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Using JACK and PipeWire

663 bytes removed, 27 March
Normally, you can run applications with PipeWire's JACK support by running it with <code>pw-jack</code>, but this is not possible when using libvirt. Instead, you need PipeWire to provide drop-in JACK support. To do this:
* on Debian: run <code>sudo cp /usr/share/doc/pipewire/examples/ld.so.conf.d/pipewire-jack-*.conf /etc/ld.so.conf.d/; sudo ldconfig</code>
* on Arch: install the [https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/pipewire<code>qemu-audio-jack-dropin</ code> package, which contains the jack driver for qemu, and the <code>pipewire-jack-dropin] AUR </code> package.
Once this is done, you have two options. You could run your virtual machines under your user, or you could set it up so that the QEMU user has access to your PipeWire socket. The former is easier, while the latter is more secure.
Then, you can run <code>virsh edit win10</code>, and perform the following changes:
# If the <code><domain></code> line doesn't already contain <code>xmlns:qemu</code>, add <code><nowiki>xmlns:qemu='http://libvirt.org/schemas/domain/qemu/1.0'</nowiki></code>. The line should look like:#: <syntaxhighlight lang="xml"><domain type='kvm' xmlns:qemu='http://libvirt.org/schemas/domain/qemu/1.0'></syntaxhighlight># Add the following block to the <code><devices></code> section:#: <syntaxhighlight lang="xml"> <audio id="1" type="jack"> <input clientName="win10" connectPorts="input-name"/> <output clientName="win10" connectPorts="output-name"/> </audio> <sound model="ich9"> <alias name="sound0"/> </sound></syntaxhighlight>#: <code>input-name</code> and <code>output-name</code> should be replaced with a regular expression that matches the name of the JACK input and output ports. Essentially, these are the names of microphone and speaker devices that the VM would connect to. You can get the names by looking at your patchbay, or run <code>jack_lsp</code>.
#: If there is an existing <code><sound></code> block, it should be removed.
# Finally, we need to set PipeWire's runtime directory and latency. These are configured by environment variables. To do this, the following block right before <code></domain></code>:
/run/user/1000/pipewire-0 rw,
</source>
 
 
 
Once you shutdown your VM and restart it, you should see an emulated HD audio device, and any sound should go into PipeWire. If you don't hear anything, check your patchbay connections.
/srv/win10/pipewire-0 rw,
</source>
 
If you are using NixOS, you'll also need to add <code><qemu:env name="LD_LIBRARY_PATH" value="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/run/current-system/sw/lib/pipewire"/></code> to your <code><qemu:commandline></code> section.
Once you shutdown your VM and restart it, you should see an emulated HD audio device, and any sound should go into PipeWire. If you don't hear anything, check your patchbay connections.
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