IAudioClient::IsFormatSupported
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IAudioClient::IsFormatSupported
The IsFormatSupported method indicates whether the audio endpoint device supports a particular stream format.
HRESULT IsFormatSupported( AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE ShareMode, const WAVEFORMATEX *pFormat, WAVEFORMATEX **ppClosestMatch );
Parameters
ShareMode
[in] The sharing mode for the stream format. Through this parameter, the client indicates whether it wants to use the specified format in exclusive mode or shared mode. The client should set this parameter to one of the following AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE enumeration values:
AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_EXCLUSIVE
AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_SHARED
pFormat
[in] Pointer to the specified stream format. This parameter points to a caller-allocated format descriptor of type WAVEFORMATEX or WAVEFORMATEXTENSIBLE. The client writes a format description to this structure before calling this method. For information about WAVEFORMATEX and WAVEFORMATEXTENSIBLE, see the Windows DDK documentation.
ppClosestMatch
[out] Pointer to a pointer variable into which the method writes the address of a WAVEFORMATEX or WAVEFORMATEXTENSIBLE structure. This structure specifies the supported format that is closest to the format that the client specified through the pFormat parameter. For shared mode (that is, if the ShareMode parameter is AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_SHARED), set ppClosestMatch to point to a valid, non-NULL pointer variable. For exclusive mode, set ppClosestMatch to NULL. The method allocates the storage for the structure. The caller is responsible for freeing the storage, when it is no longer needed, by calling the CoTaskMemFree function. If the IsFormatSupported call fails and ppClosestMatch is non-NULL, the method sets *ppClosestMatch to NULL. For information about CoTaskMemFree, see the Windows SDK documentation.
Return Value
If the method succeeds and the audio endpoint device supports the specified stream format, it returns S_OK. If the method succeeds and provides a closest match to the specified format, it returns S_FALSE. If the method succeeds and the specified format is not supported in exclusive mode, the method returns AUDCLNT_E_UNSUPPORTED_FORMAT. If it fails, possible return codes include, but are not limited to, the values shown in the following table.
Return code | Description |
E_POINTER | Parameter pFormat is NULL, or ppClosestMatch is NULL and ShareMode is AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_SHARED. |
E_INVALIDARG | Parameter ShareMode is a value other than AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_SHARED or AUDCLNT_SHAREMODE_EXCLUSIVE. |
AUDCLNT_E_DEVICE_INVALIDATED | The audio endpoint device has been unplugged, or the audio hardware or associated hardware resources have been reconfigured, disabled, removed, or otherwise made unavailable for use. |
AUDCLNT_E_SERVICE_NOT_RUNNING | The Windows audio service is not running. |
Remarks
This method provides a way for a client to determine, before calling IAudioClient::Initialize, whether the audio engine supports a particular stream format.
For exclusive mode, IsFormatSupported returns S_OK if the audio endpoint device supports the caller-specified format, or it returns AUDCLNT_E_UNSUPPORTED_FORMAT if the device does not support the format. The ppClosestMatch parameter can be NULL. If it is not NULL, the method writes NULL to *ppClosestMatch.
For shared mode, if the audio engine supports the caller-specified format, IsFormatSupported sets *ppClosestMatch to NULL and returns S_OK. If the audio engine does not support the caller-specified format but does support a similar format, the method retrieves the similar format through the ppClosestMatch parameter and returns S_FALSE. If the audio engine does not support the caller-specified format or any similar format, the method sets *ppClosestMatch to NULL and returns AUDCLNT_E_UNSUPPORTED_FORMAT.
In shared mode, the audio engine always supports the mix format, which the client can obtain by calling the IAudioClient::GetMixFormat method. In addition, the audio engine might support similar formats that have the same sample rate and number of channels as the mix format but differ in the representation of audio sample values. The audio engine represents sample values internally as floating-point numbers, but if the caller-specified format represents sample values as integers, the audio engine typically can convert between the integer sample values and its internal floating-point representation.
The audio engine might be able to support an even wider range of shared-mode formats if the installation package for the audio device includes a local effects (LFX) audio processing object (APO) that can handle format conversions. An LFX APO is a software module that performs device-specific processing of an audio stream. The audio graph builder in the Windows audio service inserts the LFX APO into the stream between each client and the audio engine. When a client calls the IsFormatSupported method and the method determines that an LFX APO is installed for use with the device, the method directs the query to the LFX APO, which indicates whether it supports the caller-specified format.
For example, a particular LFX APO might accept a 6-channel surround sound stream from a client and convert the stream to a stereo format that can be played through headphones. Typically, an LFX APO supports only client formats with sample rates that match the sample rate of the mix format.
For more information about APOs, see the white papers titled "Custom Audio Effects in Windows Vista" and "Reusing the Windows Vista Audio System Effects" at the Audio Device Technologies for Windows Web site. For more information about the IsFormatSupported method, see Device Formats.
Requirements
Client: Windows Vista
Header: Include Audioclient.h.
See Also
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