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midaszhou/espeak-ng

eSpeak NG Text-to-Speech


The eSpeak NG (Next Generation) Text-to-Speech program is an open source speech synthesizer that supports 95 languages and accents. It is based on the eSpeak engine created by Jonathan Duddington. It uses spectral formant synthesis by default which sounds robotic, but can be configured to use Klatt formant synthesis or MBROLA to give it a more natural sound.

See the CHANGELOG for a description of the changes in the various releases and with the eSpeak project.

Windows

Binaries

The Windows version of eSpeak NG 1.49.0 is available as:

NOTE: SAPI 5 voices are not currently available in this release of eSpeak NG. There is an issue to track support for this feature.

Building

To build eSpeak NG on Windows, you will need:

  1. a copy of Visual Studio 2015, such as the Community Edition;
  2. the Windows 8.1 SDK;
  3. the WiX installer plugin;
  4. the pcaudiolib project checked out to src (as src/pcaudiolib).

You can then open and build the src/windows/espeak-ng.sln solution in Visual Studio.

Linux, Mac, BSD

Dependencies

In order to build eSpeak NG, you need:

  1. a functional autotools system (make, autoconf, automake, libtool and pkg-config);
  2. a functional c compiler that supports C99 (e.g. gcc or clang).

Optionally, you need:

  1. the pcaudiolib development library to enable audio output;
  2. the sonic development library to enable sonic audio speed up support;
  3. the ronn man-page markdown processor to build the man pages.

To build the documentation, you need:

  1. the kramdown markdown processor.

On Debian-based systems such as Debian, Ubuntu and Mint, these dependencies can be installed using the following commands:

Dependency Install
autotools sudo apt-get install make autoconf automake libtool pkg-config
c99 compiler sudo apt-get install gcc
sonic sudo apt-get install libsonic-dev
ronn sudo apt-get install ruby-ronn
kramdown sudo apt-get install ruby-kramdown

Building

The first time you build eSpeak NG, or when you want to change how to build eSpeak NG, you need to run the following standard autotools commands:

./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/usr

NOTE: The --prefix option above will install the files to the /usr directory, instead of the default /usr/local location. You can use other standard configure options to control the output. For more information, you can run:

./configure --help

To use a different compiler, or compiler flags, you can specify these before the configure command. For example:

CC=clang-3.5 CFLAGS=-Wextra ./configure --prefix=/usr

The espeak-ng and speak-ng programs, along with the espeak-ng voices, can then be built with:

make

NOTE: Building the voice data does not work when using the -jN option. If you want to use that option, you can run:

make -j8 src/espeak-ng src/speak-ng
make

The documentation can be built by running:

make docs

Specific languages can be compiled by running:

make LANG

where LANG is the language code of the given language. More information can be found in the Adding or Improving a Language documentation.

Audio Output Configuration

The following configure options control which audio interfaces to use:

Option Audio Interfaces Default
--with-pulseaudio PulseAudio yes
--with-portaudio PortAudio yes
--with-sada SADA (Solaris) no

If pulseaudio and portaudio are both enabled and available, eSpeak NG will choose which one to use at runtime, trying pulseaudio first before falling back to portaudio.

eSpeak NG Feature Configuration

The following configure options control which eSpeak NG features are enabled:

Option Description Default
--with-klatt Enable Klatt formant synthesis. yes
--with-mbrola Enable MBROLA voice support. yes
--with-sonic Use the sonic library to support higher WPM. yes
--with-async Enable asynchronous commands. yes

NOTE: The --with-sonic option requires that the sonic library and header is accessible on the system.

Extended Dictionary Configuration

The following configure options control which of the extended dictionary files to build:

Option Extended Dictionary Default
--with-extdict-ru Russian no
--with-extdict-zh Mandarin Chinese no
--with-extdict-zhy Cantonese no

The extended dictionaries are taken from http://espeak.sourceforge.net/data/ and provide better coverage for those languages, while increasing the resulting dictionary size.

Testing

Before installing, you can test the built espeak-ng using the following command from the top-level directory of this project:

ESPEAK_DATA_PATH=`pwd` LD_LIBRARY_PATH=src:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH} src/espeak-ng ...

The ESPEAK_DATA_PATH variable needs to be set to use the espeak-ng data from the source tree. Otherwise, espeak-ng will look in $(HOME) or /usr/share/espeak-ng-data.

The LD_LIBRARY_PATH is set as espeak uses the libespeak-ng.so shared library. This ensures that espeak uses the built shared library in the src directory and not the one on the system (which could be an older version).

Installing

You can install eSpeak NG by running the following command:

sudo make LIBDIR=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu install

NOTE: The LIBDIR path may be different to the one on your system (the above is for 64-bit Debian/Ubuntu releases that use the multi-arch package structure -- that is, Debian Wheezy or later).

You can find out where espeak-ng is installed to on your system if you already have an espeak-ng install by running:

find /usr/lib | grep libespeak-ng

Android

The espeak-ng sources contain the code for the Android™ port of the application. This is published as the eSpeak for Android program on the Google Play store. It is based on the eyes-free port of eSpeak to the Android platform. This code was originally maintained in a separate branch when the repository tracked eSpeak releases.

Dependencies

In order to build the Android APK file, you need:

  1. the Android SDK with API 21 support;
  2. the Android NDK;
  3. Gradle 2.1 or later.

In order to use Android Studio, you will also need:

  1. Android Studio.

Building with Gradle

  1. Set the location of the Android SDK:

    $ export ANDROID_HOME=<path-to-the-android-sdk>
    
  2. Build the project:

    $ ./autogen.sh
    $ ./configure --with-gradle=<path-to-gradle>
    $ make apk-release
    

This will create an android/build/outputs/apk/espeak-release-unsigned.apk file.

Signing the APK

In order to install the built APK you need to self-sign the package. You can do this by:

  1. Creating a certificate, if you do not already have one:

    $ keytool -genkey -keystore [YOUR_CERTIFICATE] -alias [ALIAS]
    
  2. Sign the package using your certificate:

     $ jarsigner -sigalg MD5withRSA -digestalg SHA1 \
       -keystore [YOUR_CERTIFICATE] \
       android/build/outputs/apk/espeak-release-unsigned.apk [ALIAS]
    
  3. Align the apk using the zipalign tool.

     $ zipalign 4 android/build/outputs/apk/espeak-release-unsigned.apk \
       android/build/outputs/apk/espeak-release-signed.apk
    

Installing

Now, you can install the APK using the adb tool:

$ adb install -r android/build/outputs/apk/espeak-release-signed.apk

After running, eSpeakActivity will extract the espeakdata.zip file into its own data directory to set up the available voices.

To enable eSpeak, you need to:

  1. go into the Android Text-to-Speech settings UI;
  2. enable eSpeak TTS in the Engines section;
  3. select eSpeak TTS as the default engine;
  4. use the Listen to an example option to check if everything is working.

Documentation

The main documentation for eSpeak NG provides more information on using and creating voices/languages for eSpeak NG.

The espeak-ng and speak-ng command-line documentation provide a reference of the different command-line options available to these commands with example usage.

Packaging

The espeak-ng project works as a drop-in replacement for espeak, with a few caveats. More specifically:

  1. The installation creates compatibility symlinks mapping espeak, speak and libespeak.la to their espeak-ng equivalents. These are optional if you are packaging espeak using the upstream eSpeak code, and can be handled in distributions in other ways, such as the Debian Alternatives system.

  2. The command-line interface to espeak-ng and speak-ng are compatible with the upstream versions and intend to remain so. Only new command options will be added.

  3. The C API to libespeak-ng.so will remain API and ABI compatible with libespeak.so. The only change speak_lib.h has is a change to the ESPEAK_API macro when building on Windows. All new APIs are being added to espeak-ng/espeak_ng.h.

  4. The espeak-ng-data files have been modified slightly. Currently espeak-ng can read espeak data, but espeak cannot read espeak-ng data, because espeak-ng uses a different voice data so that both espeak and espeak-ng can be installed on the same machine without problems.

  5. The espeak-ng project does not include espeakedit. The voice data is built using the espeak-ng command line itself. Currently, to create and edit the voice data, you need espeakedit from the espeak project.

Historical Versions

The historical branch contains the available older releases of the original eSpeak that are not contained in the subversion repository.

1.24.02 is the first version of eSpeak to appear in the subversion repository, but releases from 1.05 to 1.24 are available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/espeak/files/espeak/.

These early releases have been checked into the historical branch, with the 1.24.02 release as the last entry. This makes it possible to use the replace functionality of git to see the earlier history:

git replace 8d59235f 63c1c019

NOTE: The source releases contain the big_endian, espeak-edit, praat-mod, riskos, windows_dll and windows_sapi folders. These do not appear in the source repository until later releases, so have been excluded from the historical commits to align them better with the 1.24.02 source commit.

Bugs

Report bugs to the espeak-ng issues page on GitHub.

License Information

eSpeak NG Text-to-Speech is released under the GPL version 3 or later license.

The ieee80.c implementation is taken directly from ToFromIEEE.c.txt which has been made available for use in Open Source applications per the license statement on http://www.realitypixels.com/turk/opensource/. The only modification made to the code is to comment out the TEST_FP define to make it useable in the eSpeak NG library.

The getopt.c compatibility implementation for getopt support on Windows is taken from the NetBSD getopt_long implementation, which is licensed under a 2-clause BSD license.

Android is a trademark of Google Inc.