SoX

{{Short description|Cross-platform free software digital audio editor}}

{{Other uses|Sox (disambiguation)}}

{{Refimprove|date=June 2021}}

{{Infobox software

| name = Sound eXchange

| developer = Chris Bagwell, et al.

| released = {{Start date and age|1991|07|df=yes}}

| latest release version= 14.4.2

| latest release date = {{Start date and age|2015|02|22|df=yes}}

| programming language = C

| operating system = Cross-platform: Windows, Linux, OS X

| genre = Audio editing software

| license = GPL-2.0-or-later
LGPL-2.1-or-later{{cite web |url=https://sourceforge.net/p/sox/code/ci/master/tree/COPYING |title=SoX licensing }}

| website = {{URL|https://sourceforge.net/projects/sox/}}

}}

Sound eXchange (SoX) is a cross-platform audio editing software. It has a command-line interface, and is written in standard C. It is free software, licensed under GPL-2.0-or-later, with libsox licensed under LGPL-2.1-or-later, and distributed by Chris Bagwell through SourceForge.

History

SoX was created in July 1991 by Lance Norskog and posted to the Usenet group alt.sources as Aural eXchange: Sound sample translator. With the second release (in November the same year) it was renamed Sound Exchange. Norskog continued to maintain and release SoX via Usenet, File Transfer Protocol (FTP), and then the web until early 1995, at which time SoX was at version 11 (gamma). In May 1996, Chris Bagwell started to maintain and release updated versions of SoX, starting with version sox-11gamma-cb. In September 2000, Bagwell registered the project at SourceForge with project name "sox". The registration was announced on 4 September 2000{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} and SoX 12.17 was released on 7 September 2000.

Throughout its history SoX has had many contributing authors; Guido van Rossum, best known as creator of the programming language Python, was a significant contributor in SoX's early days.{{cite web |last=van Rossum |first=Guido |title=Guido van Rossum - Personal Home Page |url=https://gvanrossum.github.io/ |website=Guido's Personal Home Page |access-date=5 November 2021 |quote=And here is a link to SOX, to which I contributed some early code.}}

Features

Image:Spectrogram-of-swept-triangular-wave.png

Some of SoX's features are:

Examples

SoX being used to process some audio:

$ sox track1.wav track1-processed.flac remix - norm -3

highpass 22 gain -3 rate 48k norm -3 dither

Input File : 'track1.wav'

Channels : 2

Sample Rate : 44100

Precision : 16-bit

Duration : 00:02:54.97 = 7716324 samples = 13123 CDDA sectors

Sample Encoding: 16-bit Signed Integer PCM

Endian Type : little

Output File : 'track1-processed.flac'

Channels : 1

Sample Rate : 48000

Precision : 16-bit

Duration : 00:02:54.97 = 8398720 samples ~ 13123 CDDA sectors

Sample Encoding: 16-bit FLAC

sox: effects chain: input 44100Hz 2 channels 16 bits (multi)

sox: effects chain: remix 44100Hz 2 channels 16 bits (multi)

sox: effects chain: norm 44100Hz 1 channels 16 bits

sox: effects chain: highpass 44100Hz 1 channels 16 bits

sox: effects chain: gain 44100Hz 1 channels 16 bits (multi)

sox: effects chain: rate 44100Hz 1 channels 16 bits

sox: effects chain: norm 48000Hz 1 channels 16 bits

sox: effects chain: dither 48000Hz 1 channels 16 bits (multi)

sox: effects chain: output 48000Hz 1 channels 16 bits (multi)

Playing some audio files:

$ play *.ogg

01 - Summer's Cauldron.ogg:

Encoding: Vorbis

Channels: 2 @ 16-bit Track: 01 of 15

Samplerate: 44100Hz Album: Skylarking

Album gain: -7.8dB Artist: XTC

Duration: 00:03:19.99 Title: Summer's Cauldron

In:20.8% 00:00:41.61 [00:02:38.38] Out:1.84M [ ====|==== ] Clip:0

Vulnerabilities

SoX has had several vulnerabilities listed in the National Vulnerability Database since its last public release in 2015. These vulnerabilities include stack and heap overflows and denial-of-service attacks.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}