liblo is a lightweight library that provides an easy to use implementation of the OSC protocol. For more information about the OSC protocol, please see:
- OSC at CNMAT
- https://opensoundcontrol.stanford.edu/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Sound_Control
The official liblo homepage is here:
liblo is portable to most UNIX systems (including OS X) and Windows. It is released under the GNU Lesser General Public Licence (LGPL) v2.1 or later. See COPYING for details.
To build and install liblo, read INSTALL in the main liblo directory. liblo is configured as a dynamically-linked library. To use liblo in a new application, after
configure
you should install liblo with
make install
so that the liblo library can be located by your application.
To build with MS Visual Studio on Windows, please use CMake as
described next. See build/README.md
for more details.
If you prefer the CMake build system, support has been added. Instead
of the configure
step listed in the previous section, create a build
directory and initialize CMake:
mkdir ~/build/liblo
cmake ~/source/liblo/cmake <more options..>
make
See examples
for example source code for a simple client and two
servers:
-
example_server.c
useslo_server_thread_start()
to create a liblo server in an separate thread. -
nonblocking_server_example.c
usesselect()
to wait for either console input or OSC messages, all in a single thread. -
example_client.c
uses liblo to send OSC messages to a server.
These examples will work without installing liblo. This is
accomplished by a shell script. For example, examples/client_example
is a shell script that runs the "real" program
examples/.libs/example_client
. Because of this indirection, you
cannot run example_client
with a debugger.
To debug applications using liblo, one option is to include all the liblo source code in the application rather than linking with the liblo library. For more information about this, please see the (libtool manual)1
To compile liblo with debugging flags, use,
./configure --enable-debug
liblo was written to support both IPv4 and IPv6, however it has caused various problems along the way because most of the currently available OSC applications like Pd and SuperCollider don't listen on IPv6 sockets. IPv6 is currently disabled by default, but you can enable it using
./configure --enable-ipv6
Some platforms may have both poll()
and select()
available for listening efficiently on multiple servers/sockets. In this case, liblo will default to using poll
since it is comsidered to be more scalable. However, on some platforms (e.g. MacOS) the liblo code path using select()
is considerably faster so you may wish to explictly disable support for poll
if your applications do not require extreme scalability and are sensitive to small differences in efficiency. This can be done when compiling the library from source, either using configure:
./configure --disable-poll
or if using cmake:
cmake -DWITH_POLL=OFF <path>