/* PipeWire * * Copyright © 2020 Wim Taymans * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the * Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER * DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "config.h" #include #include #include "module-protocol-pulse/pulse-server.h" /** \page page_module_protocol_pulse PipeWire Module: Protocol Pulse * * This module implements a complete PulseAudio server on top of * PipeWire. This is only the server implementation, client are expected * to use the original PulseAudio client library. This provides a * high level of compatibility with existing applications; in fact, * all usual PulseAudio tools such as pavucontrol, pactl, pamon, paplay * should continue to work as they did before. * * This module is usually loaded as part of a standalone pipewire process, * called pipewire-pulse, with the pipewire-pulse.conf config file. * * The pulse server implements a sample cache that is otherwise not * available in PipeWire. * * ## Module Options * * The module arguments can be the contents of the pulse.properties but * it is recommended to make a separate pulse.properties section in the * config file so that overrides can be done. * * ## pulse.properties * * A config section with server properties can be given. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.properties = { * # the addresses this server listens on * server.address = [ * "unix:native" * #"unix:/tmp/something" # absolute paths may be used * #"tcp:4713" # IPv4 and IPv6 on all addresses * #"tcp:[::]:9999" # IPv6 on all addresses * #"tcp:127.0.0.1:8888" # IPv4 on a single address * # * #{ address = "tcp:4713" # address * # max-clients = 64 # maximum number of clients * # listen-backlog = 32 # backlog in the server listen queue * # client.access = "restricted" # permissions for clients * #} * ] * #pulse.min.req = 256/48000 # 5ms * #pulse.default.req = 960/48000 # 20 milliseconds * #pulse.min.frag = 256/48000 # 5ms * #pulse.default.frag = 96000/48000 # 2 seconds * #pulse.default.tlength = 96000/48000 # 2 seconds * #pulse.min.quantum = 256/48000 # 5ms * #pulse.default.format = F32 * #pulse.default.position = [ FL FR ] * # These overrides are only applied when running in a vm. * vm.overrides = { * pulse.min.quantum = 1024/48000 # 22ms * } * } *\endcode * * ### Connection options * *\code{.unparsed} * ... * server.address = [ * "unix:native" * # "tcp:4713" * ] * ... *\endcode * * The addresses the server listens on when starting. Uncomment the `tcp:4713` entry to also * make the server listen on a tcp socket. This is equivalent to loading `module-native-protocol-tcp`. * * There is also a slightly more verbose syntax with more options: * *\code{.unparsed} * .... * server.address = [ * { address = "tcp:4713" # address * max-clients = 64 # maximum number of clients * listen-backlog = 32 # backlog in the server listen queue * client.access = "restricted" # permissions for clients * } * .... *\endcode * * Use `client.access` to use one of the access methods to restrict the permissions given to * clients connected via this address. * * By default network access is given the "restricted" permissions. The session manager is responsible * for assigning permission to clients with restricted permissions (usually read-only permissions). * * ### Playback buffering options * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.min.req = 256/48000 # 5ms *\endcode * * The minimum amount of data to request for clients. The client requested * values will be clamped to this value. Lowering this value together with * tlength can decrease latency if the client wants this, but increase CPU overhead. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.default.req = 960/48000 # 20 milliseconds *\endcode * * The default amount of data to request for clients. If the client does not * specify any particular value, this default will be used. Lowering this value * together with tlength can decrease latency but increase CPU overhead. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.default.tlength = 96000/48000 # 2 seconds *\endcode * * The target amount of data to buffer on the server side. If the client did not * specify a value, this default will be used. Lower values can decrease the * latency. * * ### Record buffering options * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.min.frag = 256/48000 # 5ms *\endcode * * The minimum allowed size of the capture buffer before it is sent to a client. * The requested value of the client will be clamped to this. Lowering this value * can reduce latency at the expense of more CPU usage. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.default.frag = 96000/48000 # 2 seconds *\endcode * * The default size of the capture buffer before it is sent to a client. If the client * did not specify any value, this default will be used. Lowering this value can * reduce latency at the expense of more CPU usage. * * ### Scheduling options * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.min.quantum = 256/48000 # 5ms *\endcode * * The minimum quantum (buffer size in samples) to use for pulseaudio clients. * This value is calculated based on the frag and req/tlength for record and * playback streams respectively and then clamped to this value to ensure no * pulseaudio client asks for too small quantums. Lowering this value might * decrease latency at the expense of more CPU usage. * * ### Format options * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.default.format = F32 *\endcode * * Some modules will default to this format when no other format was given. This * is equivalent to the PulseAudio `default-sample-format` option in * `/etc/pulse/daemon.conf`. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.default.position = [ FL FR ] *\endcode * * Some modules will default to this channelmap (with its number of channels). * This is equivalent to the PulseAudio `default-sample-channels` and * `default-channel-map` options in `/etc/pulse/daemon.conf`. * * ### VM options * *\code{.unparsed} * vm.overrides = { * pulse.min.quantum = 1024/48000 # 22ms * } *\endcode * * When running in a VM, the `vm.override` section will override the properties * in pulse.properties with the given values. This might be interesting because * VMs usually can't support the low latency settings that are possible on real * hardware. * * ## Stream settings and rules * * Streams created by module-protocol-pulse will use the stream.properties * section and stream.rules sections as usual. * * ## Application settings (Rules) * * The pulse protocol module supports generic config rules. It supports a pulse.rules * section with a `quirks` and an `update-props` action. * *\code{.unparsed} * pulse.rules = [ * { * # skype does not want to use devices that don't have an S16 sample format. * matches = [ * { application.process.binary = "teams" } * { application.process.binary = "teams-insiders" } * { application.process.binary = "skypeforlinux" } * ] * actions = { quirks = [ force-s16-info ] } * } * { * # speech dispatcher asks for too small latency and then underruns. * matches = [ { application.name = "~speech-dispatcher*" } ] * actions = { * update-props = { * pulse.min.req = 1024/48000 # 21ms * pulse.min.quantum = 1024/48000 # 21ms * } * } * } * ] *\endcode * * ### Quirks * * The quirks action takes an array of quirks to apply for the client. * * * `force-s16-info` makes the sink and source introspect code pretend that the sample format * is S16 (16 bits) samples. Some application refuse the sink/source if this * is not the case. * * `remove-capture-dont-move` Removes the DONT_MOVE flag on capture streams. Some applications * set this flag so that the stream can't be moved anymore with tools such as * pavucontrol. * * ### update-props * * Takes an object with the properties to update on the client. Common actions are to * tweak the quantum values. * * ## Example configuration * *\code{.unparsed} * context.modules = [ * { name = libpipewire-module-protocol-pulse * args = { } * } * ] * * pulse.properties = { * server.address = [ "unix:native" ] * } * * pulse.rules = [ * { * # skype does not want to use devices that don't have an S16 sample format. * matches = [ * { application.process.binary = "teams" } * { application.process.binary = "teams-insiders" } * { application.process.binary = "skypeforlinux" } * ] * actions = { quirks = [ force-s16-info ] } * } * { * # speech dispatcher asks for too small latency and then underruns. * matches = [ { application.name = "~speech-dispatcher*" } ] * actions = { * update-props = { * pulse.min.req = 1024/48000 # 21ms * pulse.min.quantum = 1024/48000 # 21ms * } * } * } * ] *\endcode */ #define NAME "protocol-pulse" PW_LOG_TOPIC(mod_topic, "mod." NAME); #define PW_LOG_TOPIC_DEFAULT mod_topic PW_LOG_TOPIC(pulse_conn, "conn." NAME); PW_LOG_TOPIC(pulse_ext_dev_restore, "mod." NAME ".device-restore"); PW_LOG_TOPIC(pulse_ext_stream_restore, "mod." NAME ".stream-restore"); #define MODULE_USAGE PW_PROTOCOL_PULSE_USAGE static const struct spa_dict_item module_props[] = { { PW_KEY_MODULE_AUTHOR, "Wim Taymans " }, { PW_KEY_MODULE_DESCRIPTION, "Implement a PulseAudio server" }, { PW_KEY_MODULE_USAGE, MODULE_USAGE }, { PW_KEY_MODULE_VERSION, PACKAGE_VERSION }, }; struct impl { struct pw_context *context; struct spa_hook module_listener; struct pw_protocol_pulse *pulse; }; static void impl_free(struct impl *impl) { spa_hook_remove(&impl->module_listener); if (impl->pulse) pw_protocol_pulse_destroy(impl->pulse); free(impl); } static void module_destroy(void *data) { struct impl *impl = data; pw_log_debug("module %p: destroy", impl); impl_free(impl); } static const struct pw_impl_module_events module_events = { PW_VERSION_IMPL_MODULE_EVENTS, .destroy = module_destroy, }; SPA_EXPORT int pipewire__module_init(struct pw_impl_module *module, const char *args) { struct pw_context *context = pw_impl_module_get_context(module); struct pw_properties *props; struct impl *impl; int res; PW_LOG_TOPIC_INIT(mod_topic); PW_LOG_TOPIC_INIT(pulse_conn); /* it's easier to init these here than adding an init() call to the * extensions */ PW_LOG_TOPIC_INIT(pulse_ext_dev_restore); PW_LOG_TOPIC_INIT(pulse_ext_stream_restore); impl = calloc(1, sizeof(struct impl)); if (impl == NULL) return -errno; pw_log_debug("module %p: new %s", impl, args); if (args) props = pw_properties_new_string(args); else props = NULL; impl->pulse = pw_protocol_pulse_new(context, props, 0); if (impl->pulse == NULL) { res = -errno; free(impl); return res; } pw_impl_module_add_listener(module, &impl->module_listener, &module_events, impl); pw_impl_module_update_properties(module, &SPA_DICT_INIT_ARRAY(module_props)); return 0; }