Allen & Heath User Guide for XONE:DX with Serato ITCH 1.6 60
CORRUPT FILES
Corrupt file: This MP3 contains invalid frames.
This MP3 contains frames which do not conform strictly to the offi-
cial MP3 specification. ITCH can not be certain that this file will play
back 100% accurately.
Corrupt file: This file contains corrupt frames that
may result in audible glitches.
This file contains two or more contiguous corrupt frames. Since
corrupt frames are replaced with silence, this could result in what
might sound like an audio glitch.
Corrupt file: This file has been split.
You should check the beginning for audio glitches. The first MPEG
audio frame in this file refers to audio that should be present before
it but is not. This is usually the result of incorrect MP3 editing.
Since a corrupt frame is replaced with silence and most songs start
with silence, the resulting silence might not be noticeable. All the
same, listen to the beginning of the song, just to be sure.
Corrupt file: This MP3 contains frames with cor-
rupt data.
Decoding of an MPEG audio frame failed. This means that the frame
contained invalid data. As usual with corrupt frames, this frame will
be played as silence.
Corrupt file: This MP3 lost syncronization between
the frame index and the frames.
ITCH is reading an old overview of an MP3 that has been edited in a
3rd party editing program. Re-building the overviews for the af-
fected files usually corrects this error.
Corrupt file: This MP3 is completely invalid and is
not playable.
Self explanatory. Possible causes are disk bad sectors, file system
corruption, wrong file types, wrong file extensions, etc
Corrupt file: This file contains invalid audio data.
ITCH encountered a lot of invalid data while looking for audio in this
file. This message alerts you to the fact that the file you're trying to
play contains corrupt data. This may, or may not, affect playback.
Corrupt file: This MP3 contains no valid frames.
No audio could be found in this file, which means it is completely
unplayable as far as ITCH is concerned. Please make sure this
really is an audio file.
Unsupported file: This MP3 contains multiple lay-
ers.
While scanning this file, ITCH found frames belonging to multiple
MPEG layers. ITCH does not support MP3s that contain frames from
multiple layers – some frames may be output as silence.
Unsupported file: This file is more than 2GB in
size.
Self explanatory. At the moment, ITCH does not support files that
are 2GB in size (or larger).
Unsupported file: This file has data blocks greater
than 2GB in size.
This file contains chunks of data that are larger than 2GB. ITCH
does not support files that are more than 2GB in size.
Corrupt file: This WAV contains no valid chunks.
This WAV file contains no recognizable WAV data. It is quite possi-
ble that this might not be a WAV file.
Unsupported file: This file's data is not in PCM
format.
WAV files can contain data in several formats. ITCH only supports
WAV files that contain data in the PCM format.
Unsupported file: This file has a sampling rate
greater than 48kHz.
ITCH does not support sampling rates greater than 48 kHz. If you
see this message, the simplest approach is to re- sample the audio
at 48 kHz and re-save the file.
Unsupported file: This file uses more than 24 bits
per sample.
ITCH supports a maximum of 24 bits per sample of audio data.
Corrupt file: This WAV is incomplete.
ITCH expected more data in the file, but found none. This could be
because the file was incorrectly truncated or because the data in
the file is corrupt, causing ITCH to incorrectly estimate the amount
of data present in the file.
Corrupt file: This file contains corrupt blocks.
This file contains blocks of data that report their size to be zero.
This message was inserted to identify files that might cause lockups
on previous versions of ITCH.
Corrupt file: This song contains no audio data.
ITCH could not find any audio in this file. Please check to make sure
this file contains audio in a format that ITCH supports.
Corrupt file: This song contains invalid samples.
This file contains samples of audio that are too small to represent
accurately and will therefore be truncated to zero. This should not
result in any audible audio artifacts, but could cause audio dropouts
on earlier versions of ITCH.