Pipewire: Difference between revisions
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:* [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire PipeWire issue trackers] |
:* [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire PipeWire issue trackers] |
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:* [https://docs.pipewire.org/page_module_protocol_pulse.html PipeWire Module: Protocol Pulse], [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Config-PulseAudio Config PulseAudio], [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Migrate-PulseAudio Migrate PulseAudio]. |
:* [https://docs.pipewire.org/page_module_protocol_pulse.html PipeWire Module: Protocol Pulse], [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Config-PulseAudio Config PulseAudio], [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Migrate-PulseAudio Migrate PulseAudio]. |
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* [https://docs.pipewire.org/index.html Pipewire docs]. |
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* [https://pipewire.pages.freedesktop.org/wireplumber/ WirePlumber - documentation] |
* [https://pipewire.pages.freedesktop.org/wireplumber/ WirePlumber - documentation] |
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Revision as of 14:40, 25 April 2022
Pipewire is the new sound system on Linux, meant to replace Pulseaudio.
Links
References
Configuration files:
- /usr/share/pipewire
- /usr/share/wireplumber
Commands
# View status
systemctl --user status pipewire
# Use PipeWire instead of JACK
pw-jack SOMEAPP
# PipeWire process viewer (quantum usage...)
pw-top
# Setup sinks, sources, audio devices
pw-link
qjackctl # Graphical tool, leveraging on JACK
qpwgraph # Alternative, pipewire native
# Get settings
pw-metadata -n settings
# Set settings
pw-metadata -n settings 0 clock.rate 48000
pw-metadata -n settings 0 clock.allowed-rates '[ 48000, 96000, 44100 ]'
# Command line
pw-cli
> info all
Configuration
- Package configuration files are located in /usr/share/pipewire and /usr/share/wireplumber.
- To change them, copy and edit them in /etc/pipewire (system-wide) or ~/.config/pipewire (local changes).
- pipewire-pulse.conf
- A single section can also be updated through a file in /etc/pipewire/pipewire-pulse.conf.d/ or ~/.config/pipewire/pipewire-pulse.conf.d/
cat /usr/share/pipewire/pipewire-pulse.conf
# # PulseAudio config file for PipeWire version "0.3.50" #
# #
# # Copy and edit this file in /etc/pipewire for system-wide changes
# # or in ~/.config/pipewire for local changes.
# #
# # It is also possible to place a file with an updated section in
# # for system-wide changes or in
# # ~/.config/pipewire/pipewire-pulse.conf.d/ for local changes.
Troubleshooting
Setting and keeping bluetooth profile for headset
We want to use the profile sbc sbc_xq
for our BT headset Sony WH-1000XM3.
- Set the profile manually - profile should be persistent on reboot / reconnect.
- In principe WirePlumber should remember the last selected profile.
- See [1]
# See available profile and device id with 'pactl list'
pactl set-card-profile bluez_card.38_18_4C_4B_6A_3A a2dp-sink-sbc_xq
- Configure profile
- When using pipewire-media-session, the default profile could be selected in bluez-monitor.conf, but this file no longer exists with WirePlumber.
- (UPDATE - Archlinux - Pipewire) Edit /etc/wireplumber/bluetooth.lua.d/51-bluez-config.lua (or ~/.config/wireplumber/bluetooth.lua.d/51-bluez-config.lua):
bluez_monitor.properties = {
["bluez5.enable-sbc-xq"] = true,
["bluez5.enable-msbc"] = true,
["bluez5.codecs"] = "[sbc sbc_xq]",
}
Crackling / Stuttering audio
This applies in a VM. Not sure these apply when PipeWire is run on the host.
- https://superuser.com/questions/1646216/fedora-34-vmware-workstation-vm-upgraded-from-fedora-33-has-audio-crackling
- https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/issues/469
Note that recent PipeWire already supports different auto-config if running in a vm [2].
Enable multi-user / network audio
- References
- https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Network
- Multi-user audio sharing with PipeWire - archlinux forum
- PipeWire issue 847
Currently PipeWire support sharing through network using Pulse, but auth-anonymous is always turned on (auth-ip-acl
not implemented).
- On the main user, edit pipewire-pulse.conf (from /usr/share/pipewire, or any system or user-local equivalent file) in the
context.modules
section:
context.modules = [
# ...
{ name = libpipewire-module-protocol-pulse
args = {
# the addresses this server listens on
server.address = [
"unix:native"
"tcp:4713" # IPv4 and IPv6 on all addresses
]
}
}
]
- On the secondary user, export the following env variables:
export PULSE_SERVER=tcp:127.0.0.1:4713
- Note: make sure the port is allowed in the firewall as well.
- On the remote client, use the module PipeWire Module: Pulse Tunnel:
context.modules = [
{ name = libpipewire-module-pulse-tunnel
args = {
tunnel.mode = playback
# Set the remote address to tunnel to
pulse.server.address = "tcp:192.168.1.126"
#audio.rate=<sample rate>
#audio.channels=<number of channels>
#audio.position=<channel map>
#node.target=<remote target node>
stream.props = {
# extra sink properties
}
}
}
]
- We can also use the PipeWire Module: Zeroconf Discover, that will automatically create sinks/sources to/from remote PulseAudio servers.
context.modules = [
{ name = libpipewire-module-zeroconf-discover
args = { }
}
]
- Another method it seems is to start the daemon manually [3]:
# On the server
pipewire-pulse -a tcp:4713
# On the client
PULSE_SERVER=tcp:SERVER_IP_ADDRESS:4713 pactl info