Convert AU to AIFF
Max file size 100mb.
AU vs AIFF Format Comparison
| Aspect | AU (Source Format) | AIFF (Target Format) |
|---|---|---|
| Format Overview |
AU
Sun/NeXT Audio Format
AU (Sun Audio) is an audio file format introduced by Sun Microsystems in the late 1980s for Unix workstations. It stores audio data as simple PCM samples or compressed using mu-law/A-law encoding, with a minimal header structure. AU became the standard audio format for Java, NeXT computers, and Solaris systems, and remains supported across Unix/Linux platforms. Lossless Legacy |
AIFF
Audio Interchange File Format
AIFF is an uncompressed audio format developed by Apple in 1988, based on the IFF standard. It stores raw PCM audio data with a flexible chunk-based structure, serving as the Mac equivalent of WAV. AIFF is widely used in professional audio production on macOS and is natively supported by Logic Pro, GarageBand, and all Apple software. Lossless Standard |
| Technical Specifications |
Sample Rates: 8 kHz – 48 kHz (commonly 8 kHz, 22.05 kHz, 44.1 kHz)
Bit Depth: 8-bit mu-law, 8/16/24/32-bit PCM, 32/64-bit float Channels: Mono, Stereo, Multichannel Codec: PCM, mu-law, A-law, ADPCM Container: AU/SND (.au, .snd) |
Sample Rates: 8 kHz – 192 kHz+
Bit Depth: 8, 16, 24, 32-bit (int/float) Channels: Mono, Stereo, Multichannel Codec: PCM (uncompressed) Container: IFF/AIFF (.aiff, .aif) |
| Audio Encoding |
AU uses a simple binary header followed by raw audio data. The most common encoding is mu-law (8-bit logarithmic) for telephony or linear PCM for higher quality: # Encode to AU with mu-law (8-bit, 8 kHz) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a pcm_mulaw \ -ar 8000 -ac 1 output.au # Encode to AU with linear PCM (16-bit) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a pcm_s16be \ -ar 44100 output.au |
AIFF stores raw PCM audio in big-endian byte order within an IFF chunk structure, providing lossless quality: # Encode to AIFF (16-bit, 44.1 kHz) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a pcm_s16be \ -ar 44100 output.aiff # High-resolution AIFF (24-bit, 96 kHz) ffmpeg -i input.wav -codec:a pcm_s24be \ -ar 96000 output.aiff |
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| Version History |
Introduced: ~1988 (Sun Microsystems)
Current Version: AU format specification (stable) Status: Legacy, still supported in Java and Unix Evolution: Sun Audio (~1988) → NeXT .snd adoption → Java javax.sound standard |
Introduced: 1988 (Apple Computer)
Current Version: AIFF / AIFF-C Status: Stable, widely used on Mac Evolution: AIFF (1988) → AIFF-C (compressed variant) → continued Mac standard |
| Software Support |
Media Players: VLC, Audacity, ffplay, sox
DAWs: Audacity, Ardour (Linux DAWs) Mobile: Limited — requires conversion for most devices Web Browsers: Not natively supported Development: Java (javax.sound), Python (sunau, wave modules) |
Media Players: iTunes, VLC, QuickTime, foobar2000
DAWs: Logic Pro, GarageBand, Pro Tools, Ableton Mobile: iOS (native), Android (limited) Web Browsers: Safari (native), Chrome, Firefox Editors: Audacity, Adobe Audition, WaveLab |
Why Convert AU to AIFF?
Converting AU to AIFF modernizes your Sun/NeXT audio files into a format with broader compatibility and richer feature support. AU files originate from Unix workstations and Java applications, using simple PCM or mu-law encoding with minimal metadata capabilities. While AU served Unix systems well, AIFF offers significant advantages for contemporary audio workflows, including better software support, metadata handling, and cross-platform compatibility.
The AU format was designed for simplicity on Sun SPARC and NeXT workstations in the late 1980s. Its big-endian PCM storage and minimal header made it efficient for Unix systems, but this simplicity comes at the cost of limited metadata, no album art support, and poor recognition by modern consumer software. Most media players on Windows, macOS, and mobile devices either cannot play AU files or require special configuration, making conversion essential for practical use.
AIFF provides a substantial upgrade over AU for most use cases. Whether you are migrating legacy Unix application audio, converting Java sound resources, or archiving old Solaris system recordings, AIFF ensures your audio content is accessible on modern platforms. The conversion preserves the audio fidelity of your AU files while unlocking the features and compatibility that today's audio ecosystem demands.
When converting AU to AIFF, consider the encoding settings carefully. AU files in PCM mode contain uncompressed audio that can be transcoded without quality loss to other lossless formats, or encoded to lossy formats at the quality level you choose. Mu-law encoded AU files (common in telephony) have limited bandwidth (8 kHz, 8-bit equivalent), so the conversion output quality will reflect the source limitations regardless of target format settings.
Key Benefits of Converting AU to AIFF:
- Modern Compatibility: AIFF works with modern media players, devices, and operating systems
- Better Metadata: Add proper tags, titles, and organizational information
- Cross-Platform: Escape the Unix/Java-only limitations of AU format
- Wider Software Support: Edit in any modern DAW or audio editor
- Professional Workflow: Integrate legacy AU audio into current production pipelines
- Archival Upgrade: Preserve audio in a well-supported, future-proof format
- Distribution Ready: Share audio without requiring recipients to handle AU files
Practical Examples
Example 1: Migrating Java Application Audio
Scenario: A developer is modernizing a legacy Java application that uses AU audio files for notifications and UI sounds. The new version targets cross-platform deployment and needs AIFF format for broader compatibility.
Source: notification_alert.au (2 sec, PCM 16-bit, 22.05 kHz, 88 KB) Conversion: AU → AIFF Result: notification_alert.aiff (converted with optimal settings) Workflow: 1. Export AU files from legacy Java project resources 2. Convert each AU notification sound to AIFF 3. Update application resource paths 4. Test playback across target platforms 5. Deploy modernized application
Example 2: Unix System Sound Archive Recovery
Scenario: A system administrator recovered a backup of legacy Solaris workstation sounds in AU format and needs to convert them to AIFF for use on modern Linux desktops and documentation.
Source: solaris_sounds/ (35 AU files, mu-law 8 kHz, total 2.8 MB) Conversion: AU → AIFF (preserving original quality) Result: 35 AIFF files ready for modern playback Benefits: ✓ Playable on any modern operating system ✓ Compatible with current desktop notification systems ✓ Preserved historical audio content from legacy workstations ✓ Suitable for documentation and archival purposes ✓ No special codecs needed for playback
Example 3: Telephony System Audio Conversion
Scenario: A VoIP provider has a library of AU audio prompts (mu-law encoded) used in their legacy PBX system and needs to convert them to AIFF for their updated communication platform.
Source: pbx_prompts/ (200 AU files, mu-law 8 kHz mono, 45 MB total) Conversion: AU → AIFF Result: 200 AIFF prompt files for modern PBX Migration requirements met: ✓ All voice prompts converted to modern format ✓ Audio quality matches original mu-law source ✓ Compatible with new SIP/VoIP platform ✓ Batch conversion completed efficiently ✓ Ready for modern telephony system deployment
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: What is the AU audio format?
A: AU (also called SND) is a simple audio file format created by Sun Microsystems for Unix workstations in the late 1980s. It stores audio as uncompressed PCM or mu-law/A-law encoded data with a minimal header. AU became the standard audio format for Java applications (javax.sound), NeXT computers, and Solaris systems. While largely superseded by WAV and FLAC for general use, AU remains relevant in Java development and Unix-based audio processing.
Q: Will converting AU to AIFF change the audio quality?
A: That depends on both the source AU encoding and the target format. AU files with PCM encoding contain uncompressed audio — converting to another lossless format preserves quality perfectly. Converting PCM AU to a lossy format like AIFF will apply compression. For mu-law encoded AU files (8 kHz, telephony quality), the audio bandwidth is already limited, so the output quality reflects the source limitations regardless of target format settings.
Q: Why can't I play AU files on my computer?
A: Most modern consumer media players (especially on Windows and macOS) do not recognize AU files natively. VLC can play AU files, and Audacity can import them, but standard players like Windows Media Player and Apple Music typically cannot. This is because AU was designed for Unix systems and never gained traction in the consumer market. Converting to AIFF solves this compatibility issue.
Q: What is the difference between PCM and mu-law AU files?
A: PCM AU files store raw uncompressed audio samples — identical quality to WAV at the same bit depth and sample rate. Mu-law (u-law) AU files use logarithmic encoding that compresses 14-bit dynamic range into 8 bits, originally designed for telephone systems at 8 kHz. Mu-law provides acceptable voice quality in very small files but is unsuitable for music. The conversion quality to AIFF depends on which encoding your AU files use.
Q: Can Java still use AU files or should I convert them?
A: Java's javax.sound.sampled API still fully supports AU files, making them the simplest choice for Java audio applications without external dependencies. However, if you need cross-platform compatibility, web deployment, or better metadata support, converting to AIFF is recommended. Modern Java applications increasingly use JavaFX Media or third-party libraries that support more formats.
Q: How do I identify the encoding of my AU files?
A: Use FFmpeg or SoX to inspect AU file headers. Run 'ffprobe input.au' to see the codec (pcm_s16be for 16-bit PCM, pcm_mulaw for mu-law, pcm_alaw for A-law), sample rate, channels, and bit depth. The AU header's first field after the magic number specifies the data offset, and the encoding type is stored as an integer code in the header.
Q: Are AU files big-endian or little-endian?
A: AU files use big-endian (network byte order) for both the header and PCM audio data. This is in contrast to WAV files which use little-endian byte order. The big-endian convention comes from Sun SPARC and Motorola 68000 processors used in original Sun and NeXT workstations. FFmpeg handles the byte order conversion automatically during format conversion.
Q: How long does AU to AIFF conversion take?
A: AU conversion is extremely fast — typically faster than real-time. AU files have minimal header overhead, so the decoder starts processing audio data almost immediately. A 5-minute AU file converts in under a second on modern hardware for most target formats. The main variable is the target codec's encoding speed, not the AU decoding which is near-instantaneous.