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Full Discussion: 'int' Unix to Linux!! Help!!
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat 'int' Unix to Linux!! Help!! Post 302354572 by roosse77i on Friday 18th of September 2009 03:51:50 PM
Old 09-18-2009
'int' Unix to Linux!! Help!!

Hi!
I'm having some troubles to make a Unix system communicate with a Linux system, because the LSB and MSB of an 'int' is inverted in each other.
I can't use a Algorithm for Bit Reversal, because I would have to change a lot of the services that I use im my application.
Is there any way to change the LSB and MSB of the 'int' inside of Linux?

Sorry for my english mistakes, and sorry for may newbie explication. This is the first time that I'm using Linux this way.
 

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NA_RECORD(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					      NA_RECORD(1)

NAME
na_record -- record waveform from audio device SYNOPSIS
na_record [-h] [-f sampling rate] [-audiodevice device] [-time seconds] [-o file] [-otype type] [-ostype sample type] [-F sample rate] [-obo MSB | LSB | native] [-oswap] [-p audio device protocol] DESCRIPTION
na_record records digital audio data from the system's audio input device and writes it to the specified file. It supports a variety of out- put file formats and native audio devices. The following option flags are recognized: -h Prints a short summary of usage to standard output. -f sampling rate Sets the input sampling rate (in samples per second, i.e. Hz). Not all devices support all sampling rates, so it may be desire- able to set this separately from the output sampling rate. -audiodevice device Sets the audio device to record from, if supported by the audio protocol chosen (e.g. /dev/dsp, /dev/audio) -time seconds Stops recording after the specified number of seconds. -o file Writes sound output to the specified file -otype type Specifies the file format to use for output. Supported types currently include nist, est, dsps, snd, riff, aiff, audlab, raw, and ascii. The -h flag will show the most accurate list. The default type is nist. -F sampling rate Sets the output sampling rate (again, in samples per second, i.e. Hz). If this differs from the input sampling rate, resampling will be done. Defaults to 16000Hz. -obo byte order Sets the output byte order. Supported values are MSB, LSB, and native. Many file formats have their own byte order, or are byte order independent, so this isn't tremendously useful except for raw data. The default is the native byte order for the system audio device. -oswap Swap bytes when saving to output. -ostype sample type Sets the sample type of the output. Suported values are short, mulaw, byte, or ascii. Again, this is usually implied by the file format, so should only be used for raw data. The default is short (i.e. 16-bit PCM). -p audio device protocol Selects an audio device protocol (i.e. type of audio device) to use. This varies between different installations of Speech Tools, but defaults to the most 'native' audio device, usually Open Sound System on Linux and *BSD and /dev/audio on Solaris. ENVIRONMENT
NA_PLAY_PROTOCOL Audio protocol to use (as in the -p flag) NA_PLAY_HOST Host to record audio from when using a network audio protocol. EXAMPLES
To record five seconds of audio from /dev/dsp1 (on Linux) to foo.wav in RIFF format at 32kHz: $ na_record -time 5 -audiodevice /dev/dsp1 -o foo.wav -otype RIFF -f 32000 To record one second of audio to bar.wav in raw format in 8kHz mu-law: $ na_record -time 1 -o bar.wav -otype raw -ostype mulaw -f 8000 BUGS
The -time argument only accepts integer values (though the usage message implies otherwise) SEE ALSO
na_play(1) Edinburgh Speech Tools April 4, 2001 Edinburgh Speech Tools
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