:speaking_head: aspeak
A simple text-to-speech client for Azure TTS API. :laughing:
Note
Starting from version 6.0.0, aspeak
by default uses the RESTful API of Azure TTS. If you want to use the WebSocket API,
you can specify --mode websocket
when invoking aspeak
or set mode = "websocket"
in the auth
section of your profile.
Starting from version 4.0.0, aspeak
is rewritten in rust. The old python version is available at the python
branch.
You can sign up for an Azure account and then
choose a payment plan as needed (or stick to free tier).
The free tier includes a quota of 0.5 million characters per month, free of charge.
Please refer to the Authentication section to learn how to set up authentication for aspeak.
Installation
Download from GitHub Releases (Recommended for most users)
Download the latest release from here.
After downloading, extract the archive and you will get a binary executable file.
You can put it in a directory that is in your PATH
environment variable so that you can run it from anywhere.
Installl from AUR (Recommended for Arch Linux users)
From v4.1.0, You can install aspeak-bin
from AUR.
Install from PyPI
Installing from PyPI will also install the python binding of aspeak
for you. Check Library Usage#Python for more information on using the python binding.
pip install -U aspeak==6.0.0
Now the prebuilt wheels are only available for x86_64 architecture.
Due to some technical issues, I haven't uploaded the source distribution to PyPI yet.
So to build wheel from source, you need to follow the instructions in Install from Source.
Because of manylinux compatibility issues, the wheels for linux are not available on PyPI. (But you can still build them from source.)
Install from Source
CLI Only
The easiest way to install aspeak
from source is to use cargo:
cargo install aspeak -F binary
Alternatively, you can also install aspeak
from AUR.
Python Wheel
To build the python wheel, you need to install maturin
first:
pip install maturin
After cloning the repository and cd
into the directory
, you can build the wheel by running:
maturin build --release --strip -F python --bindings pyo3 --interpreter python --manifest-path Cargo.toml --out dist-pyo3
maturin build --release --strip --bindings bin -F binary --interpreter python --manifest-path Cargo.toml --out dist-bin
bash merge-wheel.bash
If everything goes well, you will get a wheel file in the dist
directory.
Usage
Run aspeak help
to see the help message.
Run aspeak help <subcommand>
to see the help message of a subcommand.
Authentication
The authentication options should be placed before any subcommand.
For example, to utilize your subscription key and
an official endpoint designated by a region,
run the following command:
$ aspeak --region <YOUR_REGION> --key <YOUR_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY> text "Hello World"
If you are using a custom endpoint, you can use the --endpoint
option instead of --region
.
To avoid repetition, you can store your authentication details
in your aspeak profile.
Read the following section for more details.
From v5.2.0, you can also set the authentication secrets via the following environment variables:
ASPEAK_AUTH_KEY
for authentication using subscription keyASPEAK_AUTH_TOKEN
for authentication using authorization token
From v4.3.0, you can let aspeak use a proxy server to connect to the endpoint.
For now, only http and socks5 proxies are supported (no https support yet). For example:
$ aspeak --proxy http://your_proxy_server:port text "Hello World"
$ aspeak --proxy socks5://your_proxy_server:port text "Hello World"
aspeak also respects the HTTP_PROXY
(or http_proxy
) environment variable.
Configuration
aspeak v4 introduces the concept of profiles.
A profile is a configuration file where you can specify default values for the command line options.
Run the following command to create your default profile:
$ aspeak config init
To edit the profile, run:
$ aspeak config edit
If you have trouble running the above command, you can edit the profile manually:
Fist get the path of the profile by running:
$ aspeak config where
Then edit the file with your favorite text editor.
The profile is a TOML file. The default profile looks like this:
Check the comments in the config file for more information about available options.
verbosity = 0
[auth]
[text]
locale = "en-US"
[output]
container = "wav"
quality = 0
If you want to use a profile other than your default profile, you can use the --profile
argument:
aspeak --profile <PATH_TO_A_PROFILE> text "Hello"
If you want to temporarily disable the profile, you can use the --no-profile
argument:
aspeak --no-profile --region eastus --key <YOUR_KEY> text "Hello"
Pitch and Rate
rate
: The speaking rate of the voice.
- If you use a float value (say
0.5
), the value will be multiplied by 100% and become 50.00%
. - You can use the following values as well:
x-slow
, slow
, medium
, fast
, x-fast
, default
. - You can also use percentage values directly:
+10%
. - You can also use a relative float value (with
f
postfix), 1.2f
:
- According to the Azure documentation,
- A relative value, expressed as a number that acts as a multiplier of the default.
- For example, a value of
1f
results in no change in the rate. A value of 0.5f
results in a halving of the rate. A value of 3f
results in a tripling of the rate.
pitch
: The pitch of the voice.
- If you use a float value (say
-0.5
), the value will be multiplied by 100% and become -50.00%
. - You can also use the following values as well:
x-low
, low
, medium
, high
, x-high
, default
. - You can also use percentage values directly:
+10%
. - You can also use a relative value, (e.g.
-2st
or +80Hz
):
- According to the Azure documentation,
- A relative value, expressed as a number preceded by "+" or "-" and followed by "Hz" or "st" that specifies an amount to change the pitch.
- The "st" indicates the change unit is semitone, which is half of a tone (a half step) on the standard diatonic scale.
- You can also use an absolute value: e.g.
600Hz
Note: Unreasonable high/low values will be clipped to reasonable values by Azure Cognitive Services.
Examples
The following examples assume that you have already set up authentication in your profile.
Speak "Hello, world!" to default speaker.
$ aspeak text "Hello, world"
SSML to Speech
$ aspeak ssml << EOF
<speak version='1.0' xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis' xml:lang='en-US'><voice name='en-US-JennyNeural'>Hello, world!</voice></speak>
EOF
List all available voices.
$ aspeak list-voices
List all available voices for Chinese.
$ aspeak list-voices -l zh-CN
Get information about a voice.
$ aspeak list-voices -v en-US-SaraNeural
Output
Microsoft Server Speech Text to Speech Voice (en-US, SaraNeural)
Display name: Sara
Local name: Sara @ en-US
Locale: English (United States)
Gender: Female
ID: en-US-SaraNeural
Voice type: Neural
Status: GA
Sample rate: 48000Hz
Words per minute: 157
Styles: ["angry", "cheerful", "excited", "friendly", "hopeful", "sad", "shouting", "terrified", "unfriendly", "whispering"]
Save synthesized speech to a file.
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.wav
If you prefer mp3/ogg/webm, you can use -c mp3
/-c ogg
/-c webm
option.
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.mp3 -c mp3
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.ogg -c ogg
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.webm -c webm
List available quality levels
$ aspeak list-qualities
Output
Qualities for MP3:
3: audio-48khz-192kbitrate-mono-mp3
2: audio-48khz-96kbitrate-mono-mp3
-3: audio-16khz-64kbitrate-mono-mp3
1: audio-24khz-160kbitrate-mono-mp3
-2: audio-16khz-128kbitrate-mono-mp3
-4: audio-16khz-32kbitrate-mono-mp3
-1: audio-24khz-48kbitrate-mono-mp3
0: audio-24khz-96kbitrate-mono-mp3
Qualities for WAV:
-2: riff-8khz-16bit-mono-pcm
1: riff-24khz-16bit-mono-pcm
0: riff-24khz-16bit-mono-pcm
-1: riff-16khz-16bit-mono-pcm
Qualities for OGG:
0: ogg-24khz-16bit-mono-opus
-1: ogg-16khz-16bit-mono-opus
1: ogg-48khz-16bit-mono-opus
Qualities for WEBM:
0: webm-24khz-16bit-mono-opus
-1: webm-16khz-16bit-mono-opus
1: webm-24khz-16bit-24kbps-mono-opus
List available audio formats (For expert users)
$ aspeak list-formats
Output
amr-wb-16000hz
audio-16khz-128kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-16khz-16bit-32kbps-mono-opus
audio-16khz-32kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-16khz-64kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-24khz-160kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-24khz-16bit-24kbps-mono-opus
audio-24khz-16bit-48kbps-mono-opus
audio-24khz-48kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-24khz-96kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-48khz-192kbitrate-mono-mp3
audio-48khz-96kbitrate-mono-mp3
ogg-16khz-16bit-mono-opus
ogg-24khz-16bit-mono-opus
ogg-48khz-16bit-mono-opus
raw-16khz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-16khz-16bit-mono-truesilk
raw-22050hz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-24khz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-24khz-16bit-mono-truesilk
raw-44100hz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-48khz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-8khz-16bit-mono-pcm
raw-8khz-8bit-mono-alaw
raw-8khz-8bit-mono-mulaw
riff-16khz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-22050hz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-24khz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-44100hz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-48khz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-8khz-16bit-mono-pcm
riff-8khz-8bit-mono-alaw
riff-8khz-8bit-mono-mulaw
webm-16khz-16bit-mono-opus
webm-24khz-16bit-24kbps-mono-opus
webm-24khz-16bit-mono-opus
Increase/Decrease audio qualities
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.mp3 -c mp3 -q=-1
$ aspeak text "Hello, world" -o output.mp3 -c mp3 -q=3
Read text from file and speak it.
$ cat input.txt | aspeak text
or
$ aspeak text -f input.txt
with custom encoding:
$ aspeak text -f input.txt -e gbk
Read from stdin and speak it.
$ aspeak text
maybe you prefer:
$ aspeak text -l zh-CN << EOF
我能吞下玻璃而不伤身体。
EOF
Speak Chinese.
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -l zh-CN
Use a custom voice.
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-YunjianNeural
Custom pitch, rate and style
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-XiaoxiaoNeural -p 1.5 -r 0.5 -S sad
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-XiaoxiaoNeural -p=-10% -r=+5% -S cheerful
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-XiaoxiaoNeural -p=+40Hz -r=1.2f -S fearful
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-XiaoxiaoNeural -p=high -r=x-slow -S calm
$ aspeak text "你好,世界!" -v zh-CN-XiaoxiaoNeural -p=+1st -r=-7% -S lyrical
Advanced Usage
Use a custom audio format for output
Note: Some audio formats are not supported when outputting to speaker.
$ aspeak text "Hello World" -F riff-48khz-16bit-mono-pcm -o high-quality.wav
Library Usage
Python
The new version of aspeak
is written in Rust, and the Python binding is provided by PyO3.
Here is a simple example:
from aspeak import SpeechService
service = SpeechService(region="eastus", key="YOUR_AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_KEY")
service.speak_text("Hello, world")
First you need to create a SpeechService
instance.
When creating a SpeechService
instance, you can specify the following parameters:
audio_format
(Positional argument): The audio format of the output audio. Default is AudioFormat.Riff24KHz16BitMonoPcm
.
- You can get an audio format by providing a container format and a quality level:
AudioFormat("mp3", 2)
.
endpoint
: The endpoint of the speech service.region
: Alternatively, you can specify the region of the speech service instead of typing the boring endpoint url.key
: The subscription key of the speech service.token
: The auth token for the speech service. If you provide a token, the subscription key will be ignored.headers
: Additional HTTP headers for the speech service.mode
: Choose the synthesizer to use. Either rest
or websocket
.
- In websocket mode, the synthesizer will connect to the endpoint when the
SpeechService
instance is created.
After that, you can call speak_text()
to speak the text or speak_ssml()
to speak the SSML.
Or you can call synthesize_text()
or synthesize_ssml()
to get the audio data.
For synthesize_text()
and synthesize_ssml()
, if you provide an output
, the audio data will be written to that file and the function will return None
. Otherwise, the function will return the audio data.
Here are the common options for speak_text()
and synthesize_text()
:
locale
: The locale of the voice. Default is en-US
.voice
: The voice name. Default is en-US-JennyNeural
.rate
: The speaking rate of the voice. It must be a string that fits the requirements as documented in this section: Pitch and Ratepitch
: The pitch of the voice. It must be a string that fits the requirements as documented in this section: Pitch and Ratestyle
: The style of the voice.
- You can get a list of available styles for a specific voice by executing
aspeak -L -v <VOICE_ID>
- The default value is
general
.
style_degree
: The degree of the style.
- According to the
Azure documentation
, style degree specifies the intensity of the speaking style.
It is a floating point number between 0.01 and 2, inclusive.
- At the time of writing, style degree adjustments are supported for Chinese (Mandarin, Simplified) neural voices.
role
: The role of the voice.
- According to the
Azure documentation
,
role
specifies the speaking role-play. The voice acts as a different age and gender, but the voice name isn't
changed. - At the time of writing, role adjustments are supported for these Chinese (Mandarin, Simplified) neural voices:
zh-CN-XiaomoNeural
, zh-CN-XiaoxuanNeural
, zh-CN-YunxiNeural
, and zh-CN-YunyeNeural
.
Rust
Add aspeak
to your Cargo.toml
:
$ cargo add aspeak
Then follow the documentation of aspeak
crate.
There are 4 examples for quick reference: