page.title=Audio Attributes @jd:body
Audio players support attributes that define how the audio system handles routing, volume, and focus decisions for the specified source. Applications can attach attributes to an audio playback (such as music played by a streaming service or a notification for a new email) then pass the audio source attributes to the framework, where the audio system uses the attributes to make mixing decisions and to notify applications about the state of the system.
Note: Applications can also attach attributes to an audio recording (such as audio captured in a video recording), but this functionality is not exposed in the public API.
In Android 4.4 and earlier, the framework made mixing decisions using only the audio stream type. However, basing such decisions on stream type was too limiting to produce quality output across multiple applications and devices. For example, on a mobile device, some applications (i.e. Google Maps) played driving directions on the STREAM_MUSIC stream type; however, on mobile devices in projection mode (i.e. Android Auto), applications cannot mix driving directions with other media streams.
Using the audio attribute API, applications can now provide the audio system with detailed information about a specific audio source:
For dynamics processing, applications must distinguish between movie, music, and speech content. Information about the data itself may also matter, such as loudness and peak sample value.
Usage specifies the context in which the stream is used, providing information about why the sound is playing and what the sound is used for. Usage information is more expressive than a stream type and allows platforms or routing policies to refine volume or routing decisions.
Supply one of the following usage values for any instance:
USAGE_UNKNOWN
USAGE_MEDIA
USAGE_VOICE_COMMUNICATION
USAGE_VOICE_COMMUNICATION_SIGNALLING
USAGE_ALARM
USAGE_NOTIFICATION
USAGE_NOTIFICATION_RINGTONE
USAGE_NOTIFICATION_COMMUNICATION_INSTANT
USAGE_NOTIFICATION_COMMUNICATION_DELAYED
USAGE_NOTIFICATION_EVENT
USAGE_ASSISTANCE_ACCESSIBILITY
USAGE_ASSISTANCE_NAVIGATION_GUIDANCE
USAGE_ASSISTANCE_SONIFICATION
USAGE_GAME
Audio attribute usage values are mutually exclusive. For examples, refer to
USAGE_MEDIA
and
USAGE_ALARM
definitions; for exceptions, refer to the
AudioAttributes.Builder
definition.
Content type defines what the sound is and expresses the general category of the content such as
movie, speech, or beep/ringtone. The audio framework uses content type information to selectively
configure audio post-processing blocks. While supplying the content type is optional, you should
include type information whenever the content type is known, such as using
CONTENT_TYPE_MOVIE
for a movie streaming service or CONTENT_TYPE_MUSIC
for a music playback application.
Supply one of the following content type values for any instance:
CONTENT_TYPE_UNKNOWN
(default)CONTENT_TYPE_MOVIE
CONTENT_TYPE_MUSIC
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION
CONTENT_TYPE_SPEECH
Audio attribute content type values are mutually exclusive. For details on content types, refer to the audio attribute API.
Flags specify how the audio framework applies effects to the audio playback. Supply one or more of the following flags for an instance:
FLAG_AUDIBILITY_ENFORCED
. Requests the system ensure the audibility of the
sound. Use to address the needs of legacy STREAM_SYSTEM_ENFORCED
(such as forcing
camera shutter sounds).HW_AV_SYNC
. Requests the system select an output stream that supports hardware A/V
synchronization.Audio attribute flags are non-exclusive (can be combined). For details on these flags, refer to the audio attribute API.
In this example, AudioAttributes.Builder defines the AudioAttributes to be used by a new AudioTrack instance:
AudioTrack myTrack = new AudioTrack( new AudioAttributes.Builder() .setUsage(AudioAttributes.USAGE_MEDIA) .setContentType(AudioAttributes.CONTENT_TYPE_MUSIC) .build(), myFormat, myBuffSize, AudioTrack.MODE_STREAM, mySession);
Application developers should use audio attributes when creating or updating applications for Android 5.0. However, applications are not required to take advantage of attributes; they can handle legacy stream types only or remain unaware of attributes (i.e. a generic media player that doesn’t know anything about the content it’s playing).
In such cases, the framework maintains backwards compatibility with older devices and Android releases by automatically translating legacy audio stream types to audio attributes. However, the framework does not enforce or guarantee this mapping across devices, manufacturers, or Android releases.
Compatibility mappings:
Android 5.0 | Android 4.4 and earlier |
---|---|
CONTENT_TYPE_SPEECH USAGE_VOICE_COMMUNICATION
|
STREAM_VOICE_CALL
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION USAGE_ASSISTANCE_SONIFICATION
|
STREAM_SYSTEM
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION USAGE_NOTIFICATION_RINGTONE
|
STREAM_RING
|
CONTENT_TYPE_MUSIC USAGE_UNKNOWN USAGE_MEDIA USAGE_GAME USAGE_ASSISTANCE_ACCESSIBILITY USAGE_ASSISTANCE_NAVIGATION_GUIDANCE |
STREAM_MUSIC
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION USAGE_ALARM
|
STREAM_ALARM
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION USAGE_NOTIFICATION USAGE_NOTIFICATION_COMMUNICATION_REQUEST USAGE_NOTIFICATION_COMMUNICATION_INSTANT USAGE_NOTIFICATION_COMMUNICATION_DELAYED USAGE_NOTIFICATION_EVENT |
STREAM_NOTIFICATION
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SPEECH
|
(@hide) STREAM_BLUETOOTH_SCO
|
FLAG_AUDIBILITY_ENFORCED
|
(@hide) STREAM_SYSTEM_ENFORCED
|
CONTENT_TYPE_SONIFICATION USAGE_VOICE_COMMUNICATION_SIGNALLING
|
(@hide) STREAM_DTMF
|
Note: @hide streams are used internally by the framework but are not part of the public API.