PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop
PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop

PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop

PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop
PipeWire 1.0 Released For Managing Audio/Video Steams On The Linux Desktop
Official Release Page for those who don't want to read the Phoronix article: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/releases/1.0.0
It's great to see that Pipewire has reached this milestone. Personally I've been using it since 0.3.35 for very basic audio needs and it's been a very smooth transition. After installation I never had to tinker with it anymore. "It just works"TM
I had to do some tinkering way back to make my bluetooth earplugs be recognized as an audio device.
Not sure if that is still needed today
No
Genuinely one of the best pieces of software that these heroes are giving away.
I've seen so many audio changes on Linux. But Pipewire is the first one without any negatives.
For a long time, people shat all over pipewire and said it wasn't viable as a replacement for the existing Linux audio stack, but clearly that hasn't ended up being the case
I've heard nothing but good, and replacing Pulseaudio was painless. It was Pulseaudio that people hated on in my experience
When it was brand new there were some edge case bugs that broke on certain workflows and hardware, but that's pretty much entirely fixed now and I'm guessing for a long time now it's been more universally stable than pulseaudio was.
Also, some people just pointlessly dislike anything that's new, or because it breaks their spacebar heating
Pipewire makes me feel like I'm a bit stupid. I keep reading about it, I read the introduction and FAQ on their website, yet I still couldn't tell you what that thing even does. All I know is it's a slightly less buggy drop-in replacement for pulseaudio, and pulseaudio is something I use because Firefox forces me to. (I would still be on plain old ALSA if it weren't for Firefox.)
Also, it definitely did not "just work" for me out of the box, I had to do quite some digging and some very non-obvious stuff to get it to a) start up and b) let me use my microphone. I still don't even know what "starting up" really means for pipewire (is there a daemon or something?), the website likes to pretend that isn't a thing, but without doing some stuff to start it up, audio just won't work for pulseaudio and pipewire applications...
The Arch wiki made installing it very painless for me. Zero problems. Install it, remove PA, activate systemd service.
you can install pipewire directly from archinstall now
I hope the garuda linux devs found it as easy as you. Wish they would disable the 5 second standby timer by default, but I'll manage.
btw
Hol up, 1.0? I've been using it and thought it was around for few years already
In F/OSS, it is not unusual for software to stay below 1.0 version for a long time yet still get a lot of use. Just look at how long OpenSSL, for example, was at 0.9.something, while already being of crucial importance to a lot of internet infrastructure.
The reasons for this are varied, but the most important is probably simply that free software developers don't feel the pressure to call a product 1.0 when they don't believe it is ready to be called that.
Is there something like the banana voicemeeter for pipewire?
I am currently using Helvum, which is kinda lacking a lot of the functionality.
I was experimenting with the Cadence tools from KXStudio. These are mostly made for JACK, but PipeWire has a JACK interface so it should work. It's similar to helvum, but with more options.
Not sure right now which one (maybe Carla), but one of these programs also support adding sound effect nodes that have their own GUI! You probably want to use it in multi-client or patchbay mode
Sadly cadence seems to be dead: https://github.com/falkTX/Cadence
My audio set up is using jack on Ubuntu. If I were to start using pipewire, does it replace jack? Or do you use it alongside jack? I use mostly ardour, hydrogen, renoise and bitwig.
big fan of qpwgraph
I believe a problem you may encounter asking this question is the fact pipewire does most of that itself?
This is the best summary I could come up with:
It has finally happened: PipeWire 1.0 has been released as this now very common software to the Linux desktop for managing audio and video streams.
With time it's proven to be a suitable replacement to the likes of PulseAudio and JACK while pushing forward the Linux desktop with its modern design and feature set.
PipeWire 1.0 delivers improved time reporting for less jitter in ALSA when using IRQ mode, various module fixes, Bluetooth LC3 codec and compatibility improvements, improved transport and time handling for JACK, optimized buffer re-use with JACK, and a variety of other improvements.
There isn't anything fundamentally different about PipeWire 1.0 but was part of their plan for releasing 1.0 later in the year and finally moving past all the 0.3.xx releases.
PipeWire has proven itself stable and plenty reliable for Linux desktop uses.
Downloads and more details on the big PipeWire 1.0 release via FreeDesktop.org GitLab.
The original article contains 161 words, the summary contains 150 words. Saved 7%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
lets go
Brilliant piece of software
I've been using PipeWire this year on my Void Linux laptop & desktop. It's been mostly OK but has a few problems. For years I have been using plain ALSA (with no custom configuration) because pulseaudio causes me regular issues across multiple machines (mostly silently failing).
Pros:
Cons:
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- Sometimes breaks all audio until I manually restart it (hey, just like pulseaudio. This problem never happens when using ALSA straight)
Well, how much lennart is in this thing? Not only can that predict how well it's going to work, but also how soon it'll be fixed, how responsive the 'team' will be to bug reports, how compatible it'll be with other system components AND whether 'compatibility' will be achieved before the entire OS has been systematically imported into (and badly replicated by) the project.
I don't think honestly he gets enough credit.
If you check SystemD, its a HUGE step up, which is why everyone is using it now (whereas, the old scripts had race conditions, were a pain to write and other issues). Anyone who has written both can tell you how much better things are now..
The fact this issue is happening on both Pipewire and Pulseaudio also suggests it's more likely a bug in the drivers.. It might not be obvious on ALSA directly, but that doesn't mean an issue doesn't exist there..
And honestly, the situation before PulseAudio was awful. Audio not working was a common issue, and low latency audio was the least of anyone's problems. Whereas, these days, because of Pulseaudio, even gaming is a thing now (back then, I even saw issues on tuxracer, and Unreal tournament back in the days).
In regards to setup, most distributions will handle that anyway I'm guessing. So not sure why the configuration process should matter unless you're in Arch or Slackware? As long as the distribution handles it, it shouldn't matter. It'd really a non-issue honestly.
I do a lot of middleware development and we're regularly blamed by users for bugs/problems upstream too (which is why we've now added a huge amount of enduser diagnostics/metrics in our products which has made it more obvious the issues aren't related to us). In practice, very few people have issues with Pulseaudio (I haven't seen issues since launch). Sometimes as well, keep in mind it can be the sound interface (especially if its USB)
Oh nice! I wonder if this will fix discord streaming audio?
Nope. This will only be fixed when Discord gets their head out of their ass, unlikely to happen soon.
Can you describe the issue? I don't use Discord (and I presume the problem might depend on what browser you use).
on discord on linux you can't screenshare with desktop audio, I think this might be already fixed in newer electron versions (but discord is closed source and has not updated their electron in a long time)
I have discord installed from the flatpak. Screen sharing works but it doesn't share audio from the applications. Discord-screenaudio and web browser discord have been suggested to me but they don't work with unfocused push to talk. I've also tried xwaylandvideobridge but that didn't stream the audio either.
I'm assuming this is a "dedicated app" (i.e. apt install discord). I was capable of streaming the video, but sound was a different beast. Audio streaming on discord was a no go. I was finally able to do it with pipewire and using discord-screenaudio
Pipewire is a true blessing for Linux