The CMT LADSPA plugin collection is written in C++ and uses a little additional sophistication to make plugin writing easier. This document describes how to add a new plugin to the toolkit.
CMT plugins interpret LADSPA_Handle
entities as
pointers to objects derived from the CMT_PluginInstance
class. Plugin instance structures are defined by subclassing this, so
writing a descendent of CMT_PluginInstance
is the first
thing to do. The CMT library provides its own implementation of
connect_port()
, cleanup()
and a templated
form of instantiate()
(see
CMT_Instantiate<>()
). These calls assume that any
instantiation or cleanup mechanisms required will be written in the
constructor or destructor of the class.
When writing a plugin module, an initialisation function should be
included. To ensure this is called, add a call to the
initialise_modules()
function in
descriptor.cpp
. The module should also be added to the
makefile
.
Your initialisation function should construct new
CMT_Desctiptor
plugin descriptor structures and pass them
to registerNewPluginDescriptor()
. The
CMT_Descriptor
is directly descended from
LADSPA_Descriptor
but provides constructor, destructor
and addPort()
methods.
All plugins need unique IDs. During development, use values between 1 and 1000. When the plugin is ready, please request a block of IDs from ids@ladspa.org.
In practice, CMT plugin writing is probably best learned by
example. For a simple case, see the mixer.cpp
module. This defines a SimpleMixer
class to handle
instance data, a runSimpleMixer()
function for use with
it and a mixer_descriptor()
function to provide a
description of the plugin to the CMT core. The
mixer_descriptor()
function is declared and referenced in
the descriptor.cpp
module. Additional information is
available in cmt.h
and ladspa.h
.
CMT plugins are licenced under GPL version 2. Please read and understand this license before submitting plugins to the library.