- High performance
- Realtime sample in - sample out processing
- Butterworth, RBJ, Chebychev filters
- Lowpass, highpass, bandpass and bandstop filters
- Template based header-only filter functions
- Cross platform: Linux, Windows and Mac
An infinite impulse response (IIR) filter library for Linux, Mac OSX and Windows which implements Butterworth, RBJ, Chebychev filters and can easily import coefficients generated by Python (scipy).
The filter processes the data sample by sample for realtime processing.
It uses templates to allocate the required memory so that it can run without any malloc / new commands. Memory is allocated at compile time so that there is never the risk of memory leaks.
All realtime filter code is in the header files which guarantees efficient integration into the main program and the compiler can optimise both filter code and main program at the same time.
Add the following include statement to your code:
#include "Iir.h"
The general coding approach is that first the filter is
instantiated specifying its order, then the
parameters are set with the function setup
and
then it's ready to be used for sample by sample realtime filtering.
The idea is to allocate the memory of the
filter at compile time with a template argument to avoid any new
commands. This prevents memory leaks and can be optimised at compile
time. The order
provided to the template (for example here for a
lowpass filter):
Iir::Butterworth::LowPass<order> f;
is used as the default order by the setup
command below
but can be overridden by a lower order if required.
All filters are available as lowpass, highpass, bandpass and bandstop/notch filters. Butterworth / Chebyshev offer also low/high/band-shelves with specified passband gain and 0dB gain in the stopband.
The frequencies can either be analogue ones against the sampling rate or normalised ones between 0..1/2 where 1/2 is the Nyquist frequency. Note that normalised frequencies are simply f = F/Fs and are in units of 1/samples. Internally the library uses normalised frequencies and the setup commands simply divide by the sampling rate if given. Choose between:
setup
: sampling rate and the analogue cutoff frequenciessetupN
: normalised frequencies in 1/samples between f = 0..1/2 where 1/2 = Nyquist.
By default setup
uses the order supplied by the template argument but
can be overridden by lower filter orders.
See the header files in \iir
or the documentation for the arguments
of the setup
commands.
The examples below are for lowpass filters:
- Butterworth --
Butterworth.h
Standard filter suitable for most applications. Monotonic response.
const int order = 4; // 4th order (=2 biquads)
Iir::Butterworth::LowPass<order> f;
const float samplingrate = 1000; // Hz
const float cutoff_frequency = 5; // Hz
f.setup (samplingrate, cutoff_frequency);
or specify a normalised frequency between 0..1/2:
f.setupN(norm_cutoff_frequency);
- Chebyshev Type I --
ChebyshevI.h
With permissible passband ripple in dB.
Iir::ChebyshevI::LowPass<order> f;
const float passband_ripple_in_db = 5;
f.setup (samplingrate,
cutoff_frequency,
passband_ripple_in_dB);
or specify a normalised frequency between 0..1/2:
f.setupN(norm_cutoff_frequency,passband_ripple_in_dB);
- Chebyshev Type II --
ChebyshevII.h
With worst permissible stopband rejection in dB.
Iir::ChebyshevII::LowPass<order> f;
double stopband_ripple_in_dB = 20;
f.setup (samplingrate,
cutoff_frequency,
stopband_ripple_in_dB);
or specify a normalised frequency between 0..1/2:
f.setupN(norm_cutoff_frequency,stopband_ripple_in_dB);
- RBJ --
RBJ.h
2nd order filters with cutoff and Q factor.
Iir::RBJ::LowPass f;
const float cutoff_frequency = 100;
const float Q_factor = 5;
f.setup (samplingrate, cutoff_frequency, Q_factor);
or specify a normalised frequency between 0..1/2:
f.setupN(norm_cutoff_frequency, Q_factor);
- Designing filters with Python's scipy.signal --
Custom.h
########
# Python
# See "elliptic_design.py" for the complete code.
from scipy import signal
order = 4
sos = signal.ellip(order, 5, 40, 0.2, 'low', output='sos')
print(sos) # copy/paste the coefficients over & replace [] with {}
///////
// C++
// part of "iirdemo.cpp"
const double coeff[][6] = {
{1.665623674062209972e-02,
-3.924801366970616552e-03,
1.665623674062210319e-02,
1.000000000000000000e+00,
-1.715403014004022175e+00,
8.100474793174089472e-01},
{1.000000000000000000e+00,
-1.369778997100624895e+00,
1.000000000000000222e+00,
1.000000000000000000e+00,
-1.605878925999785656e+00,
9.538657786383895054e-01}
};
const int nSOS = sizeof(coeff) / sizeof(coeff[0]); // here: nSOS = 2 = order / 2
Iir::Custom::SOSCascade<nSOS> cust(coeff);
Samples are processed one by one. In the example below
a sample x
is processed with the filter
command and then saved in y
. The types of x
and y
can either be
float or double
(integer is also allowed but is still processed internally as floating point):
y = f.filter(x);
This is then repeated for every incoming sample in a loop or event handler.
Invalid values provided to setup()
will throw
an exception. Parameters provided to setup()
which
result in coefficients being NAN will also
throw an exception.
You can switch off exeption handling by defining
IIR1_NO_EXCEPTIONS
via cmake or in your program.
If you use cmake as your build system then just add
to your CMakeLists.txt
the following lines for the dynamic library:
find_package(iir)
target_link_libraries(... iir::iir)
or for the static one:
find_package(iir)
target_link_libraries(... iir::iir_static)
Link it against the dynamic library
(Unix/Mac: -liir
, Windows: iir.lib
)
or the static library (Unix/Mac: libiir_static.a
,
Windows: libiir_static.lib
).
If you are using Ubuntu LTS then you can install this library as a pre-compiled package.
Add this repository to your system:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:berndporr/dsp
Then install the packages:
- Library files:
sudo apt install iir1
- Development files:
sudo apt install iir1-dev
It's available for 64 bit Intel and 32,64 bit ARM (Raspberry PI etc). The documentation of the development package and the example programs are in:
/usr/share/doc/iir1-dev/
The build tool is cmake
which generates the make- or project
files for the different platforms. cmake
is available for
Linux, Windows and Mac. It also compiles directly on a
Raspberry PI.
Run
cmake .
which generates the Makefile. Then run:
make
sudo make install
which installs it under /usr/local/lib
and /usr/local/include
.
Both gcc and clang have been tested.
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 .
See cmake
for the different build-options. Above is for a 64 bit build.
Then start Visual C++ and open the solution. This will create
the DLL and the LIB files. Under Windows it's highly recommended
to use the static library and link it into the application program.
Run unit tests by typing make test
or just ctest
.
These test if after a delta pulse all filters relax to zero,
that their outputs never become NaN and if the Direct Form I&II filters calculate
expected sequences by comparing them from results created
by the output of scipy's sosfilt
.
You can disable the generation of tests by setting IIR1_BUILD_TESTING
to off.
The easiest way to learn is from the examples which are in the demo
directory. A delta pulse as a test signal is sent into the different
filters and saved in a file. With the Python script
plot_impulse_fresponse.py
you can then plot the frequency responses.
You can disable the compilation of the demos by setting IIR1_BUILD_DEMO
to off.
Also the directory containing the unit tests provides examples for every filter type.
A PDF of all classes, methods and in particular setup
functions
is in the docs/pdf
directory.
The online documentation is here: http://berndporr.github.io/iir1
These responses have been generated by iirdemo.cpp
in the /demo/
directory and then plotted with plot_impulse_fresponse.py
.
This library has been further developed from Vinnie Falco's great original work which can be found here:
https://github.com/vinniefalco/DSPFilters
While the original library processes audio arrays this
library has been adapted to do fast realtime processing sample
by sample. The setup
command won't require the filter order and instead remembers
it from the template argument. The class structure has
been simplified and all functions documented for doxygen.
Instead of having assert() statements this libary throws
exceptions in case a parameter is wrong. Any filter design
requiring optimisation (for example Ellipic filters) has
been removed and instead a function has been added which can import easily
coefficients from scipy.
Bernd Porr -- http://www.berndporr.me.uk