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Device Roles for Legacy Windows Multimedia Applications

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Device Roles for Legacy Windows Multimedia Applications

  • Note   The MMDevice API supports device roles. However, the user interface in Windows Vista does not implement support for this feature. User interface support for device roles might be implemented in a future version of Windows. For more information, see Device Roles in Windows Vista.

The legacy Windows multimedia waveOutXxx and waveInXxx functions provide no means for an application to select the audio endpoint device that the user has assigned to a particular device role. However, in Windows Vista, the core audio APIs can be used in conjunction with a Windows multimedia application to enable device selection based on device role. For example, with the help of the MMDevice API, a waveOutXxx application can identify the audio endpoint device that is assigned to a role, identify the corresponding waveform output device, and call the waveOutOpen function to open an instance of the device. For more information about waveOutXxx and waveInXxx, see the Windows SDK documentation.

The following code example shows how to obtain the waveform device ID for the rendering endpoint device that is assigned to a particular device role:

//-----------------------------------------------------------
// This function gets the waveOut ID of the audio endpoint
// device that is currently assigned to the specified device
// role. The caller can use the waveOut ID to open the
// waveOut device that corresponds to the endpoint device.
//-----------------------------------------------------------
#define EXIT_ON_ERROR(hres)  \
              if (FAILED(hres)) { goto Exit; }
#define SAFE_RELEASE(punk)  \
              if ((punk) != NULL)  \
                { (punk)->Release(); (punk) = NULL; }

HRESULT GetWaveOutId(ERole role, int *pWaveOutId)
{
    HRESULT hr;
    IMMDeviceEnumerator *pEnumerator = NULL;
    IMMDevice *pDevice = NULL;
    WCHAR *pstrEndpointIdKey = NULL;
    WCHAR *pstrEndpointId = NULL;

    if (pWaveOutId == NULL)
    {
        return E_POINTER;
    }

    // Create an audio endpoint device enumerator.
    hr = CoCreateInstance(__uuidof(MMDeviceEnumerator),
                          NULL, CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER,
                          __uuidof(IMMDeviceEnumerator),
                          (void**)&pEnumerator);
    EXIT_ON_ERROR(hr)

    // Get the audio endpoint device that the user has
    // assigned to the specified device role.
    hr = pEnumerator->GetDefaultAudioEndpoint(eRender, role,
                                              &pDevice);
    EXIT_ON_ERROR(hr)

    // Get the endpoint ID string of the audio endpoint device.
    hr = pDevice->GetId(&pstrEndpointIdKey);
    EXIT_ON_ERROR(hr)

    // Get the size of the endpoint ID string.
    size_t  cbEndpointIdKey;

    hr = StringCbLength(pstrEndpointIdKey,
                        STRSAFE_MAX_CCH * sizeof(WCHAR),
                        &cbEndpointIdKey);
    EXIT_ON_ERROR(hr)

    // Include terminating null in string size.
    cbEndpointIdKey += sizeof(WCHAR);

    // Allocate a buffer for a second string of the same size.
    pstrEndpointId = (WCHAR*)CoTaskMemAlloc(cbEndpointIdKey);
    if (pstrEndpointId == NULL)
    {
        EXIT_ON_ERROR(hr = E_OUTOFMEMORY)
    }

    // Each for-loop iteration below compares the endpoint ID
    // string of the audio endpoint device to the endpoint ID
    // string of an enumerated waveOut device. If the strings
    // match, then we've found the waveOut device that is
    // assigned to the specified device role.
    int waveOutId;
    int cWaveOutDevices = waveOutGetNumDevs();

    for (waveOutId = 0; waveOutId < cWaveOutDevices; waveOutId++)
    {
        MMRESULT mmr;
        size_t cbEndpointId;

        // Get the size (including the terminating null) of
        // the endpoint ID string of the waveOut device.
        mmr = waveOutMessage((HWAVEOUT)IntToPtr(waveOutId),
                             DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEIDSIZE,
                             (DWORD_PTR)&cbEndpointId, NULL);
        if (mmr != MMSYSERR_NOERROR ||
            cbEndpointIdKey != cbEndpointId)  // do sizes match?
        {
            continue;  // not a matching device
        }

        // Get the endpoint ID string for this waveOut device.
        mmr = waveOutMessage((HWAVEOUT)IntToPtr(waveOutId),
                             DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEID,
                             (DWORD_PTR)pstrEndpointId,
                             cbEndpointId);
        if (mmr != MMSYSERR_NOERROR)
        {
            continue;
        }

        // Check whether the endpoint ID string of this waveOut
        // device matches that of the audio endpoint device.
        if (lstrcmpi(pstrEndpointId, pstrEndpointIdKey) == 0)
        {
            *pWaveOutId = waveOutId;  // found match
            hr = S_OK;
            break;
        }
    }

    if (waveOutId == cWaveOutDevices)
    {
        // We reached the end of the for-loop above without
        // finding a waveOut device with a matching endpoint
        // ID string. This behavior is quite unexpected.
        hr = E_UNEXPECTED;
    }

Exit:
    SAFE_RELEASE(pEnumerator);
    SAFE_RELEASE(pDevice);
    CoTaskMemFree(pstrEndpointIdKey);  // NULL pointer okay
    CoTaskMemFree(pstrEndpointId);
    return hr;
}

In the preceding code example, the GetWaveOutId function accepts a device role (eConsole, eMultimedia, or eCommunications) as an input parameter. The second parameter is a pointer through which the function writes the waveform device ID for the waveform output device that is assigned to the specified role. The application can then call waveOutOpen with this ID to open the device.

The main loop in the preceding code example contains two calls to the waveOutMessage function. The first call sends a DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEIDSIZE message to retrieve the size, in bytes, of the endpoint ID string of the waveform device that is identified by the waveOutId parameter. (The endpoint ID string identifies the audio endpoint device that underlies the waveform device abstraction.) The size reported by this call includes the space for the terminating null character at the end of the string. The program can use the size information to allocate a buffer that is large enough to contain the entire endpoint ID string.

The second call to waveOutMessage sends a DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEID message to retrieve the device ID string of the waveform output device. The example code compares this string to the device ID string of the audio endpoint device with the specified device role. If the strings match, then the function writes the waveform device ID to the location pointed to by parameter pWaveOutId. The caller can use this ID to open the waveform output device that has the specified device role.

Windows Vista supports the DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEIDSIZE and DRV_QUERYFUNCTIONINSTANCEID messages. They are not supported in earlier versions of Windows, including Windows Server 2003, Windows XP, and Windows 2000.

The function in the preceding code example obtains the waveform device ID for a rendering device, but, with a few modifications, it can be adapted to obtain the waveform device ID for a capture device. The application can then call waveInOpen with this ID to open the device. To change the preceding code example to get the waveform device ID for the audio-capture endpoint device that is assigned to a particular role, do the following:

  • Replace all of the waveOutXxx function calls in the preceding example with the corresponding waveInXxx function calls.
  • Change handle type HWAVEOUT to HWAVEIN.
  • Replace ERole enumeration constant eRender with eCapture.

In Windows Vista, the waveOutOpen and waveInOpen functions always assign the audio streams that they create to the default session—the process-specific session that is identified by the session GUID value GUID_NULL.

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