midi icon indicating copy to clipboard operation
midi copied to clipboard

Library for reading and writing of MIDI messages and MIDI files (SMF) with Go

midi

library for reading and writing of MIDI messages and SMF/MIDI files with Go.

Note: If you are reading this on Github, please note that the repo has moved to Gitlab (gitlab.com/gomidi/midi) and this is only a mirror.

  • Go version: >= 1.16
  • OS/architectures: everywhere Go runs (tested on Linux and Windows).

Installation

go get gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2@latest

Features

This package provides a unified way to read and write "over the wire" MIDI data and MIDI files (SMF).

  • [x] implementation of complete MIDI standard ("cable" and SMF MIDI)
  • [x] unified Driver interface (see below)
  • [x] reading and optional writing with "running status"
  • [x] seamless integration with io.Reader and io.Writer
  • [x] no dependencies outside the standard library
  • [x] low overhead
  • [x] shortcuts for General MIDI, Sysex messages etc.
  • [x] CLI tools that use the library

Drivers

For "cable" communication you need a Driverto connect with the MIDI system of your OS. Currently the following drivers available in the drivers subdirectory (all multi-platform):

  • rtmididrv based on rtmidi (requires CGO)
  • portmididrv based on portmidi (requires CGO)
  • webmididrv based on the Web MIDI standard (produces webassembly)
  • midicatdrv based on the midicat binaries via piping (stdin / stdout) (no CGO needed)
  • testdrv for testing (no CGO needed)

Examples

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"time"

	"gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2"
	_ "gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2/drivers/rtmididrv" // autoregisters driver
)

func main() {
	defer midi.CloseDriver()

	in, err := midi.FindInPort("VMPK")
	if err != nil {
		fmt.Println("can't find VMPK")
		return
	}

	stop, err := midi.ListenTo(in, func(msg midi.Message, timestampms int32) {
		var bt []byte
		var ch, key, vel uint8
		switch {
		case msg.GetSysEx(&bt):
			fmt.Printf("got sysex: % X\n", bt)
		case msg.GetNoteStart(&ch, &key, &vel):
			fmt.Printf("starting note %s on channel %v with velocity %v\n", midi.Note(key), ch, vel)
		case msg.GetNoteEnd(&ch, &key):
			fmt.Printf("ending note %s on channel %v\n", midi.Note(key), ch)
		default:
			// ignore
		}
	}, midi.UseSysEx())

	if err != nil {
		fmt.Printf("ERROR: %s\n", err)
		return
	}

	time.Sleep(time.Second * 5)

	stop()
}

package main

import (
	"bytes"
	"fmt"

	"gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2"
	"gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2/gm"
	"gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2/smf"

	_ "gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2/drivers/portmididrv" // autoregisters driver
)

func main() {
	defer midi.CloseDriver()

	fmt.Printf("outports:\n" + midi.GetOutPorts() + "\n")

	out, err := midi.FindOutPort("qsynth")
	if err != nil {
		fmt.Printf("can't find qsynth")
		return
	}

	// create a SMF
	rd := bytes.NewReader(mkSMF())

	// read and play it
	smf.ReadTracksFrom(rd).Do(func(ev smf.TrackEvent) {
		fmt.Printf("track %v @%vms %s\n", ev.TrackNo, ev.AbsMicroSeconds/1000, ev.Message)
	}).Play(out)
}

// makes a SMF and returns the bytes
func mkSMF() []byte {
	var (
		bf    bytes.Buffer
		clock = smf.MetricTicks(96) // resolution: 96 ticks per quarternote 960 is also common
		tr    smf.Track
	)

	// first track must have tempo and meter informations
	tr.Add(0, smf.MetaMeter(3, 4))
	tr.Add(0, smf.MetaTempo(140))
	tr.Add(0, smf.MetaInstrument("Brass"))
	tr.Add(0, midi.ProgramChange(0, gm.Instr_BrassSection.Value()))
	tr.Add(0, midi.NoteOn(0, midi.Ab(3), 120))
	tr.Add(clock.Ticks8th(), midi.NoteOn(0, midi.C(4), 120))
	// duration: a quarter note (96 ticks in our case)
	tr.Add(clock.Ticks4th()*2, midi.NoteOff(0, midi.Ab(3)))
	tr.Add(0, midi.NoteOff(0, midi.C(4)))
	tr.Close(0)

	// create the SMF and add the tracks
	s := smf.New()
	s.TimeFormat = clock
	s.Add(tr)
	s.WriteTo(&bf)
	return bf.Bytes()
}

Documentation

see https://pkg.go.dev/gitlab.com/gomidi/midi/v2

License

MIT (see LICENSE file)

Credits

Inspiration and low level code for MIDI reading (see internal midilib package) came from the http://github.com/afandian/go-midi package of Joe Wass which also helped as a starting point for the reading of SMF files.

Alternatives

Matt Aimonetti is also working on MIDI inside https://github.com/mattetti/audio but I didn't try it.