This article shows you how easy it is to capture sound/audio coming into your computer’s microphone (or line in) and record the captured sound in to a WAV file, with help of Java Sound API. A small example program is provided to illustrate how to record sound for a specified duration. Let’s look at the Java Sound API first.
The package javax.sound.sampled.* is a part of Java Sound API which contains interfaces and classes that are dedicated for processing sampled audio by Java programming language.
Here are the typical steps to capture and record sound into a WAV file:
write(AudioInputStream, AudioFileFormat.Type, File)
Note that this method blocks the current thread until the target data line is closed.
Here is the source code of a sample program which follows the steps above:
import javax.sound.sampled.*; import java.io.*; /** * A sample program is to demonstrate how to record sound in Java * author: www.codejava.net */ public class JavaSoundRecorder { // record duration, in milliseconds static final long RECORD_TIME = 60000; // 1 minute // path of the wav file File wavFile = new File("E:/Test/RecordAudio.wav"); // format of audio file AudioFileFormat.Type fileType = AudioFileFormat.Type.WAVE; // the line from which audio data is captured TargetDataLine line; /** * Defines an audio format */ AudioFormat getAudioFormat() { float sampleRate = 16000; int sampleSizeInBits = 8; int channels = 2; boolean signed = true; boolean bigEndian = true; AudioFormat format = new AudioFormat(sampleRate, sampleSizeInBits, channels, signed, bigEndian); return format; } /** * Captures the sound and record into a WAV file */ void start() { try { AudioFormat format = getAudioFormat(); DataLine.Info info = new DataLine.Info(TargetDataLine.class, format); // checks if system supports the data line if (!AudioSystem.isLineSupported(info)) { System.out.println("Line not supported"); System.exit(0); } line = (TargetDataLine) AudioSystem.getLine(info); line.open(format); line.start(); // start capturing System.out.println("Start capturing..."); AudioInputStream ais = new AudioInputStream(line); System.out.println("Start recording..."); // start recording AudioSystem.write(ais, fileType, wavFile); } catch (LineUnavailableException ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } catch (IOException ioe) { ioe.printStackTrace(); } } /** * Closes the target data line to finish capturing and recording */ void finish() { line.stop(); line.close(); System.out.println("Finished"); } /** * Entry to run the program */ public static void main(String[] args) { final JavaSoundRecorder recorder = new JavaSoundRecorder(); // creates a new thread that waits for a specified // of time before stopping Thread stopper = new Thread(new Runnable() { public void run() { try { Thread.sleep(RECORD_TIME); } catch (InterruptedException ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } recorder.finish(); } }); stopper.start(); // start recording recorder.start(); } }
This console-based program will record sound from the microphone for 60 seconds then saves the recorded sound into a file in .wav format under E:/Test/RecordAudio.wav (so make sure you created the parent directory first). You may want to save as .mp3 format, but unfortunately the Java Sound API only supports the .wav format.
You can change the record duration by modifying value of the constant RECORD_TIME at the beginning of the class.
Notice that there are two threads spawn in this program:
Compile the program:
javac JavaSoundRecorder.java
Run it:
java JavaSoundRecorder
Output:
Start capturing...
Start recording...
Finished
And check if the file RecordAudio.wav created under E:/Test directory and play it back.