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README.md |
JUCE6 and 7 Unofficial CMake Clap Plugin Support
This is a set of code which, combined with a JUCE6 or JUCE 7 CMake plugin project, allows you to build a CLAP plugin. It is licensed under the MIT license, and can be used for both open and closed source projects.
We are labeling it 'unofficial' for four reasons
- It is not supported by the JUCE team,
- There are some JUCE features which we have not translated to CLAP yet,
- It presents a set of completely optional extensions which break JUCE abstractions to allow extended CLAP feature support and
- It does not support JUCE-based CLAP hosting
Despite those caveats, the basic use of this library has allowed a wide variety of synths and effects to generate a CLAP from their JUCE program, including Surge, B-Step, Monique, several ChowDSP plugins, Dexed and more.
By far the best solution for CLAP in JUCE would be full native support by the JUCE team. Until such a time as that happens (and it may never happen), this code may help you if you have a JUCE plugin and want to generate a CLAP. We are happy to merge changes and answer questions as you try to use it. Please feel free to raise github issues in this repo.
This version is based off of CLAP 1.0 and generates plugins which work in BWS 4.3beta5 and later, as well as other CLAP 1.0 DAWs such as MultitrackStudio.
Basics: Using these extensions to build a CLAP
Given a starting point of a JUCE plugin using CMake which can build a VST3, AU, Standalone and so forth with
juce_plugin
, building a CLAP is a simple exercise of checking out this CLAP extension code
somewhere in your dev environment, setting a few CMake variables, and adding a couple of lines to your CMake file.
The instructions are as follows:
- Add
https://github.com/free-audio/clap-juce-extensions.git
as a submodule of your project, or otherwise make the source available to your cmake (CPM, side by side check out in CI, etc...). - Load the
clap-juce-extension
in your CMake after you have loaded JUCE. For instance, you could do
add_subdirectory(libs/JUCE) # this is however you load juce
add_subdirectory(libs/clap-juce-extensions EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL)
- Create your JUCE plugin as normal with flags and formats using the
juce_plugin
CMake function - After your
juce_plugin
code, add the following lines (or similar) to your CMake (a list of pre-defined CLAP features can be found here):
clap_juce_extensions_plugin(TARGET my-target
CLAP_ID "com.my-cool-plugs.my-target"
CLAP_FEATURES instrument "virtual analog" gritty basses leads pads)
- Reload your CMake file and you will have a new target
my-target_CLAP
which will build a CLAP and leave it side-by-side with your AU, Standalone, VST3, and so forth. Load that CLAP into a DAW and give it a whirl!
Risks of using this library
Using this library is, of course, not without risks. There could easily be bugs we haven't found and there are APIs we don't cover. We are happy to discuss, investigate, and work to fix any of those.
The biggest risk, though, involves JUCE team providing official support in a way which is fundamentally incompatible with these wrappers. As of this writing, the JUCE team has not committed to supporting CLAP in JUCE 7 or any future version, although they are aware of the project. But if the JUCE team did provide official future support, it is not clear that your CLAP plugin which resulted from their official support would work in the same way as the plugin generated by this library would.
There are a couple of mitigants to that risk.
Most importantly, in the three critical places a DAW interacts with a plugin - CLAP ID, parameter IDs, and state streaming - we have endeavoured to write in as JUCE-natural a way as possible.
- The CLAP ID is just a CMake parameter, as we expect it would be in an official build.
- The parameter IDs we use uses the internal JUCE hashing mechanism to generate
our
uint32_t
just like the current VST3 wrapper does. - Our stream implementation
transparently calls
AudioProcessor::setStateInformation
andAudioProcessor::getStateInformation
with no intervening modification of the stream.
While there is no guarantee that an official JUCE implementation, if it were to exist, would make these choices, it seems quite natural that it would, and in that case, your plugin would continue to work.
If, however, you use the extensions detailed below - which allows features outside of JUCE like note expressions, sample accurate automation, and polyphonic and non-destructive modulation - there is very little assurance we can give you that an official JUCE implementation, if it were to exist, would work with your code without modification, or even that it would support those features at all. That would leave such a synth (of which Surge is the primary example today) relying on these wrappers still.
Major Missing API points
- We have not tested any JUCE version earlier than 6.0.7, and plugins which use deprecated APIs may not work
- The
AudioProcessor::WrapperType
API doesn't support CLAP. All CLAP plugins will define awrapperType
ofwrapperType_Undefined
. We do provide a workaround for using our extensions mechanism, below. - Several parameter features - including discrete (stepped) parameters - don't translate from JUCE to CLAP in our adapter (although they are supported in the CLAP API of course). We would love a test plugin to help us resolve this.
The Extensions API
There are a set of things which JUCE doesn't support which CLAP does. Rather than not support them in our plugins, we've decided to create an extensions API. These are a set of classes which your AudioProcessor can implement and, if it does, then the CLAP JUCE wrapper will call the associated functions.
The extension are in "include/clap-juce-extensions.h" and are documented there, but currently have three classes
clap_juce_extensions::clap_properties
- if you subclass this your AudioProcessor will have a collection of members which give you extra CLAP info
- Most usefully, you get an
is_clap
member which is false if not a CLAP and true if it is, which works around the fact that our 'forkless' approach doesn't let us add aAudioProcessor::WrapperType
to the JUCE API
clap_juce_extensions::clap_extensions
- these are a set of advanced extensions which let you optionally interact more directly with the CLAP API and are mostly useful for advanced features like non-destructive modulation and note expression support
clap_juce_extensions::clap_param_extensions
- If your AudioProcessorParameter subclass implements this API, you can share extended CLAP information on a parameter by parameter basis
As an example, here's how to use clap_properties
to work around AudioProcessor::WrapperType
being Undefined
in the forkless
CLAP approach
#include "clap-juce-extensions/clap-juce-extensions.h"
- Make your main plugin
juce::AudioProcessor
derive fromclap_juce_extensions::clap_properties
- Use the
is_clap
member variable to figure out the correct wrapper type.
Here's a minimal example:
#include <JuceHeader.h>
#include "clap-juce-extensions/clap-juce-extensions.h"
class MyCoolPlugin : public juce::AudioProcessor,
public clap_juce_extensions::clap_properties
{
String getWrapperTypeString()
{
if (wrapperType == wrapperType_Undefined && is_clap)
return "CLAP";
return juce::AudioProcessor::getWrapperTypeDescription (wrapperType);
}
...
};
If you are interested in using these extensions, please consult the documentation in the clap-juce-extensions header. The Surge XT Synthesizer is a worked example of using many of these. We are also happy to discuss them - reach out in the issues here or in a shared discord server.
Technical Detail: The "Forkless" approach
There's a couple of ways we could have gone adding experimental JUCE support. The way the LV2 extensions to JUCE work requires a forked JUCE which places LV2 support fully inside the JUCE ecosystem at the cost of maintaining a fork (and not allowing folks with their own forks to easily use LV2). We instead chose an 'out-of-JUCE' approach which has the following pros and cons
Pros:
- You can use any JUCE 6 or 7 / CMake method you want and don't need to use our branch.
- We don't have to update our fork to pull latest JUCE features; you don't have to use our fork and choices to build your plugin.
Cons:
- The CMake API is not consistent. Rather than add "CLAP" as a plugin type, you need a couple of extra lines of CMake to activate your CLAP.
- We cannot support the
AudioProcessor::WrapperType
API, as discussed above.