Le ven. 9 sept. 2022 à 15:06, Vincent Bernat <ber...@debian.org> a écrit :

> On 2022-09-09 04:51, Paul Wise wrote:
> > On Thu, 2022-09-08 at 17:58 +0200, Dylan Aïssi wrote:
> >
> >> I have been asked several times regarding when Debian will switch its
> default
> >> sound server from PulseAudio to PipeWire without having an official
> answer.
> >> Thus, I suppose it's the right time to start a discussion about that.
> >
> > I switched to PipeWire some time ago. I don't have particularly complex
> > audio needs (just AUX/headphones on a desktop). When the system is
> > under load and the CPU throttled, I get choppy audio, which is
> > especially annoying when the load is caused by a video. That doesn't
> > happen with PulseAudio and setting the quantum to 2048 is a workaround.
> >
> >     pw-metadata -n settings 0 clock.force-quantum 2048
> >
> > Probably there are more of these sorts of issues, so I agree we should
> > switch to it by default sooner rather than later to find the problems.
>
> I also had this issue. This was greatly improved since May and I am now
> using it instead of PulseAudio. Check that you have rtkit-daemon
> installed. It helps.


wireplumber (up-to-date sid) on an armhf laptop:
- same problem as above (even with rtkit + force-quantum) which wasn't the
case with pulseaudio
- micro no longer recognized
- hdmi audio jack no longer recognized
- headphones have no sound
This laptop have a rockchip alsa ucm2 profile, alsa sees speakers, micro,
headphones, hdmi,
but not pipewire apparently.

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