• umbrella@lemmy.ml
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    7 个月前

    pipewire simply eliminated all the quirks from my use case.

    the transition was annoying, but i don’t even think about how bad linux audio used to be anymore.

    wish the transition to wayland was going this well.

    • lengau@midwest.social
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      7 个月前

      The transition for me was “install Pipewire and its pulseaudio compatibility package, remove pulseaudio, reboot.”

      There are a couple of quirks (updating Apparmor rules makes KDE think I’ve reattached all my audio devices), but it’s mostly pretty smooth.

      • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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        7 个月前

        I waited for canonical to enable it by default. The annoying part for me was undoing the workarounds PulseAudio needed to do what I wanted.

  • nintendiator@feddit.cl
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    7 个月前

    Pipewire: works.

    Pulseaudio: worksn’t.

    Really, it’s as simple as that. Pulseaudio tried to be the systemd of sound and failed succeeded pretty horribly. Even its packaging was horrible, back when it was first put into Fedora and I tried uninstalling, it threatened taking down Libreoffice and Gedit with it.

    • Auzy@beehaw.org
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      7 个月前

      Pulseaudio is NOT a failure lol

      ALSA, Esound, OSS etc were always conflicting pre-pulseaudio. Sometimes you’d get sound, you’d always have to screw around with the sound server settings in different apps between KDE and Gnome apps, and gaming was a disaster. Even just using XMMS2 was a pain with Netscape/Firefox

      It was a huge step forward, even with initial teething problems.

      The only thing it didn’t solve was low latency (for music production), and that’s really the huge advantage of Pipewire. It did take a while to get there though…

      In Xfree86 days, Linux wouldn’t have had a future if PulseAudio wasn’t released. It was one of those critical elements (along with Compiz, XrandR, DRI, Udev, PackageKit and Steam) which actually made Linux competitive against OSX and Windows at the time

      • nintendiator@feddit.cl
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        7 个月前

        I don’t know what universe were you living in, but I remember history vastly differently. No app I ever used ever had problems with ALSA, not even gaming. XMMS or XMMS2 (or Audacious even back then when it was kinda starting) never had issues with Firefox. Only when PA was introduced I started losing audio on various apps, losing volume control, or in a few cases apps would cease listing ALSA as a possible audio output while PA was installed.

        I killed PA on my machines hard and never had any issues again, and things pretty much only improved once Pipewire arrived other than having to change one (1) configuration file, and it was properly documented.

        • Auzy@beehaw.org
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          7 个月前

          This was back in kernel 2.2 / 2.4 days when Xfree86 still needed a configuration file

          If you used DE’s like Enlightenment or multiple desktops simultaneously, it only caused more issues.

          Also, you HAD to configure what sound server you were using often in many apps, and I seem to recall even needing to set a path in some cases to the dev.

          Pulseaudio was only problematic when it was first released.

          You may have had a good experience with sound servers back then, but for the rest of us, it was a lot of additional configuration and messing around

          • nintendiator@feddit.cl
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            7 个月前

            Xfree? Who’s talking about that? I’ve only ever had to use Xorg, and I only ever needed to touch its conf file if I needed to fiddle with the refresh rate of an external monitor. (Compared to that, its “”““modern””“” replacement Wayland doesn’t even start a full desktop session on my machine)

            No, we’re talking about the crap that was PulseAudio, and how ALSA; which is unrelated to XFree, worked almost flawlessly and barely needed any configuration. Formatted my machine several times and remember there was someties a path to the dev (/dev/snd or something like that usually, I think? I sometimes see it thrown around when doing advanced stuff with stuff like mpv) but I was lucky that when I had to edit my file it was for hardware bugs and not for software things. I… think? nowadays that bug is acknowledged for either at the ALSA or the Pipewire level, haven’t delved enough to check.

            Dealing with sound servers on the Linux community does feel like a rarity going-backwards kind of thing: to this day, Firefox for some weird ass-reason dropped ALSA support in favour of PulseAudio. But in Debian, the packaged Firefox versions continue to work with ALSA flawlessly - as if support never was dropped, despite the many versions and changes since. Which suggests me to think Mozilla never actually dropped support, they just flipped a switch somewhere to promote PA instead, which usually comes down to money deals. Mozilla is an expert at that kind of thing.

            • Auzy@beehaw.org
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              7 个月前

              That’s my point. I’ve been using Linux from before xorg existed. Back in those days, things didn’t auto configure.

              Sorry, we’ll agree to disagree here about sound servers…

              Just because audio worked perfectly for you, I assure you, it wasn’t the case for everyone else at the time. Not everything defaulted to OSS or ALSA. So, there was often additional configuration involved.

              And pulse was the only one to convince everyone to drop their sound servers and provide a way to support them all. That’s a huge accomplishment. Whilst it could be argued that ALSA had the potential to do so, maybe… But they didn’t

              It was such a pity they didn’t include JACK support though, because that seriously held back the Linux Music production community (which is mostly seamless in Windows and MacOS)

    • TheHarpyEagle@lemmy.world
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      7 个月前

      back when it was first put into Fedora and I tried uninstalling, it threatened taking down Libreoffice and Gedit with it.

      I did this back when I was a newbie and somehow destroyed either the display server or some other part of the GUI. Sound issues have made me nervous ever since.

      • nintendiator@feddit.cl
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        7 个月前

        Shoddy workmanship due to how eager those devs are to push their beta testing software on Production, yeah. And honestly looking back, coming from Fedora, doesn’t surprise me.

      • Piece_Maker@feddit.uk
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        7 个月前

        Pipewire’s got fantastic JACK support. You can even run standard JACK control GUI’s like Carla on top of it and expect them to work just like they would on regular JACK

        • SolidTux@lemmy.ml
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          7 个月前

          I do still have some problems with freewheeling. Ardour always crashes on exports when using the Jack interface, but everything works over the Pulseaudio interface. It might be an Ardour thing, but it doesn’t occur when actually running Jack. So something is actually different with Pipewire.

      • nintendiator@feddit.cl
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        7 个月前

        No idea if that’s the case but they certainly seem to have been made with the same mentality. FOSS has for a while suffered of what I call the “Icaza pest”, trying to bring the Microsoft way of design and programming into Linux. The results and troubles this causes abound, considering eg.: the fart that has been Gnome themes since 3.x, or the Gnome posturing back in the day that “users have no right to change their settings” when modernization of Gnome-terminal, and how it’d interact with stuff like screen and dtach, were discused.

  • excitingburp@lemmy.world
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    7 个月前

    PipeWire wins in the feature-set game, which is why it is being preferred over PulseAudio.

    According to the inventor of PipeWire, this is the wrong perspective to take. PipeWire is preferred over PulseAudio as a server, clients (apps) should continue to use the PulseAudio/JACK APIs because the PipeWire API is not designed for general use (it’s designed for things like pipewire-pulse and pipewire-jack).

    • DefederateLemmyMl@feddit.nl
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      7 个月前

      clients (apps) should continue to use the PulseAudio/JACK APIs because the PipeWire API is not designed for general use

      Really? That is news to me … explains why mpv’s pipewire audio output was briefly broken a couple of months ago.

      • excitingburp@lemmy.world
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        7 个月前

        I heard it in a podcast, but here’s a written source on that: https://fedoramagazine.org/pipewire-1-0-an-interview-with-pipewire-creator-wim-taymans/

        The message is still to use the PulseAudio and JACK APIs. They are proven and they work and they are fully supported.

        I know some projects now use the pw-stream API directly. There are some advantages for using this API such as being lower latency than the PulseAudio API and having more features than the JACK API. The problem is that I came to realize that the stream API (and filter API) are not the ultimate APIs. I want to move to a combination of the stream and filter API for the future.

    • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 个月前

      So the middleware stays the same but the underlying server changes? That’s an amazing strategy I wish Wayland did this instead of breaking damn near everything with it’s strange restrictions on behavior and overlays

      • NekkoDroid@programming.dev
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        7 个月前

        The thing with Wayland and X11 is: this couldn’t really be done because of how fundamentally broken incompatible X11 is (and there is XWayland for most clients that mostly works)

      • lengau@midwest.social
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        7 个月前

        That’s what xwayland is.

        Apps can talk to xwayland with the x11 protocol but instead of an X server rendering it, your Wayland compositor renders it.

        The restrictions come from the fact that those x11 behaviours are exactly things the industry has decided are a bad idea and should be replaced.

        • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          7 个月前

          Really? Like not letting apps draw over other apps? As far as I know Windows still allows that, so does even Mac OS. I don’t know who in the industry decided that screenshotting is a bad behaviour and needs to be removed but maybe they should find a new industry, like fast food line work for example.

          • Ullebe1@lemmy.ml
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            7 个月前

            Allowing any app unrestricted access to the input and output of any other app (like in X11) is a terrible security practice. It allows for trivially easy keyloggers and makes horizontal movement to other apps after the first has been exploited super easy.

            Many people’s answer to this is “then just don’t run untrusted apps, duh”, but that is a bad take since that isn’t realistic for 99% of users. People run things like Discord or Spotify or games or Nvidia drivers all the time, not to mention random JavaScript on various websites, so the security model should be robust in the presence of that kind of behaviour. Otherwise everyone is just a single sandbox escape in the browser away from being fully compromised by malware installed with root privileges. Luckily we know better now than when X11 was designed and that is the reason for things like Bubblewrap (used in Flatpak for sandboxing), portals and the security model of Wayland.

            And in the end: the people who decided this are the people actually willing to do the work to build and maintain the Linux desktop stack. If anyone knows what the right approach is, it’s them.

            • yianiris@kafeneio.social
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              7 个月前

              Are you comparing 40years of graphical environment stability and global use with something that has been broken for more than a decade and now all of a sudden is portrayed as secure?

              I want to start applications as another user in my own environment and my own system and wayland prevents me, while x11 allows me (together with many forms of sandboxing and containerization).

              I have asked this question to all pretend to be experts of wayland and I have 0 responses.

              @Ullebe1 @LainTrain

              • Ullebe1@lemmy.ml
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                7 个月前

                I absolutely am. Calling Wayland “something that has been broken for more than a decade” rather than “something that has been in active development for more than a decade” is also an interesting take. By that measure X.Org is “something that has been broken for almost two decades”, so let’s just not go there. And I’m not saying that Wayland magically makes everything secure. I’m saying that Wayland (or something like it) is a necessary step if we want a desktop that is secure. I have seen people propose something like nested sandboxed X servers with a single application for each as an alternative, but I think it’s probably better to actually fix the underlying problem.

                That’s an interesting use case. It isn’t really anything I’ve had a need for, so I don’t know what the best way to do something like that is. If your compositor doesn’t allow it, could it perhaps be possible to run as a different user in a nested compositor, like Cage or gamescope? Also, how do you sandbox the applications X11 access? If they share the same server, then a sandboxed application can just wait for you to launch a terminal and use sudo, at which point it can inject a malicious command as root.

                • yianiris@kafeneio.social
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                  7 个月前

                  I don’'t use systemd or logind so I don’t have to worry about such magic security violations this bogus pile of crap creates. I have more control of processes and don’t allow some “automated” service to be loging-in-out system users 2000 times a nanosecond as logind does.

                  It only happens when I want it to happen, not uncontrollably.

                  KISS is the best security measure.

                  @Ullebe1

            • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              7 个月前

              I’m a cybersec MSc and the security model you’re describing is that of the clipboard.

              Apps interacting with each other is also how just about anything works on a computer since multi tasking OSes.

              Flatpaks and Snaps are also DOA along with Wayland lol.

              • Ullebe1@lemmy.ml
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                7 个月前

                Nice appeal to authority. Are you referring to a formalised security model (of which I’d love to read more, if you have a link?), or the actual clipboard on your PC?

                But not all interaction is equal. Access control and granularity of permissions is something X11 is sorely lacking in, which Wayland has built in. Which is why X11 is a bad fit for common treat models and Wayland is not.

                Ohh, @LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com said so, so it must be true! I’ll let you keep believing that while I enjoy them and watch them grow in popularity and usage, just like Wayland.

                • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  7 个月前

                  I’m referring to the actual clipboard on your PC, yes.

                  Don’t get me wrong ofc X is not without issues at all, but Wayland is like chopping off your arm at the elbow because you messed up some nail polish, and you arguing for it is like saying that now since you don’t have that arm anymore no one can break it, while all the other OSes watch on in horror and embarrassment as they allow all access to screen elements to any random app like god intended.

                  If you got malware installed it’s all over anyway. Why bother with weird screen access when you can just ransom the home partition and all personal files instead?

                  Without OBS, Discord, Steam, Guake, proper screenshot tools, etc. it’s not really a functional OS anymore for general use and that’s what you get with Wayland.

                  If Wayland fixes all the issues with it I’d happily switch, but it likely won’t since they are fundamental to it’s design and if so then the only way it will secure Linux desktops is by making no one ever use one again.

        • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          7 个月前

          And it hasn’t done that because no one is going to replace it a good but old pipe with a few issues with a pipe with a massive hole in it “by design”

  • Snarwin@kbin.social
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    7 个月前

    As someone who occasionally dabbles in music production on Linux, I love that Pipewire lets me run JACK and Pulseaudio apps side-by-side without having to jump through hoops.

  • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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    7 个月前

    I miss the pulseaudio restart command.

    Sometimes my 3.5mm aux isn’t detected in pipewire until I reboot.

    pulseaudio -r used to do the trick iirc

      • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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        7 个月前

        Thank you, I added the command to my Linux Journal,

        Your post motivated me to do some more trials and it ended up that my greetd greeter was locking up the audio sink.

        So I made sure to add a command after the greeter exits killall -u greeter and the sink finally passed correctly to the logged in user just fine after that.

        In reviewing the arch wiki some more too I’ve installed wire plumber session manager for pipewire, I am still a little confused about it’s function and relation to pipewire but maybe that has helped too?

        Cheers :)

      • burrito@sh.itjust.works
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        7 个月前

        I used to have to occasionally run this but I’d say it has been at least a couple of years since I last had to. I was a pretty early adopter of pipewire because it solved some Bluetooth issues that pulseaudio had. It has improved immensely since I first started using it.

        • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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          7 个月前

          To be fair (with pipewire*) my audio issues usually related to HDMI audio output which has been a PITA for like 20 years since the days of Xbox 360.

          I started using PipeWire as soon as Arch switched the recommended default and I agree, it cleared up a lot of issues and fixed my Bluetooth headset, which was nice.

          My 3.5mm issues are complicated by the scenario where I have a extension cable always plugged in but not always my headphone cable (sennheisers stock cables aren’t super long)

          I just wanted to add this as a “to be fair” and there is a element of “user error” where I just haven’t put enough time in to really learn pipewire.

          Well last night I resolved my problems by making sure to kill all processed owned by the greeter (as seen in my other post thanks to OP^^)

          `killall -u greeter’

          Now I can enjoy my Ubuntu startup sound in peace /s /volume-warning

          https://yewtu.be/watch?v=CQaEXZ-df6Y

          • Communist@lemmy.ml
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            7 个月前

            you should really report that bug to the greeter people, that should be fixed for everyone

  • Diplomjodler@feddit.de
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    7 个月前

    I always had trouble with the sound on video calls with PulseAudio. Since I’ve switched to Pipewire, everything has been smooth.

  • Baggie@lemmy.zip
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    7 个月前

    Would love to use it, it has the incorrect channel map for my surround sound system which apparently cannot be changed like it can in pulse? After that gets sorted then sure.

    • Mactan@lemmy.ml
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      7 个月前

      my system sets the wrong bitrate for a device but I was able to configure it, you may want to browse the wireplumber wiki and see if its config options can meet your use case

      • Baggie@lemmy.zip
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        7 个月前

        That’s a good tip, it probably can but I’ll need a bit of learning to figure it out. The Linux audio situation is a hell of a learning curve sometimes.

  • uvok@pawb.social
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    7 个月前

    I’ve been using Pipewire for a while, it was great because I could use my Bluetooth headset with a better audio Codec than in Pulseaudio. Unfortunately, my headset stopped working one day suddenly with Pipewire. (maybe after a dist-upgrade?) No amount of disconnecting, unbonding etc. would work. Went back to Pulseaudio as a sound server. Sad.

    Neither Pulseaudio nor Pipewire remember to use by screen speakers (hdmi) as default, though. It always switches back to the internal sound card.