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game-music-emu is a collection of audio emulators for assorted video game console hardware. It was originally developed by Blargg and used as the basis for several other software products before being converted into a library. It was then fixed to build on additional platforms and is used to support audio plugins for other libraries, such as GStreamer and FFmpeg.
The latest release is version 0.6.2 to address another security vulnerability, this one in the NSF Enhanced (NSFE) emulator code. See Issue #14 for additional details, or CVE-2017-17446.
Some other minor additional changes and hardening fixes had been committed since the 0.6.1 a year ago but have been pushed back to the next release.
The last released tarball (for version 0.6.2) is available from the Downloads page.
- Michael Pyne, 2017-12-06
You'll need at least CMake version 2.6.
Then you'll need to do something like this: (note these are Linux/UNIX instructions. Although CMake should work on Mac OS X and Windows I don't have those systems available to test, and you can always still build it yourself like you could before :P):
#!sh
$ tar xjvf game-music-emu-0.6.1.tar.bz2
$ cd game-music-emu-0.6.1
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ../ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local # See below for more options
$ make && sudo make install
- The
cmake ../
part is to run CMake, passing the parent directory (../) as the source directory. - -D for CMake begins a definition, so
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
sets the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX (where CMake installs to) to/usr/local
. You can change this to be anywhere you'd like to install game-music-emu. - Compiling in only certain game music emulators is supported. By default, all available types are compiled in. You can remove a type by passing
-DUSE_GME_
type=FALSE
on the command line when running CMake. Make sure to pass more than one if you have more than one type to remove. The valid options are listed below:
Emulator type | CMake option |
---|---|
Spectrum ZX | -DUSE_GME_AY=0 |
Game Boy | -DUSE_GME_GBS=0 |
Sega Genesis | -DUSE_GME_GYM=0 |
NEC PC Engine / TurboGrafx-16 | -DUSE_GME_HES=0 |
MSX / Other Z80 | -DUSE_GME_KSS=0 |
NES | -DUSE_GME_NSF=0 |
NES Extended support | -DUSE_GME_NSFE=0 |
Atari SAP | -DUSE_GME_SAP=0 |
SNES | -DUSE_GME_SPC=0 |
Sega VGM/VGZ | -DUSE_GME_VGM=0 |
Note that some emulator code is shared. For instance the audio processing code used by Spectrum ZX happened to also be used by PC Engine, so if you select PC Engine and disable Spectrum ZX, you may notice a bit of code still being used, but this is not an error.
If you're a developer using libgme the only public API is the one defined in gme/gme.h
This API includes a gme_type_list()
function, which you must call at runtime. It returns a NULL-terminated list of available types (alternately, you can simply try to play a file and allow libgme to fail if it doesn't support it).
To test the library, you can use the included (and very simple) GUI player application (which requires libSDL) in the player/ directory. It is not built by default, but you can cd to the game-music-emu/build/player directory and run make from there after you've already run CMake.
From there just run ./player /path/to/file
on any supported file type.
If you have issues building you can contact Michael Pyne at mpyne at kde org. I know a bit about emulation but absolutely nothing about the actual internals of how any of the emulator cores operate, so you'll still need to ask blargg or someone else if you have troubles with the actual operation of the emulators. But fair warning, no one else seems to still be around.
game-music-emu moved to Bitbucket in 2015 since the old Google Code repository was closed down. Blargg (the original author) no longer has time to maintain the code, so it's being kept on life support by Michael Pyne. If you're interested in continuing development or maintenance please get in touch, though I will continue to provide security and other minor fixes as I can in the meantime.