libgsm 1.0.22-1build1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

libgsm (1.0.22-1build1) noble; urgency=high

  * No change rebuild for frame pointers (and time_t).

 -- Julian Andres Klode <email address hidden>  Thu, 18 Apr 2024 19:47:46 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Julian Andres Klode
Uploaded to:
Noble
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
any
Section:
devel
Urgency:
Very Urgent

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Oracular release universe devel
Noble release universe devel

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
libgsm_1.0.22.orig.tar.gz 65.0 KiB f0072e91f6bb85a878b2f6dbf4a0b7c850c4deb8049d554c65340b3bf69df0ac
libgsm_1.0.22-1build1.debian.tar.xz 10.4 KiB 4092fbfcf3ac53cebdb8c9940fbe4f8856a9c4f87a97b50ea427f92a8b9d0d43
libgsm_1.0.22-1build1.dsc 2.1 KiB 816f7d703c2742fe509c99a00132283b3179a50316da66a154a973bcd1ef8369

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

libgsm-tools: User binaries for a GSM speech compressor

 This package contains user binaries for libgsm, an implementation of
 the European GSM 06.10 provisional standard for full-rate speech
 transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which uses RPE/LTP (residual pulse
 excitation/long term prediction) coding at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.

libgsm-tools-dbgsym: debug symbols for libgsm-tools
libgsm1: Shared libraries for GSM speech compressor

 This package contains runtime shared libraries for libgsm, an
 implementation of the European GSM 06.10 provisional standard for
 full-rate speech transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which uses RPE/LTP
 (residual pulse excitation/long term prediction) coding at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.

libgsm1-dbgsym: debug symbols for libgsm1
libgsm1-dev: Development libraries for a GSM speech compressor

 This package contains header files and development libraries for
 libgsm, an implementation of the European GSM 06.10 provisional
 standard for full-rate speech transcoding, prI-ETS 300 036, which
 uses RPE/LTP (residual pulse excitation/long term prediction) coding
 at 13 kbit/s.
 .
 GSM 06.10 compresses frames of 160 13-bit samples (8 kHz sampling
 rate, i.e. a frame rate of 50 Hz) into 260 bits; for compatibility
 with typical UNIX applications, this implementation turns frames of
 160 16-bit linear samples into 33-byte frames (1650 Bytes/s).
 The quality of the algorithm is good enough for reliable speaker
 recognition; even music often survives transcoding in recognizable
 form (given the bandwidth limitations of 8 kHz sampling rate).
 .
 The interfaces offered are a front end modelled after compress(1), and
 a library API. Compression and decompression run faster than realtime
 on most SPARCstations. The implementation has been verified against the
 ETSI standard test patterns.