fda9cde064
Since the wgpu backend is a bit crashy. |
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.cargo | ||
.github/workflows | ||
cargo_nih_plug | ||
nih_plug_derive | ||
nih_plug_egui | ||
nih_plug_iced | ||
nih_plug_xtask | ||
plugins | ||
src | ||
xtask | ||
.gitignore | ||
bundler.toml | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
NIH-plug
This is a work in progress JUCE-lite-lite written in Rust to do some experiments
with, as well as a small collection of plugins. The idea is to have a statefull
but simple plugin API that gets rid of as much unnecessary ceremony wherever
possible, while also keeping the amount of magic to minimum. Since this is not
quite meant for general use just yet, the plugin API is limited to the
functionality I needed and I'll expose more functionality as I need it. See the
documentation comment in the Plugin
trait for an incomplete list of missing
functionality.
Come join us on the Rust Audio Discord.
Table of contents
Plugins
Check each plugin's readme for more details on what the plugin actually does and for download links.
- Crisp adds a bright crispy top end to any low bass sound. Inspired by Polarity's Fake Distortion video.
- Diopser is a totally original phase rotation plugin. Useful for oomphing up kickdrums and basses, transforming synths into their evil phase-y cousin, and making everything sound like a cheap Sci-Fi laser beam.
- Puberty Simulator is that patent pending One Weird Plugin that simulates the male voice change during puberty! If it was not already obvious from that sentence, this plugin is a joke, but it might actually be useful (or at least interesting) in some situations. This plugin pitches the signal down an octave, but it also has the side effect of causing things to sound like a cracking voice or to make them sound slightly out of tune.
Framework
Current status
It actually works! There's still lots of small things to implement, but the core functionality and basic GUI support are there, with export targets and plugin bundling for both VST3 and CLAP. Currently the Windows support has only been tested under Wine with yabridge, and the macOS version hasn't been tested at all. Feel free to be the first one!
Building
NIH-plug works with the latest stable Rust compiler.
After installing Rust, you can compile any of the plugins
in the plugins
directory in the following way, replacing gain
with the name
of the plugin:
cargo xtask bundle gain --release
Plugin formats
NIH-plug can currently export VST3 and
CLAP plugins. Exporting a specific plugin
format for a plugin is as simple as calling the nih_export_<format>!(Foo);
macro. The cargo xtask bundle
commane will detect which plugin formats your
plugin supports and create the appropriate bundles accordingly, even when cross
compiling.
Example plugins
The best way to get an idea for what the API looks like is to look at the examples.
- gain is a simple smoothed gain plugin that shows off a couple other parts of the API, like support for storing arbitrary serializable state.
- gain-gui is the same plugin as gain, but with a GUI to control the parameter and a digital peak meter.
- sine is a simple test tone generator plugin with frequency smoothing that can also make use of MIDI input instead of generating a static signal based on the plugin's parameters.
- stft shows off some of NIH-plug's other optional
higher level helper features, such as an adapter to process audio with a
short-term Fourier transform using the overlap-add method, all using the
compositional
Buffer
interfaces.
Licensing
The framework, its libraries, and the example plugins in plugins/examples/
are
all licensed under the ISC license. However,
the VST3 bindings used by
nih_export_vst3!()
are licensed under the GPLv3 license. This means that
unless you replace these bindings with your own bindings made from scratch, any
VST3 plugins built with NIH-plug need to be able to comply with the terms of the
GPLv3 license.
The other plugins in the plugins/
directory may be licensed under the GPLv3
license. Check the plugin's Cargo.toml
file for more information.