOUND_FONT=/usr/share/soundfonts/FluidR3_GM.sf2 AUDIO_DRIVER=alsa OTHER_OPTS='-is -m alsa_seq -r 48000'
After that, you can start/enable the fluidsynth service. Be aware of bug https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/50122 when using pulseaudio driver
The following will give you an output software MIDI port (in addition of hardware MIDI ports on your system, if any):
$ aconnect -o
client 128: 'FLUID Synth (5117)' [type=user] 0 'Synth input port (5117:0)'
An example of usage for this is aplaymidi:
$ aplaymidi -p128:0 example.midi
How to convert MIDI to MP3/OGG
Requires soundfont-fluid or any other soundfont of your choice.
/usr/share/soundfonts is the default location of FluidR3_GM
Simple command lines to convert midi to mp3:
$ fluidsynth -l -T raw -F /usr/share/soundfonts/FluidR3_GM.sf2 example.mid | twolame -b 256 -r example.mp3
Requires twolame
Simple command lines to convert midi to ogg:
$ fluidsynth -nli -r 48000 -o synth.cpu-cores=2 -T oga -F example.ogg /usr/share/soundfonts/FluidR3_GM.sf2 example.MID
Here's a little script to convert multiple midi files to ogg in parallel:
#!/bin/bash maxjobs=$(grep processor /proc/cpuinfo | wc -l) midi2ogg() { name=$(echo $@ | sed -r s/[.][mM][iI][dD][iI]?$//g | sed s/^[.][/]//g) for arg; do fluidsynth -nli -r 48000 -o synth.cpu-cores=$maxjobs -F "/dev/shm/$name.raw" /usr/share/soundfonts/FluidR3_GM.sf2 "$@" oggenc -r -B 16 -C 2 -R 48000 "/dev/shm/$name.raw" -o "$name.ogg" rm "/dev/shm/$name.raw" ## Uncomment for replaygain tagging #vorbisgain -f "$name.ogg" done } export -f midi2ogg find . -regex '.*[.][mM][iI][dD][iI]?$' -print0 | xargs -0 -n 1 -P $maxjobs bash -c 'midi2ogg "$@"' --
Troubleshooting
Conflicting with PulseAudio
If your fluidsynth application is set to use alsa as driver, the sound card will be accessed directly and pulseaudio and applications using pulseaudio will not be able to work properly. You can modify the configuration file /etc/conf.d/fluidsynth
and change the driver to PulseAudio, then restart fluidsynth and PulseAudio:
/etc/conf.d/fluidsynth
AUDIO_DRIVER=pulseaudio OTHER_OPTS='-m alsa_seq -r 48000'