Provided by: multispeech-common_4.6.2-2_all bug

NAME

       multispeech.conf - Multispeech configuration file

DESCRIPTION

       On  startup multispeech expects to find it's configuration in /etc/multispeech.conf and ~/.multispeechrc.
       The user settings provided by ~/.multispeechrc always take precedence  over  the  system-wide  ones  from
       /etc/multispeech.conf.  And  all  these settings in turn can be overridden by an extra configuration file
       specified via the command line. Being started as Speech Dispatcher module, multispeech  treats  the  file
       specified  in command line as an extension of global configuration. Options specified there override ones
       from the main system configuration file, but ~/.multispeechrc takes precedence over the both.
        Some configuration options are mandatory, so at least one of these files must exist.

SYNTAX

       The syntax is quite simple.

       Lines started from the ‘#’ character are treated as comments.  Blank lines are ignored. Each option entry
       looks like follows:

       keyword = value

       Case is significant.

       All options are logically grouped by sections.  Each section is started by its name in square brackets on
       a separate line.

CLIENT INTERACTION CONTROL OPTIONS

       These options are grouped in the section named ‘frontend’. These options are as follows:

       charset
              Input  charset  should  be  specified  by  its   name.   Available   names   can   be   found   in
              /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED or wherever else it is on your system. By default this option is not set
              so current locale setting is used.

       native_voices
              Enable native voice control embedded commands.

       dtk_voices
              Enable DECtalk voice control embedded commands.

       These two options control inline parameters parsing. In the default state only native voices are enabled,
       so  multispeech  behaves as it used to and accepts only special inline commands formed by emacspeak. When
       dtk voices are enabled, multispeech recognizes DECtalk inline commands and tries to emulate  some  subset
       of  the  DECtalk  voice  control  capabilities. Use the word ‘yes’ or ‘on’ to enable and the word ‘no’ or
       ‘off’ to disable the option. Nothing prevents to keep both options enabled simultaneously. In  this  case
       DECtalk  inline  commands will be accepted as well as the native ones. If both options are disabled, then
       inline commands detection and parsing will not be performed at all.

GENERAL AUDIO OUTPUT CONTROL OPTIONS

       Section name is ‘audio’. It contains following options:

       device
              Default device for all  audio  output  (speech,  sounds  and  tones).   If  it  is  not  specified
              explicitly,  then system default will be used.  The DSP device specifications (such as ‘/dev/dsp’)
              are allowed here as well as the ALSA ones. Invoke ‘multispeech -l’ to get list  of  all  available
              devices on your system.

       general_volume
              Volume  level  applied  to  all audio output in general.  It should be in the range of (0.0..1.0].
              When this option is not specified the default value 0.8 is used.

       latency
              Audio output latency in seconds. Special value 0.0 implies that reasonable latency will be  chosen
              automatically by system.  Normally this option should not be set up explicitly.  Do it only if you
              are pretty unsatisfied by the default.

       async_operation
              This  option  enables  truly  asynchronous  audio stream operation.  Normally it is absolutely not
              necessary, thus, disabled by default, but theoretically there can be some circumstances  where  it
              would be preferable. Use the word ‘yes’ or ‘on’ to enable and the word ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.

       pulseaudio_direct
              This  option  allows direct usage of PulseAudio API for ‘pulse’ and ‘default’ devices when ‘pulse’
              device is present in the system.  If it is disabled, these devices will  be  accessed  via  native
              host API bridge. Use the word ‘yes’ or ‘on’ to enable and the word ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.

SOUNDS PLAYING CONTROL OPTIONS

       Section name is ‘sounds’. It contains several options that affect sound file playing capability:

       device
              Sound  files  playing device. This setting overwrites general default and allows one to play sound
              files on a separate audio device.  The DSP device specifications (such as ‘/dev/dsp’) are accepted
              here as well as the ALSA ones. Invoke ‘multispeech -l’ to get list of  all  available  devices  on
              your system.

       volume
              Relative volume level for sound files playing. It is 1.0 by default.

       asynchronous
              This  option  enables  or disables to play sound files simultaneously with other audio activities,
              such as speech and tone signals producing. It is enabled by default.  Use the word ‘yes’  or  ‘on’
              to enable and the word ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.

TONE SIGNALS PRODUCING CONTROL OPTIONS

       Section name is ‘tones’. It consists of the following options:

       device
              Tones  producing  device. This setting overwrites general default and allows one to use a separate
              device for tone signals.  The DSP device specifications (such as ‘/dev/dsp’) are accepted here  as
              well  as  the  ALSA  ones.  Invoke  ‘multispeech  -l’ to get list of all available devices on your
              system.

       volume
              Relative volume level for tone signals producing. It is 1.0 by default.

       sampling
              Sampling frequency for generated tone signals. It is 44100 by default.

       asynchronous
              This option  enables  or  disables  to  produce  tone  signals  simultaneously  with  other  audio
              activities,  such as speech and sound files playing. It is enabled by default.  Use the word ‘yes’
              or ‘on’ to enable and the word ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.

GENERAL SPEECH CONTROL OPTIONS

       Section name is ‘speech’. These options affect speech output in general:

       device
              Speech output device. This setting overwrites general default and allows one to produce speech  on
              a  separate audio device.  The DSP device specifications (such as ‘/dev/dsp’) are accepted here as
              well as the ALSA ones. Invoke ‘multispeech -l’ to get  list  of  all  available  devices  on  your
              system.

       volume
              Relative volume level for speech output. It is 1.0 by default.

       language
              This  option  specifies  the  language  to  speak.  Allowed values are: ‘en’ for English, ‘ru’ for
              Russian, ‘de’ for German, ‘fr’ for French, ‘es’ for Spanish, ‘pt’ for Portuguese, ‘it’ for Italian
              or ‘autodetect’ for automatic detection from the text nature. By default language is autodetected.
              The language then may be changed on the fly during runtime by respective commands.

       fallback
              This option  specifies  the  language  that  will  be  chosen  when  it  should  be  changed,  but
              autodetection  fails.  Any  supported  language  may  be  specified  here,  of  course,  except of
              ‘autodetect’. Of course, the language declared as a fallback must be available itself.  See  below
              about language related options.

LANGUAGE RELATED SPEECH CONTROL OPTIONS

       There  is  a  separate section for each supported language named ‘en’ for English, ‘ru’ for Russian, ‘de’
       for German, ‘fr’ for French, ‘es’ for Spanish, ‘pt’ for Portuguese and ‘it’ for Italian.  These  sections
       contain  quite  the  same  collection of options that affect speech on a specific language. Actual speech
       engine is chosen by the key option ‘engine’. By default it is ‘espeak’  for  all  languages.   If  it  is
       explicitly  not  set  or  set as ‘disabled’ then the language will not be available in Multispeech and no
       resources will be spent for it. Actual choice vary from language to language, but these  two  values  are
       always  legitimate.  It is not necessary to define speech engine for each language, but at least one must
       be defined. It is wise to define speech engine for only those languages that are actually to be  used  or
       define speech engine for all languages in global configuration and then locally disable some of them that
       are not needed.

       Each language specific section consists of the following options:

       engine
              TTS engine specification. Allowed values are as follows:

       freephone - English speech with Freephone and Mbrola voice ‘en1’;
       ru_tts - Russian speech with Ru_tts speech synthesizer;
       espeak - all supported languages with Espeak TTS engine;
       mbrola  -  English,  German,  French,  Spanish,  Portuguese  and  Italian  speech  produced  by Mbrola in
       conjunction with Espeak as a preprocessor;
       user - user defined TTS engine.

       priority
              Language detection priority. Any integer value is allowed.   During  autodetection  languages  are
              probed in the ascending order of their priority values. It is 0 by default.

       volume
              Specific voice loudness relatively to the general speech volume level. It is 1.0 by default.

       pitch
              Specific  voice  pitch  adjustment  relative  to it's normal level.  It is 1.0 by default. Greater
              value causes higher pitch.

       rate
              Relative speech rate for specific voice. It is  1.0  by  default.   Higher  value  causes  quicker
              speech.

       acceleration
              Apply additional speech tempo acceleration. Speech rate will be changed by specified difference in
              percents  compared  to  the  original  tempo.  Positive values cause speech acceleration while the
              negative ones actually imply slowing it down. Default value is 0 so no additional tempo change  is
              applied.

       char_pitch
              Relative  voice  pitch  control  applied  to  the  single letters pronunciation. By default 1.0 is
              suggested.

       char_rate
              Relative speech rate control applied to the  single  letters  pronunciation.  By  default  1.0  is
              suggested.

       caps_factor
              Voice  pitch factor for capital letters. By default it is 1.2 so capital letters are pronounced by
              slightly higher pitch.

       speak_numbers
              This option affects numbers speaking. When it is ‘yes’ or ‘on’, digits  are  treated  as  if  they
              belong  to the native alphabet and, therefore, do not cause language switching. When it is ‘no’ or
              ‘off’, digits are treated as foreign symbols causing switch to another language that will  be  the
              fallback one or some other according to the language priority settings. It is ‘yes’ by default.

MBROLA RELATED OPTIONS

       Section named ‘mbrola’ contains some options affecting multispeech interaction with mbrola speech engine:

       executable
              Path  to  the  Mbrola  executable.  If  only  program name is specified (as it is by default) then
              environment variable PATH will be examined and all paths mentioned there will be searched.

       voices
              Path to the directory where Mbrola voice files are  stored.   By  default  ‘/usr/share/mbrola’  is
              suggested.

MBROLA VOICES ASSIGNMENT

       These  voices  are  used  by  Mbrola  backend  in conjunction with Espeak.  To see the list of the voices
       supported by Espeak try to invoke ‘espeak --voices’. Only Mbrola voices are allowed here. Also make  sure
       that you have corresponding Mbrola voices itself.  See Espeak documentation for further details.

       en
              English voice. By default ‘en1’ is used.

       de
              German voice. By default ‘de6’ is used.

       fr
              French voice. By default ‘fr4’ is used.

       es
              Spanish voice. By default ‘es1’ is used.

       pt
              Portuguese voice. By default ‘br3’ is used.

       it
              Italian voice. By default ‘it3’ is used.

FREEPHONE RELATED OPTIONS

       Section named ‘freephone’ is devoted to freephone speech backend. Here are the following options:

       executable
              Path  to  the  Freephone  executable. If only program name is specified (as it is by default) then
              environment variable PATH will be examined and all paths mentioned there will be searched.

       lexicon
              Path to the lexical database. By default ‘/usr/share/freespeech/enlex.db’ is suggested.

RU TTS RELATED OPTIONS

       Section named ‘ru_tts’ consists of options  that  control  multispeech  interaction  with  ru_tts  speech
       synthesizer:

       executable
              Path  to  the  Ru_tts  executable.  If  only  program name is specified (as it is by default) then
              environment variable PATH will be examined and all paths mentioned there will be searched.

       lexicon
              Path to the lexical database. By default ‘/usr/share/freespeech/rulex.db’ is suggested.

       log
              Optional file to collect unknown words. This file must be writable for the Multispeech  user.  The
              collected data can be used later to improve lexical database. No such file is suggested by default
              so unknown words are not stored.

       expressiveness
              Relative  voice  pitch  variation  level.  The default value is 1.0.  It is the normal intonation.
              Value 0.0 causes absolutely monotonic speech.

       female_voice
              When this option is ‘yes’ the alternative female voice is used instead of the default (male) one.

       decimal_point
       decimal_comma
              These options enable or disable treating point and comma inside a number as decimal separator.  By
              default both are enabled.  Use ‘yes’ or ‘on’ to enable and ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.

       interclause_gap_factor
              The factor applied to all interclause gap durations.

       comma_gap_factor
       dot_gap_factor
       semicolon_gap_factor
       colon_gap_factor
       question_gap_factor
       exclamation_gap_factor
              the factors applied to the durations of the gaps implied by the corresponding punctuations.

       intonational_gap_factor
              The factor applied to the duration of intonational gaps not caused by punctuations.

ESPEAK RELATED OPTIONS

       Interaction with espeak TTS engine is controlled by the options grouped in section ‘espeak’:

       executable
              Path  to  the  Espeak  executable.  If  only  program name is specified (as it is by default) then
              environment variable PATH will be examined and all paths mentioned there will be searched.

       en
              English voice specification. By default ‘en’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak  --voices’  to  see  all
              available alternatives.

       ru
              Russian  voice  specification.  By  default ‘ru’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak --voices’ to see all
              available alternatives.

       de
              German voice specification. By default ‘de’ is suggested. Invoke  ‘espeak  --voices’  to  see  all
              available alternatives.

       fr
              French  voice  specification.  By  default  ‘fr’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak --voices’ to see all
              available alternatives.

       es
              Spanish voice specification. By default ‘es’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak  --voices’  to  see  all
              available alternatives.

       pt
              Portuguese  voice specification. By default ‘pt’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak --voices’ to see all
              available alternatives.

       it
              Italian voice specification. By default ‘it’ is suggested. Invoke ‘espeak  --voices’  to  see  all
              available alternatives.

USER DEFINED TTS BACKEND OPTIONS

       The section name is ‘user’. The following options are grouped here:

       command
              Shell  command  to perform TTS transformation. This command must accept text on the standard input
              and produce sound stream on the standard output. It should be a simple  command,  pipes  or  other
              shell  complications  are not allowed here, but command line arguments may be specified. Moreover,
              there are several special keywords  recognized  by  Multispeech  and  replaced  by  actual  values
              internally  just  before  execution.  This  mechanism  allows  Multispeech  to pass current speech
              parameters to the TTS engine. These keywords are as follows:

       %lang - replaced by the language id string;
       %pitch - replaced by relative voice pitch value;
       %rate - replaced by relative speech rate value;
       %freq - replaced by the sampling frequency value.

       The last keyword is replaced only when freq_control is enabled (see below).

       format
              Produced sound stream sample format. The following values are allowed here:

       s8 - signed 8 bits;
       u8 - unsigned 8 bits;
       s16 - signed 16 bits.

       Leave this option commented  out  if  sound  stream  is  produced  in  a  format  that  can  be  detected
       automatically, such as wave file for instance.

       sampling
              Produced  sound  stream sampling frequency in Hz. Assumed 22050 by default. This option is ignored
              when sound stream format is autodetected.

       stereo
              Set to ‘yes’ if produced sound stream is stereo. By default it is assumed  mono.  This  option  is
              ignored when sound stream format is autodetected.

       freq_control
              Set  this  option to ‘yes’ if TTS engine accepts sampling frequency specification (as mbrola does,
              for instance) and you wish to make use of this capability.  This  option  allows  ‘%freq’  keyword
              replacement in command line. Leave commented out if unsure.

       charset
              Character  set  in which the TTS engine accepts  it's input.  Available charset names can be found
              in /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED or wherever else it is on your system. By default this option is  not
              set so current locale setting is used.

SPEECH DISPATCHER MODULE RELATED OPTIONS

       The section name is ‘spd’. The following options are grouped here:

       version
              Speech  Dispatcher  version. Usually it is correctly guessed automatically, but you can specify it
              explicitly when compatibility issues take place.

       sound_icons
              Path to the directory where multispeech will  search  sound  icon  files  when  acting  as  Speech
              Dispatcher module.  By default ‘/usr/share/sounds/sound-icons’ is suggested.

       use_voice_language
              This option defines multispeech behaviour when synthesis_voice and language settings are passed by
               Speech  Dispatcher in a single request. If it is ‘yes’ or ‘on’, language will be chosen according
              to the specified voice, otherwise, when it is ‘no’ or ‘off’, the last setting in packet will  take
              precedence. By default this option is ‘yes’.

       accept_explicit_language
              This  option  enables  or  disables  explicit language choice by Speech Dispatcher. When disabled,
              language can be chosen only via synthesis_voice. Use the word ‘yes’ or ‘on’ to enable and the word
              ‘no’ or ‘off’ to disable.  By default this option is enabled.

       ignore_unknown_voice
              When this option is ‘yes’ or ‘on’, Speech Dispatcher
               requests to set synthesis_voice with unknown name are ignored.  Otherwise, when  it  is  ‘no’  or
              ‘off’,  such  requests  are treated as if the voice name was ‘NULL’. This special name is used for
              so-called default voice that allows  multispeech  to  utilize  language  autodetection  mechanism.
              Though  language  still can be changed explicitly by Speech Dispatcher if enabled.  This option is
              ‘no’ by default.

       index_marks
              This option enables or disables index marks support.  When it is ‘yes’ or ‘on’,  index  marks  are
              reported  correctly, but it is necessary to split message at the point of index mark. If such side
              effect is somewhat inconvenient, it may be better to turn off index marks support by setting  this
              option to ‘no’ or ‘off’. By default index marks support is enabled.

SEE ALSO

       espeak(1), freephone(1), mbrola(1), multispeech(1), ru_tts(1), speech-dispatcher(1).

AUTHOR

       Igor B. Poretsky <poretsky@mlbox.ru>.

                                                  March 2, 2010                              MULTISPEECH.CONF(5)