137 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
137 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
contrib/pipewire how to
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=======================
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## Intro
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`pipewire` is a modern multimedia server. Quoting gentoo wiki, it's strenghts are:
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> - Minimal latency capture/playback of audio and video
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> - Real-time multimedia processing
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> - Multi-process architecture allowing multimedia content sharing between applications
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> - Seamless support for ALSA, Bluez, GStreamer, JACK, PulseAudio..
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> - applications sandboxing support with Flatpak
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Getting `pipewire` to run is relatively easy on `CRUX`.
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This is a simple guide and relies on further reading upon official and unofficial resources.
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⚠️ Work in progress!
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> Although `pipewire` works perfectly fine with everything I have thrown at it by date (HDMI, USB, Bluetooth, ..) this article is incomplete.
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> You can make it better by expanding it.
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## Prerequisites
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- working kernel with alsa audio
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- `opt/alsa-utils` will be installed by default as a dependency and needs to be configured by the user
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- pipewire requires a session-manager to run to operate correctly. The only supported implementation available right now is `contrib/wireplumber` and is installed by default
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- currently, pipewires default config likes to make use of `opt/alsa-ucm-conf`, consider installing that alongside the default dependency `opt/alsa-utils`
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### Optional prerequisites
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- pipewire needs pulseaudio to be built with xorg-libxtst around to have the pulseaudio portal available
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- `prt-get depinst xorg-libxtst && prt-get update -fr pulseaudio`
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- `contrib/rtkit` and a realtime compatible kernel to help with latency, add your user to `rtkit` group to be able to make use of it
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- [an stackoverflow question on the topic](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/817059/what-is-preemption-what-is-a-preemtible-kernel-what-is-it-good-for)
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- [Real-Time Linux collaborative project](https://wiki.linuxfoundation.org/realtime/start)
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- [Arch wiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Realtime_kernel_patchset)
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- [linuxaudio.org wiki](https://wiki.linuxaudio.org/wiki/system_configuration#the_kernel)
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- please look at `contrib/pipewire/Pkgfile` for further optional dependencies listed and rebuild the package after installing new optional dependencies
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## Running pipewire
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### Setting up pipewire
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💡 Note
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> Mostly nothing of that chapter is normally needed to get a working pipewire session that manages your audio and video.
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> Doing so allows for a better control of your settings, as well as running compatibility layers provided by `pipewire` for e.g. `pulseaudio`.
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`pipewire` will always leverage `alsa`, so you should configure that first.
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Do that with e.g. `alsamixer` and use `alsactl store` to store those settings.
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Afterwards, we can configure `/etc/rc.conf` to add `alsa` and `dbus` to the SERVICES to be started.
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⚠️ Things to keep in mind
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> Currently, pipewires default config format might ~~always~~ change, so its advised to check either upstream or in `/usr/share/pipewire` for changes.
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The default config can be copied from `/usr/share/pipewire` to `/etc/pipewire` to be modified.
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Alternatively, it will read the config from `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pipewire`.
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With the config moved to either place, you should enable wireplumber.
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In `pipewire.conf`, almost at the bottom of the file, you will find the `context.exec` section where you should uncomment the lines for wireplumber:
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```
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#{ path = "/usr/bin/pipewire-media-session" args = ""
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# condition = [ { exec.session-manager = null } { exec.session-manager = true } ] }
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```
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💡 Quality of life
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To make things easier to work with, you might opt for smaller configuration files, e.g. something like the following structure:
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```
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/etc/pipewire
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├── pipewire-pulse.conf.d
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│ ├── 10-rtmodule.conf
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│ ├── 92-lowlatency.conf
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│ └── 10-tcp.conf
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└── pipewire.conf.d
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├── 10-sessions.conf
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├── 10-rtmodule.conf
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├── 92-lowlatency.conf
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├── 10-settings.conf
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└── 10-rates.conf
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```
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The same words count for `wireplumber` which stores its default configs in `/usr/share/wireplumber`.
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You can copy to `/etc/wireplumber` and so on.
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### Managing a user session
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You are now ready to try out to run a pipewire session.
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From a users shell run `/usr/bin/pipewire` - if there aren't any serious errors your session should be working.
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You can verify your running pipewire session by examining the output of `pw-dump`.
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### Running pipewire-pulse as a pulseaudio-server replacement
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It is crucial that you make sure that `pulseaudio` is not started automagically before you start your `pipewire` server, or it will not work.
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You can do that by adding `autospawn = no` to `/etc/pulse/client.conf`.
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After that, you can theoretically start `pulseaudio-pulse` in another terminal and run `pactl info` to see what `Server Name` it returns.
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It should say `Server Name: PulseAudio (on PipeWire 0.3.yy)`.
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Success!
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You can have that start by default by editing your sessions configurations, e.g.:
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```
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$ cat /etc/pipewire/pipewire.conf.d/10-sessions.conf
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context.exec = [
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{ path = "/usr/bin/wireplumber" args = ""
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condition = [ { exec.session-manager = null } { exec.session-manager = true } ] }
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{ path = "/usr/bin/pipewire" args = "-c pipewire-pulse.conf"
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condition = [ { exec.pipewire-pulse = null } { exec.pipewire-pulse = true } ] }
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]
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```
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Now you can use tools like `contrib/pavucontrol` or `contrib/ncpamixer` to control your typical sources and sink settings.
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Ports like `opt/firefox-bin` and whatever else uses `pulseaudio` should work ootb for you too.
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### Running jack applications through pipewire
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⚠️ Work in progress!
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> There is no jack port in CRUX and therefor this port lacks support of it.
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### Debbuging pipewire
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You can run `pipewire` like that from a terminal: `PIPEWIRE_DEBUG=3 pipewire`
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Make sure to kill your previous session.
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## tl;dr
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> „I don't have any time to read up on stuff myself, tell me what I need to do right now to get this hot mess!“ -some user
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- optional: `prt-get depinst xorg-libxtst pulseaudio` et al, see Pkgfile
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- install `prt-get depinst pipewire`
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- setup `pipewire` to use `wireplumber` as your session-manager
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- execute while starting your X11/Wayland-Session: `/usr/bin/pipewire` & `/usr/bin/pipewire-pulse` & `/usr/bin/wireplumber` (setting up a basic config is cooler though)
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## Ressources
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- [Official pipewire wiki](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/home)
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- [Official ALSA wiki](https://alsa-project.org/wiki/Main_Page)
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- [Gentoo wiki - ALSA](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/ALSA)
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- [Gentoo wiki - Pipewire](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/PipeWire)
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- [Arch wiki - ALSA](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Advanced_Linux_Sound_Architecture)
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- [Arch wiki - Pipewire](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/PipeWire)
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// vim:filetype=markdown
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// End of file
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