This backend provides read-write access to the JACK Audio Connection Kit low-latency audio transport server for the transport of control data via either JACK midi ports or control voltage (CV) inputs and outputs.
Option | Example value | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
debug |
on |
off |
Print info level notices from the JACK connection |
errors |
on |
off |
Print error level notices from the JACK connection |
Option | Example value | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name |
Controller |
MIDIMonster |
Client name for the JACK connection |
server |
jackserver |
default |
JACK server identifier to connect to |
epn-tx |
short |
full |
Configure whether to clear the active parameter number after transmitting a MIDI nrpn or rpn parameter. |
Channels (corresponding to JACK ports) need to be configured with their type and, if applicable, value limits. To configure a port, specify it in the instance configuration using the following syntax:
port_name = <type> <direction> min <minimum> max <maximum>
Port names may be any string except for the instance configuration keywords name
and server
.
The following type
values are currently supported:
midi
: JACK MIDI port for transmitting MIDI event messagescv
: JACK audio port for transmitting DC offset "control voltage" samples (requiresmin
/max
configuration)
direction
may be one of in
or out
, as seen from the perspective of the MIDIMonster core, thus
in
means data is being read from the JACK server and out
transfers data into the JACK server.
The following example instance configuration would create a MIDI port sending data into JACK, a control voltage output
sending data between -1
and 1
, and a control voltage input receiving data with values between 0
and 10
.
midi_out = midi out
cv_out = cv out min -1 max 1
cv_in = cv in min 0.0 max 10.0
Input CV samples outside the configured range will be clipped. The MIDIMonster will not generate output CV samples outside of the configured range.
CV ports are exposed as single MIDIMonster channel and directly map to their normalised values.
MIDI ports provide subchannels for the various MIDI controls available. Each MIDI port carries 16 MIDI channels (numbered 0 through 15), each of which has 128 note controls (numbered 0 through 127), corresponding pressure controls for each note, 128 control change (CC) controls (numbered likewise), one channel wide "aftertouch" control and one channel-wide pitchbend control.
Every MIDI channel also provides rpn
and nrpn
controls, which are implemented on top of the MIDI protocol, using
the CC controls 101/100/99/98/38/6. Both control types have 14-bit IDs and 14-bit values.
A MIDI port subchannel is specified using the syntax channel<channel>.<type><index>
. The shorthand ch
may be
used instead of the word channel
(Note that channel
here refers to the MIDI channel number).
The following values are recognized for type
:
cc
- Control Changesnote
- Note On/Off messagespressure
- Note pressure/aftertouch messagesaftertouch
- Channel-wide aftertouch messagespitch
- Channel pitchbend messagesprogram
- Channel program change messagesrpn
- Registered parameter numbers (14-bit extension)nrpn
- Non-registered parameter numbers (14-bit extension)
The pitch
, aftertouch
and program
messages/events are channel-wide, thus they can be specified as channel<channel>.<type>
.
Example mappings:
jack1.cv_in > jack1.midi_out.ch0.note3
jack1.midi_in.ch0.pitch > jack1.cv_out
jack2.midi_in.ch0.nrpn900 > jack1.midi_out.ch1.rpn1
jack1.midi_in.ch15.note1 > jack1.midi_out.ch4.program
The MIDI subchannel syntax is intentionally kept compatible to the different MIDI backends also supported by the MIDIMonster
MIDI extended parameter numbers (EPNs, the rpn
and nrpn
control types) will also generate events on the controls (CC 101 through
98, 38 and 6) that are used as the lower layer transport. When using EPNs, mapping those controls is probably not useful.
EPN control types support only the full 14-bit transfer encoding, not the shorter variant transmitting only the 7 high-order bits. This may be changed if there is sufficient interest in the functionality.
While JACK has rudimentary capabilities for transporting OSC messages, configuring and parsing such channels with this backend would take a great amount of dedicated syntax & code. CV ports can provide fine-grained single control channels as an alternative to MIDI. This feature may be implemented at some point in the future.