pmidi man page on OpenSuSE

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PMIDI(1)							      PMIDI(1)

NAME
       pmidi - A midi file player for ALSA.

SYNOPSIS
       pmidi [ -pclient:port ] [ -l ] [ -ddelay ] file...

DESCRIPTION
       The  pmidi  command  reads  in  the specified midi files and plays them
       through the ALSA sequencer.  You can specify on the command line	 which
       sequencer  port	that you wish to use.  Use the -l option to get a list
       of possible sequencer ports for your machine.

   OPTIONS
       -pclient:port
	      Specify the ALSA port to send the midi file to.

       -l     List the possible output ports that could be used.

       -ddelay
	      Delay after song ends.  This is used to prevent the last note of
	      a song being chopped off early.  The default is two seconds.

   Port numbers
       You  can	 specify client:port numbers in the ALSA_OUTPUT_PORTS environ‐
       ment variable.  You can also supply a comma (or space  if  quoted  cor‐
       rectly)	separated list of client:port numbers.	This will allow you to
       play midi files that use more than 16 channels.

   Examples
	      pmidi song.mid song2.mid
	      pmidi -p "64:0, 64:1" song.mid

TROUBLE SHOOTING
       Before you start you need to have ALSA installed	 and  configured  cor‐
       rectly.	 This  man page cannot cover all general ALSA topics, but here
       are a few things to check when things do not seem to be working.

   Checking ALSA
       1.  First check that the correct sequencer modules are loaded for  your
	   sound card:

	   -  For  a  card  with an external Midi connection, you need to load
	      snd-seq-midi.

	   -  For the OPL2/3 internal synthesiser you need to load  snd-synth-
	      opl3.

	   -  For  the	AWE32/64  internal  synthesiser	 you need to load snd-
	      synth-emu8000.

	   -  For the SB Live! internal synthesiser  you  need	to  load  snd-
	      synth-emu10k1.

	   -  (Let me know of any more)

       2a  If  you  have  an  AWE32/64	or  SB Live! you will need to load the
	   sounds with sfxload in the same way	as  for	 the  standard	kernel
	   drivers.

       2b  If  you  have  the OPL3 FM synthesiser you will have to load the FM
	   instruments with sbiload.  See note below.

       3.  Make sure that the synth in the mixer is turned up and  unmuted  if
	   appropriate.

   Before use
       Because	you  may have more than one sound card and each sound card may
       have several MIDI connections, you have to tell pmidi which one to use.

       First find out what the possibilities are for your system:

       If you run:
	      pmidi -l
       it will give you a list of the possible devices that it can play to. On
       my system I get:

       Port    Client name			Port name
       64:0    Rawmidi 0 - EMU10K1 MPU-401 (U	EMU10K1 MPU - 401 (UART)
       65:0    Emu10k1 WaveTable		Emu10k1 Port 0
       65:1    Emu10k1 WaveTable		Emu10k1 Port 1
       65:2    Emu10k1 WaveTable		Emu10k1 Port 2
       65:3    Emu10k1 WaveTable		Emu10k1 Port 3
       128:0   FLUID Synth (28152)		Synth input port (28152)
       129:0   Client-129			TiMidity port 0
       129:1   Client-129			TiMidity port 1

       Any  of the port numbers in the first column can be used with pmidi. In
       the example above the first one is the external	Midi  port,  the  next
       four are the internal wave table synthesiser.  Then there are two soft‐
       ware synthesisers running, FluidSynth  (http://www.fluidsynth.org)  and
       Timididy.

       If  you don't see anything listed then check that the correct ALSA mod‐
       ules are loaded as in the section "Checking ALSA".

ENVIRONMENT
       ALSA_OUTPUT_PORTS   Port to use in playing midi file.

SEE ALSO
       playmidi(1)

AUTHOR
       Steve Ratcliffe <sr@parabola.me.uk>

				  Dec 20 2003			      PMIDI(1)
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