FSO ringtones
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Kbjorgensen (Talk | contribs) |
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/usr/share/sounds/Arkanoid_PSID.sid | /usr/share/sounds/Arkanoid_PSID.sid | ||
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+ | Fun fact : according to the gstreamer documentation, .sid files are in fact small Commodore 64 programs that are executed on an emulated 6502 CPU and a MOS 6581 sound chip. | ||
Now to change it is a little bit of fun. | Now to change it is a little bit of fun. | ||
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/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/framework/subsystems/oeventd/ | /usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/framework/subsystems/oeventd/ | ||
− | and open the file | + | and open the file parser.py |
− | #this will be /var/lib/python-support/python2.5/framework/subsystems/oeventd/ | + | #this will be /var/lib/python-support/python2.5/framework/subsystems/oeventd/parser.py if you are using FSO under Debian |
− | + | Search for PlaySound. Edit the 2 lines to point to your wav or mp3 file. | |
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There does seem to be a lag of a few vibrations before the sound starts but that might desirable. (I didn't compare against the original code). The code to specifically handle formats, (oggs for example) can be a little complicated and makes things messy. | There does seem to be a lag of a few vibrations before the sound starts but that might desirable. (I didn't compare against the original code). The code to specifically handle formats, (oggs for example) can be a little complicated and makes things messy. | ||
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mv receiver.pyo /home/root | mv receiver.pyo /home/root | ||
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+ | #receiver.pyo will be receiver.pyc in FSO under Debian | ||
python | python | ||
>>> import py_compile | >>> import py_compile | ||
− | >>> py_compile.compile(" | + | >>> py_compile.compile("parser.py") |
>>> quit() | >>> quit() | ||
#You may not have the py_compile module. You can install them like this: | #You may not have the py_compile module. You can install them like this: |
Revision as of 11:57, 21 September 2008
Key pages on: FSO |
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The ringtone in milestone 2 is stored here:
/usr/share/sounds/Arkanoid_PSID.sid
Fun fact : according to the gstreamer documentation, .sid files are in fact small Commodore 64 programs that are executed on an emulated 6502 CPU and a MOS 6581 sound chip.
Now to change it is a little bit of fun.
first change directory to
/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/framework/subsystems/oeventd/
and open the file parser.py
- this will be /var/lib/python-support/python2.5/framework/subsystems/oeventd/parser.py if you are using FSO under Debian
Search for PlaySound. Edit the 2 lines to point to your wav or mp3 file.
There does seem to be a lag of a few vibrations before the sound starts but that might desirable. (I didn't compare against the original code). The code to specifically handle formats, (oggs for example) can be a little complicated and makes things messy. Since, it seems like this code is changing in FSO, I'm leaving it for the moment.
Then
mv receiver.pyo /home/root
- receiver.pyo will be receiver.pyc in FSO under Debian
python >>> import py_compile >>> py_compile.compile("parser.py") >>> quit()
- You may not have the py_compile module. You can install them like this:
opkg install python-compile
/etc/init.d/fso-frameworkd restart && /etc/init.d/zhone-session stop && sleep 2 && /etc/init.d/zhone-session start
- I've only run the above restart commands in Debian so I'm not sure if they are the same in the default FSO image
- the default zhone-session file doesn't have a working restart command, hence the stop->sleep 2->start
zhone for FSO seems to be launched by Xsession.d so maybe try:
/etc/init.d/xserver-nodm restart
Now you can link /usr/share/sounds/ringtone to any mp3 (or other sound file if you took the second option) and that will be your ringtone