![]() Although using a separate audio interface might also help pin down whether it's just a bug in Linux' handling of that particular interface since you mentioned recording from the internal sound device's microphone is working properly otherwise (as well as it can!).One or more processors and memory storing processor-executable instructions that, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the apparatus to: But I would say that if you're reliably seeing the same broken behavior in multiple different applications using the PulseAudio layer, then that's probably something worth reporting upstream. ![]() I would simply say stick to the JACK compatibility layer, but that really doesn't help you much with Firefox obviously. ![]() ![]() They should probably clarify that in the documentation at some point as different components are definitely looking at different configuration files to some extent it seems.Īnyway, sorry I couldn't help with the problem otherwise. Annoyingly, I had to go run strings on binaries and libraries to even see which components referenced which configuration files under /usr/share/pipewire specifically. Sadly I don't have too much experience using the PulseAudio side of PipeWire as most of my "fun" audio stuff is being done through the JACK compatibility side of things which has mostly "just worked" for me, aside from setting things like PIPEWIRE_LATENCY as needed occasionally.Īs for the configuration file stuff, I'd stick with doing everything under ~/.config/pipewire as much as possible per just to avoid having system updates stomp on things down the road potentially. I also don't know why doing the temporary change above didn't work - so maybe sample rate isn't the problem?ĭoes it sound like this is a sample rate issue, or should I be looking at something else? I don't have any config file in /etc/pipewire currently. But I'm confused why both nf and nf both exist, and if I need to change both, since the latter also has 48000 throughout, though not in the same way. Was going to see if I can drop it from 48000 down to 44100. Learned about /usr/share/pipewire/nf and saw this site posted here: Just ran that command then tried to record again, got the same thing. I came across a /r/linuxaudio post which recommended I run pw-metadata -n settings 0 clock.force-rate 44100 I did that, but it didn't change anything - unless I'm supposed to restart something after, which I didn't. I went through pop_os documentation and updated everything, reinstalled pipewire and alsa. But I need to run recording software via firefox, so I can't always manually switch. When I open ocenaudio and record via Jack, it's at the right speed. When I recorded with someone lately, they recorded themselves at 2 minutes - but my audio was around 1:50 or less.Ĭould I be recording at 48000 instead of 44100, which is what everything else is at?Ĭonfirmed this is a pulse / pipewire issue. My computer records audio with lots of clipping and a high pitch. This is an issue, bc I do interviews for work. While my internal mic records fine, and the H4n records fine, plugging the H4n into the laptop causes major speed issues. I have a Zoom H4n plugged into a laptop running pop_os. ![]() Sounds Freesound ccMixter Songs, samples under CC Musical Artifacts : Sounfonts, samples, synth presets etc.Ĭurated software list Awesome-linuxaudio įixed! Scroll down to comments for the solution.īeen working on this for awhile but need to take care of other pressing issues, would love to get feedback on what I plan to do next: JHoermannįorums AV Linux forums KXStudio forums Demonic Sweaters linux audio productions, tutorials, floss software demos Linux Music : lots of tutorial and explanations about linux audio, jack, synthesis. Youtube Channels Tobiasz Karoń : Zynaddsubx, ardour, jack, obxd, calf and more. On freenode #laa #lad #lau #opensourcemusicians A subreddit dedicated towards music and audio related topics on the Linux platform. ![]()
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