hi Mitsch,
recently, i have disabled the onboard soundcard of my laptop using pipewire on arch linux with this:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/WirePlumber#Disable_a_device/node
i want the system to just use usb soundcards. and the system always automatically connected the onboard card to the first ins/outs which i didn't want.
it worked like a charm.
viele grüße!
christoph
recently, i have disabled the onboard soundcard of my laptop using pipewire on arch linux with this:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/WirePlumber#Disable_a_device/node
i want the system to just use usb soundcards. and the system always automatically connected the onboard card to the first ins/outs which i didn't want.
it worked like a charm.
viele grüße!
christoph
Am 29. September 2024 17:04:28 MESZ schrieb Michael Jarosch <riotsound@xxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Hi!
I'm using Linux-Show-Player (LiSP). LiSP allows you to make use of any audio port there is with the jack-output-plugin but, unfortunately, under pipewire it just doesn't. (There seems to be a bug in gstreamer-jack.) So, I have to switch to jack, from time to time.
There is a cool configuration-script in Ubuntu-Studio on my main multimedia-workstation, which allows switching from pipewire to another config where I can start jackd - and going back without any hassle. But on my laptop I'm running Debian.
It's said that pipewire works great with jackd. Unfortunately, it's not self-explaining…
Under Gnome - what steps do I need to take without de- and reinstalling anything… Keeping pipewire alive, but excluding a sound device, f.e. the one that I normally plug on the USB bus and then starting jackd on it.
Should not be too hard, is it?
Greets!
Mitsch
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