13 points

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!

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63 points
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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

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7 points

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

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3 points

No

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1 point
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85 points

Pipewire is a true blessing for Linux

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59 points

Genuinely one of the best pieces of software that these heroes are giving away.

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14 points

Is there something like the banana voicemeeter for pipewire?

I am currently using Helvum, which is kinda lacking a lot of the functionality.

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6 points

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

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2 points

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.

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2 points

Pipewire exposes both a JACK and Pulseaudio client interface, so you don’t need to run the JACK daemon anymore.

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4 points

Sadly cadence seems to be dead: https://github.com/falkTX/Cadence

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1 point

Oh, that’s sad news. These are really great tools :(

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5 points

big fan of qpwgraph

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2 points

I believe a problem you may encounter asking this question is the fact pipewire does most of that itself?

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