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    Convolution gain louder at higher sample rates

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    samplerateconvolution
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    • Dan KorneffD
      Dan Korneff @Christoph Hart
      last edited by

      @Christoph-Hart 🤣

      Dan Korneff - Producer / Mixer / Audio Nerd

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      • M
        mwplugs
        last edited by

        convolution is producing a distorted digital noise at sample rates 44.1 and 48khz anything above the behave perfect. but with every one tested there is a distortion below 88.2

        Dan KorneffD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Dan KorneffD
          Dan Korneff @mwplugs
          last edited by

          @mwplugs I'm about to add convolution to a project. I'll report what happens on my end.

          Dan Korneff - Producer / Mixer / Audio Nerd

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          • M
            mwplugs @Dan Korneff
            last edited by

            @dustbro ok yeah i cant figure it out for the life of me

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            • Dan KorneffD
              Dan Korneff
              last edited by Dan Korneff

              @Christoph-Hart I could use a little help getting Engine.getSampleRate() to work properly.
              I would like to use the sample rate as a variable to compensate for the gain difference with different sample rates.
              I've added a global variable with Engine.getSampleRate() to the preparedToPlay callback, which works in HISE, but the exported plugin shows "undefined" for the sample rate. 🤷

              here's a snippit:

              HiseSnippet 1224.3oc0X8+SabCE2GvMQRajZq1e.V7SAsD5EZfRWU0nDftnUfnFFqSUnNm6bRrvw9zYGFYUU6Os8ezz9OX6YeG4tKbvXYZnQ9g.98M+487yedF5DI8oJkLB4T53IgTjyCc6NQnG1ZHgIPs2E47DWEYTHmhiHZJVSUZzNSBIJEM.43r3aL14TZIj8ye7M6P3DgOMUDBchj4SeKaDSmJsy1eGiy2mDPOlMJi0M2tsuTzRxkiALsnqGJj3eFY.8PhwrEbQNewdALsLpqFviBrYGYvjtCk+rH19SXJVON0rnApKDnXwnVCY7fNWluJDxYoNoY+hwY+W5d.KfMUdZU3QVE3TOxVCbVHOjVJGjZbcPZeIOvDfqAdNYf2Rwv6wtc8iXg5TMFr8.21BMMpOAJ6YgUrsnE90EcaIAKD50FQNiteDrXpGU2zyqFdCOuUeYkxUJCEekFeNIB20dp+NHidKoGkieE9xfLfpaIGEJEvhpqLicqXhSZTLsGFioBEQyjBHL19KSP1qeepODgYsYkXnLSfWSQAa0zKzqTCmrqXi1uFuB9qveqToS8X0Whe5SwfGXtE7ZINSW70lnLPzqvenYyFPQo4Vdv2as05v2uXSyu234a1z7iW.h7N0tEDNGGJU1y2ragJ+djM8NgvGSUl8wqV8F0puds5OqV8l0puwoSQshYiz.nxXvtdHSAwA7yD19xHbUEFTkG5qVo7mpTFCeLa4AvQ83v1h.5ElhdNKWiYDeT+pET0fCFrUMV1GODzmuxYBe72ydrYNfdsVGw5MVSqdEsFA0JnP7gL.8zUutJfM4MHJKYjElUJ+YSQAJKiE91VLo3Poldjn5pk+T4Rk+bY7rp52uPclF7HImSiJTsgoJ5lbrpX7ndznZwncpgv0277CO31wO3GeeKigRQaASeDTAiWmxfXzEm0Wp0CMMYyJJMGyJ0lZEXVpnqRPgR3Cfe66auKQSLbVIx.6BoQZlIac1kdNL.HlAqj6tT0YZYn01DRDjiq1psRB+l8BOhEXY7xSCftHcXwnsmjt3G21vMXnvywMXuECyatBWJvnKCFyI57z7l1zDEvYaN9TCmoPwzSxNu6e.2uWgb+MJpzdKg6ic6vz9CKFuKT.dgin+qwaxjzJtwz6ofcI28e+cvXyEtZsqbRaEr+Ff7vjk38eeihFX576toWtCingjH5wxNbxjppoMi0v83R+y5x9k3K5C3xdD9Lig.h28DCXBpYbWp3plAbkfqJJImtVXDyLG8JdVzTsb7NgwI5NFbT0eHQHnb07PO4l+bX4a24PdxH3gZYqTobTYQ4Mxv72zh8N4XMSL3.BLgA3.bOb7ntviD8osRxbPlyBFZo30dl0lN9tTQfcweBeRT1vr1IQYiKU9ujQK6sfkm9ZZ6br2j9Z5YGLdcul9m.1keaWJTKyd88GXA5gYI8J381sEmCHsijShl8x+h2zamaLmuc9lYnLoD9dCi5Sbsk76S.11Rb+AvOxsC4+CMD2E7I2E6wHhej7i9wrolqlKak.4sv9mLWx8.yZbCjk1G7y0aMOzH3Om8i99lwx0g5Sw9r9b3yylCeZNG9rwb3ylygOOeN7YqazGy+IgWOVKGE2+CB5rmcZiiydBBzIauJf9KvoIPOm
              

              Dan Korneff - Producer / Mixer / Audio Nerd

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              • Christoph HartC
                Christoph Hart
                last edited by

                You're declaring the global variable in the prepareCallback itself (I wasn't aware that this is possible, might have to add a safe check to prevent this at some point).

                This means that the variable will be initialised long after the interface script has run, so undefined is exactly what's happening...

                BTW, the safest way to use global variables is to define them in the first script (most likely the interface script) and also tuck them behind a condition so that it just gets initialised if it doesn't exist:

                if(!isDefined(myGlobalVariable))
                {
                   global myVariable = 90;
                }
                

                If you don't do this, the variable will get reinitialised everytime you compile the interface script which is not a problem in your case, but might lead to annoying issues when using more complex data (because the other scripts might use a reference to the old object).

                Dan KorneffD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • Dan KorneffD
                  Dan Korneff @Christoph Hart
                  last edited by

                  @Christoph-Hart Thanks so much for this! I think I have it (mostly) working.
                  Any words of advice on how to deal with a user changing sample rates while the plugin is loaded?
                  I tried this in the preparedToPlay callback with no luck

                  if (HostSampleRate != Engine.getSampleRate())
                  {
                       ..... some function to update HostSampleRate
                  }

                  Dan Korneff - Producer / Mixer / Audio Nerd

                  lalalandsynthL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • lalalandsynthL
                    lalalandsynth @Dan Korneff
                    last edited by

                    @dustbro said in Convolution gain louder at higher sample rates:

                    uch for this! I think I have it (mostly) working.
                    Any words of advice on how to deal with a user changing sample rates while the plugin is loaded?
                    I tried this in the preparedToPlay callback with no luck

                    Was this ever solved or do I need to monitor the sample rates and change gain accordingly ?

                    https://lalalandaudio.com/

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                    lalalandsynthL Dan KorneffD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • lalalandsynthL
                      lalalandsynth @lalalandsynth
                      last edited by

                      @lalalandsynth ittybittybump. :)

                      https://lalalandaudio.com/

                      https://lalalandsynth.com/

                      https://www.facebook.com/lalalandsynth

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                      • Dan KorneffD
                        Dan Korneff @lalalandsynth
                        last edited by

                        @lalalandsynth I believe you still have to self monitor these changes

                        Dan Korneff - Producer / Mixer / Audio Nerd

                        Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Christoph HartC
                          Christoph Hart @Dan Korneff
                          last edited by

                          Actually I'm not sure whether this is a bug in the convolution engine or a physical /mathematical law that you need to counteract manually. I'd love to encorporate a automatic fix for this into the convolution module directly, but it's not so easy, so maybe something can help me out here.

                          Let's assume we have a impulse response at 48 kHz with a single dirac at 0dB at sample position 512. And we're convoluting a signal with the same samplerate, then it would be a simple static delay of 512 samples without modification of the gain. Now If we switch to 96kHz, the impulse response needs to be resampled to match the 96kHz signal input. However this means that the upsampling will duplicate the dirac impulse (so that in the 96k response, we'll have a dirac at sampleposition 1024 and 1025, both at 0dB. If we now convolute the 96k signal, we'll get two delays short after each other which basically causes a +6db gain.

                          In this simple example, the solution would be a 6dB attenuation when we double the samplerate (+12db if we quadruple it, etc), but this is only working for this extremely simple test case - as soon as you have a "real" impulse response the upsampling will not be in this linear relation.

                          I'm not sure how other convolution reverbs take this into account (or if they don't), so if anybody has a clue about this, let me know.

                          d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • d.healeyD
                            d.healey @Christoph Hart
                            last edited by d.healey

                            @Christoph-Hart Might be of interest - https://github.com/juce-framework/JUCE/commit/68d30f9c8d8571acf43a39caffc7d5b64ed9f253

                            And here's the forum post - https://forum.juce.com/t/dsp-convolution-changing-level-depending-on-the-host-sample-rate/

                            Libre Wave - Freedom respecting instruments and effects
                            My Patreon - HISE tutorials
                            YouTube Channel - Public HISE tutorials

                            Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Christoph HartC
                              Christoph Hart @d.healey
                              last edited by

                              @d-healey Well the comment below the commit is correct, the problem is that you can't expect the linearity between resample factor and output gain - you even can't expect the gain change to be the same for each input signal, so it's a highly imprecise thing after all.

                              lalalandsynthL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • lalalandsynthL
                                lalalandsynth @Christoph Hart
                                last edited by

                                @christoph-hart I guess it would be helpful to have an approximation at least, I guess not many users are switching sample rates mid project?

                                https://lalalandaudio.com/

                                https://lalalandsynth.com/

                                https://www.facebook.com/lalalandsynth

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                                • ustkU
                                  ustk
                                  last edited by

                                  Or getting a tool that tests different samplerates for an impulse and spits out a compensation table (why not an API we can directly use in script? but execution time might be a problem, or not with the new background thread...)

                                  As @Christoph-Hart said it also depends on the input, but this is a lesser problem since users need to compensate for the signal they put in (as it's always been the case in any audio processing)

                                  Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

                                  d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • d.healeyD
                                    d.healey @ustk
                                    last edited by

                                    What about providing several impulses at different sample rates and loading the one based on the "current" sample rate?

                                    Libre Wave - Freedom respecting instruments and effects
                                    My Patreon - HISE tutorials
                                    YouTube Channel - Public HISE tutorials

                                    ustkU 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ustkU
                                      ustk @d.healey
                                      last edited by

                                      @d-healey I'm not sure this erases the gain problem, because you have to resample them somewhere anyway, but I might be mistaken...

                                      Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

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                                      • ustkU
                                        ustk
                                        last edited by ustk

                                        Here's an interesting consideration in the last post:

                                        Link Preview Image
                                        Is it ok to resample impulse response?

                                        I have some room impulse response at 48kHz sampling rate. I have recording at 16kHz sampling rate. I want to apply impulse response on the recording. What I do now is downsample impulse response 48...

                                        favicon

                                        Signal Processing Stack Exchange (dsp.stackexchange.com)

                                        My opinion would be to record them at different samplerates from the start, so you never resample, and load them as @d-healey mentioned
                                        Although this might not fix the fact that regarding the frequency domain, you'll have additional energy in the upper frequencies at higher SR and so have to deal with (a filter might be enough though)

                                        Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

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                                        • ustkU
                                          ustk
                                          last edited by

                                          Could someone provide me with an IR at two different SR for which you approximately know the gain difference?
                                          I'd like to make some tests...

                                          Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

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                                          • bendursoB
                                            bendurso
                                            last edited by

                                            This is from two years ago, was there any change in Hise? I have this same problem.

                                            Is it possible to decrease the volume of the Convolution Reverb samples with some configuration? So I could decrease the volume of the samples according to the sample rate.

                                            Dan KorneffD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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