libgsm 1.0.22-ok1 source package in openKylin

Changelog

libgsm (1.0.22-ok1) nile; urgency=high

  * Build for openKylin.

 -- Luoyaoming <email address hidden>  Wed, 24 Apr 2024 15:01:49 +0800

Upload details

Uploaded by:
luoyaoming
Sponsored by:
Cibot
Uploaded to:
Nile V2.0
Original maintainer:
Openkylin Developers
Architectures:
any
Section:
libs
Urgency:
Very Urgent

Publishing See full publishing history

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Huanghe V3.0 proposed main libs
Huanghe V3.0 release main libs
Nile V2.0 release main libs
Nile V2.0 proposed main libs

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
libgsm_1.0.22.orig.tar.gz 65.0 KiB f0072e91f6bb85a878b2f6dbf4a0b7c850c4deb8049d554c65340b3bf69df0ac
libgsm_1.0.22-ok1.debian.tar.xz 8.0 KiB 2aa27d233501ccf4381de5c6ae49246f0623c5fb4f6d4e63da396df75e53589e
libgsm_1.0.22-ok1.dsc 1.9 KiB 4caf7aeeb32f28a61f85982eeadc6382b867ea355d89ca6d2ff6dc7e167425ff

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

libgsm-tools: User binaries for a GSM speech compressor

 This package contains user binaries for libgsm, an implementation of
 the European GSM 06.10 provisional standard for full-rate speech
 transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which uses RPE/LTP (residual pulse
 excitation/long term prediction) coding at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.

libgsm-tools-dbgsym: debug symbols for libgsm-tools
libgsm1: Shared libraries for GSM speech compressor

 This package contains runtime shared libraries for libgsm, an
 implementation of the European GSM 06.10 provisional standard for
 full-rate speech transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which uses RPE/LTP
 (residual pulse excitation/long term prediction) coding at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.

libgsm1-dbgsym: debug symbols for libgsm1
libgsm1-dev: Development libraries for a GSM speech compressor

 This package contains header files and development libraries for
 libgsm, an implementation of the European GSM 06.10 provisional
 standard for full-rate speech transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which
 uses RPE/LTP (residual pulse excitation/long term prediction) coding
 at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.