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Loudness compliance verdicts against formal published standards (EBU R128, ATSC A/85) — a pass/fail answer with exact deltas, not raw meter output.

Project description

loudcheck

A loudness compliance verdict, not raw meter output. loudcheck measures a media file with ffmpeg and answers the question that actually matters — does this file pass the spec? — against formal published standards:

  • EBU R 128 (European broadcast: −23.0 LUFS ±0.5 LU, max −1 dBTP)
  • ATSC A/85 (US television: −24 LKFS ±2 dB, true peak below −2 dBTP)
  • BS.1770 (measure-only: BS.1770 defines no compliance target, so this mode returns verdict measured with the numbers and no judgment)
$ loudcheck master.wav --standard EBU_R128
FAIL — EBU R 128
  ✗ integrated -19.4 LUFS (target -23.0 ±0.5, delta +3.6)
  ✓ true peak -16.3 dBTP (max -1.0)
  · LRA 0.0 LU (informational)
  → apply -3.6 LU gain to reach -23.0 LUFS (e.g. ffmpeg -af volume=-3.6dB, or loudnorm I=-23)

Ships as a CLI and an MCP tool over one engine, so agents and humans get the identical verdict.

Why this exists

An agent (or an engineer) can run ffmpeg's ebur128 filter and get numbers. What it can't get from a shell is the verdict — that requires knowing the standard's target, tolerance, and gating, and interpreting integrated loudness vs. LRA vs. true peak against them. Loudness is one of the most common causes of delivery rejection, and the gap is not measurement — it's the standards-aware answer. That's the whole tool.

Install

pip install -e .            # CLI (requires ffmpeg >= 5.0 on PATH)
pip install -e ".[mcp]"     # + MCP server
pip install -e ".[dev]"     # + pytest

CLI

loudcheck file.wav                          # EBU R128 by default
loudcheck file.mp4 --standard ATSC_A85      # first audio stream of a video
loudcheck file.wav --json                   # full structured verdict
loudcheck file.wav --standard BS_1770       # measurement only, no gates
loudcheck file.mov --all-streams            # verdict every audio track
loudcheck file.mov --stream 1               # a specific audio track
loudcheck file.wav --detailed               # + max momentary / short-term
loudcheck masters/ --standard EBU_R128      # batch a directory -> table
loudcheck a.wav b.wav c.wav                 # batch multiple files
loudcheck --schema                          # print the tool definition

Batch mode prints one line per file (plus remediation for fails) and a summary; --json in batch emits an array. Exit code is 1 if any file fails.

For agents

  • Exit codes carry the verdict: 0 = pass, 1 = fail (non-compliant), 2 = error (missing file, no audio stream, no ffmpeg). Gate a delivery on the exit code alone.
  • --json is the full contract: overall verdict, per-metric measured/target/tolerance/delta/pass with the spec citation attached to every gated metric, failures in plain English, and remediation with the exact correction — a fail 2.3 LU over target tells you to apply −2.3 LU gain and hands you the ffmpeg incantation. This tool never applies the fix (measurement and verdict only); the agent one-shots it with loudnorm using the delta provided.
  • MCP: register python -m loudcheck.mcp_server (stdio). Tools: check_loudness(path, standard) → same JSON as the CLI, and list_standards() → the catalog with citations. Verified against mcp==1.28.1.
  • tool.json at the repo root describes the surface machine-readably — or fetch it live from any install with loudcheck --schema (the file ships inside the package; a test keeps the two copies in sync).
  • ffmpeg version is part of the contract: every verdict includes measurement_context.ffmpeg_version. Minimum supported: 5.0. Developed and verified against 8.1.

The scope guardrail (read before contributing)

Only formal, stable standards live in this repo; per-platform delivery templates (Netflix, DPP, Apple TV+, Amazon, broadcaster specs) never do. Platform specs change unilaterally and cover far more than loudness — the moment they enter, this stops being a near-zero-maintenance community tool and becomes a yearly-maintenance product. If a PR adds a target that a platform can change on its own, it belongs in a separate template layer built on top of this primitive, not here.

Contributions of additional formal standards (e.g. a plain ITU-R BS.1770 mode) are welcome: a standard is pure data in loudcheck/standards.py — targets, tolerances, and citations. No code changes required.

How it measures

One ffmpeg pass with loudnorm=print_format=json (analysis mode) yields integrated loudness, loudness range, true peak (oversampled dBTP per BS.1770), and the gating threshold. The test suite cross-checks loudnorm's reading against ffmpeg's independent ebur128 implementation — the two must agree within 1 LU for CI to pass, so an ffmpeg release that changes filter behavior is caught by the suite, not by users.

Verification corpus

pytest generates calibrated test tones on the fly (no binaries in the repo): per BS.1770's calibration statement, a mono 997 Hz sine at 0 dBFS reads −3.01 LKFS, so tones are generated at exact known loudness — compliant, too loud, too quiet, and true-peak-hot — and every verdict must match its known expectation.

Out of scope, permanently

Loudness correction (use ffmpeg loudnorm with the delta this tool gives you) · full-file QC (codec/colour/cadence) · real-time monitoring · GUIs · platform delivery templates (see guardrail).

License

MIT

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