Let device module figure out the priority based on the state of the
profiles.
Note that most likely all profiles will be in PA_BT_AUDIO_STATE_CONNECTED
state so 'Off' will be the initial profile then it is up to the policy
module to switch to the most suitable profile.
Add support for hfgw card profile in module-bluetooth-policy, just like
a2dp_source is handled.
In this case also the sink needs to be connected using module-loopback.
Instead of focusing on a2dp_source only, prepare the module to support
several profiles. It will be possible to enable/disable each of them
using module arguments.
Property bluetooth.protocol did make a distinction between A2DP sink and
source roles but on the contrary did not separate HFP roles (headset vs
gateway). For consistency, they should both behave similarly.
This automatically fixes another incosistency: the HFGW (or HSP) sink
was set to bluetooth.protocol="sco", while the source was set to "hsp".
There is no use for this distinction, since the protocol (including the
role) is the same.
Profile a2dp_source, just like any other card profile, should have
state guards when the profile is being changed. If the BlueZ interface
is not connected, the profile should be set to "off".
The return value of dbus_message_iter_next() doesn't need to be checked
since the while condition will be false anyway (arg type will be
DBUS_TYPE_INVALID).
The method ListDevices() in org.bluez.Adapter was deprecated in BlueZ
4.61, and is going to be removed in future releases. Instead, a property
was introduced for this purpose in BlueZ 4.7.
The method ListAdapters() in org.bluez.Manager was deprecated in BlueZ
4.61, and is going to be removed in future releases. Instead, a property
was introduced for this purpose in BlueZ 4.22.
The module module-bluetooth-device should never be given parameter
'profile' twice, even if both HFGW and A2DP are playing. This patch
proposed to consider HFGW first.
This simplifies the code a lot, in favour of the D-Bus Media interface
in BlueZ. The old socket-based IPC mechanism has been deprecated and is
about to be removed soon.
In UCM basic functions, we only assign intended roles from modifier
to sink/source, but we don't have a chance to set the ucm modifiers.
Here we amend the functions so that when roled stream starts or
stops, we have the following results:
1. stream will be routed to sink/source specified in modifier by
module-intended-roles
2. After that, modifier will be enabled or disabled.
3. when multiple streams with matched roles of modifier start, only
the first one will enable the modifier, and when they end, the
last one will disable the modifier.
Signed-off-by: Feng Wei <wei.feng@freescale.com>
Signed-off-by: Arun Raghavan <arun.raghavan@collabora.co.uk>
I know that pa_streq() is defined with an extra parenthesis, but everytime I
look at it, it makes me nervous. :D
So it's better to add the parenthesis here.
Modifiers may have their own PlaybackPCM/CapturePCM and for these, we
create separate sinks/sources. These are marked with the
device.intended_roles property to let role-based routing take care if
streams are tagged appropriately.
The proplist isn't used by the conventional alsa-mixer code path, but
can be used by UCM to transfer properties from UCM data to the
sinks/sources corresponding to a mapping. These properties could be used
later in policy, etc.
The specific use for which I'm writing this now is for UCM modifiers
that have their own PlaybackPCM/CapturePCM field. These will be
translated to a separate sink/source corresponding to the modifier by
adding an additional mapping per sink/source. These mappings' proplist
will be populated with the name of the modifier and corresponding
"device.intended_role" property. The latter will be used in the usual
routing-by-role way, and the former will be used during sink/source
activation and deactivation to know what UCM modifier is to be enabled
or disabled.
Jack in UCM is decided by UCM device name, although in fact
not all UCM devices have "jacks". Because port is also mapped
to UCM device, we can always find target port when some jack
event happens.
Signed-off-by: Feng Wei <wei.feng@freescale.com>
UCM basic functions will provide another way to handle the alsa mixer
and controls. That means alsa card module will make use of alsa ucm
configurations provided by various audio systems instead of mixer and
paths configurations provided by PA. PA profiles come from UCM verb, PA
sinks/sources and ports come from UCM devices.
In case the proper UCM configurations are found, ucm branches are
activated, or we will still fall through to the original way.
Signed-off-by: Feng Wei <wei.feng@freescale.com>
Some ASUS netbooks, such as the 1015 CX, have only one 3.5 mm jack,
but it can be used either as a headphone or as a mic (but not both
simultaneously).
This patch adds support for the "Headphone Mic" path that is used
on these devices, so that we can use the jack as an external mic, and
doing so without muting the speaker.
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1018262
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Since commit 12af302a last month, cards always have at least one
profile, so there is also always an active_profile (this makes the code
more simple). However, module-coreaudio-device did not create a profile
yet, causing a crash of PulseAudio when used on OS X. This patch fixes
this crash, by adding a single "On" profile. I've also added a TODO for
adding an "Off" profile which removes all sinks and sources -- I can
work on resolving this TODO later on.
As these functions are called together and are related, we might merge
them and call setting_select from pa_alsa_path_select by passing
optional pa_alsa_setting argument.
Make also the setting_select static as it is not called outside of
alsa-mixer.c after this change.
[Additional note from Tanu Kaskinen: this change improves the
mute-during-activation feature, because now the mixer changes related
to selecting the setting happen while the hw is muted.]
Move pa_alsa_setting_select call just after the pa_alsa_path_select in
[sink | source]_set_port_cb functions as there is no dependency to volume
calculations that are done between these two calls. Idea here is to make
possible to merge these two functions since they are called together from
other places too.
It's assumed in a couple of places that entry_read()
initializes entry->profile to a non-NULL string. This patch
makes those assumptions hold.
Tested-by: Mikel Astiz <mikel.astiz.oss@gmail.com>
module-card-restore now saves the latency offsets.
This change includes a entry version bump.
The entry now consists of a port count and a port name and offset for
every port that belongs to the relevant card.
This is a basic module for enabling loopback as soon as a new bluetooth A2DP
source is created. The module is given a source and a media role using command
line. This allows module-intended-roles or module-device-manager to choose a
target sink for the stream.
At module-loopback load, if no sink is given, the default sink is used. If the
stream has a media.role property, the property cannot be used because a the
source or sink is forced to default. Both module-intended-roles and
module-device-manager are affected. The same apply to sources.
With this patch, if sink or source is missing, routing modules can be used.
I forgot half of the front headphone patch, i e, to hide the
speaker output when the front headphone is connected. Thanks to
Shih-Yuan Lee for noticing.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This makes updating of permissions on existing directories optional with
pa_make_secure_dir() and pa_make_secure_parent_dir(). This makes sure
that the recursive directory creation doesn't end up modifying existing
directories, and also fixes a problem where creating an auth cookie
(specifically ~/.esd_auth) would end up modifying permissions on ~.
Thanks to Frédéric Danis for reporting this.
Many desktops have headphone on the front and line outs on the back.
Sometimes this means that the headphone is labelled "Front Headphone Jack",
but the volume controls are only "Headphone Playback Volume", i e,
without the "Front" prefix.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Some devices have inverted right channel, so when you add left and right,
the result is silence, or very faint sound. In recent kernels (3.5,
perhaps also 3.4) these are starting to be marked with a special
"Inverted Internal Mic" capture switch.
While we might want to add some reverse summing mechanism in the
future, for now, we just turn the thing off to avoid the problem of
recording silence.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
For kernel 3.6, "phantom jack" kctls have been added. They serve as
a marker that a particular port exist. They were made so we can detect
that there actually are speakers and internal mic on a laptop, even if
there are no other indications (volume controls etc).
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Several laptops have speaker ports, and/or internal mic ports, but we have
no way of detecting that. So we make the port(s) always show up for these
devices.
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/946232
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>