Turned out that SelectConfiguration is only used for outgoing connections, and
incoming connection from bluetooth headset using SBC codec ends up with a
bitpool as large as declared by headset. When resulting bitpool is so large that
SBC frame size plus RTP header size exceeds write MTU size, number of frames per
packet becomes zero causing crash dividing by zero in update_sink_buffer_size()
Fix this by limiting available bitpool value exposed for SBC endpoints.
Fixes: 89082cbfa ("bluetooth: a2dp dual channel SBC XQ codec configurations")
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/695>
Commit c6d6ca541 ("bluetooth/gst: Replace buffer accumulation in adapter
with direct pull") removed the `timestamp` parameter from GStreamer
transcoders due to being unused, but these should instead be propagated
to the GStreamer encoding buffers.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/494>
Bluetooth codecs should always have fixed in/output and are hence able
to have their results directly read from the codec, instead of
accumulating in a buffer asynchronously that is subsequently only read
in the transcode callback. The Bluetooth backends calling encode/decode
also expect these fixed buffer sizes.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/494>
Handling multiple threads does not come without overhead, especially
when the end-goal is to ping-pong them making the whole system run
serially. This patch rips out all that thread handling and instead
"chains" buffers to be encoded/decoded directly into the pipeline,
making them execute their work on the current thread. The resulting
buffer can be pulled out from appsink immediately without require extra
locking and signalling. While the overhead on modern systems is found
to be negligible or unnoticable, code complexity of such locking and
signalling systems is prevalent making it the main drive behind this
refactor.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/494>
Drop rtpldacpay and payload the LDAC encoded output manually in the
RTP header.
The RTP payload seems to be required as it carries the frame count
information. Right now, rtpldacpay does not add this so construct
the RTP header and payload manually.
Strangely some devices like Shanling MP4 and Sony XM3 would still
work without this while some like the Sony XM4 does not.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/689>
Change d7f95170a1 added a dependency on device
adapter pointer being valid while checking if bluetooth profile is supported by
device.
When adapter object is released, each device holding pointer to adapter being
released is notified to reset that to NULL. Since adapter objects are released
first when discovery object is unreferenced, each device will have adapter
pointer reset before the time device objects are released.
Fix observed crash by examining device adapter pointer. If it is NULL report
that device does not support any bluetooth profile instead of looking at UUIDs
supported by adapter.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/646>
Commit 7fd89e491 ("bluetooth: Try to reconnect SCO") introduces a call
to pa_msleep but failed to include the header, resulting in a:
../pulseaudio/src/modules/bluetooth/backend-native.c: In function ‘sco_acquire_cb’:
../pulseaudio/src/modules/bluetooth/backend-native.c:336:17: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘pa_msleep’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
336 | pa_msleep(300);
| ^~~~~~~~~
(Un)fortunately this implicit declaration gets resolved at link-time,
otherwise the issue would have been caught sooner.
Fixes: 7fd89e491 ("bluetooth: Try to reconnect SCO")
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/651>
Check whether a Bluetooth profile is supported both by the remote device
and the local host before creating a card profile for it.
This is useful when some of the media profiles have not been registered
with bluetoothd because ex., oFono is not running and the headset
backend is not available.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/638>
The remote device list of UUIDs reflects which profiles are supported by
the remote device alone. We currently rely solely on this list to decide
if a certain card profile is supported, and thus should be created and
get connected.
This used to be accurate when the Bluetooth modules were first written,
but now BlueZ is more dynamic and local profile support can be added or
removed during runtime. The adapter's list of UUIDs is an accurate
representation of the profiles supported by the local host at a certain
moment.
This commit combines the list of UUIDs supported by remote device and
the list of UUIDs supported by the local host to determined whether a
Bluetooth profile is actually supported or not, and whether it should be
expected to get connected during device connection.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/638>
When the SCO connection is in use, if you disconnect first and then connect,
the SCO connection will occasionally fail, and the Bluetooth error code is 42
(0x2A in hexadecimal). This is usually because an error occurred when the SCO
connection was initiated, we need to try to reconnect to optimize the handling
of this problem. The log returned by the kernel is as follows:
Bluetooth: sco_connect_cfm: hcon 0000000003328902 bdaddr 40:ef:4c:0c:11:f0 status 42
Bluetooth: sco_sock_connect status is -38
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/622>
Commit f89d64b98e fixed a crash
when disabling adapters. However, now if any device is removed
ofono card is removed, even if it belongs to different device.
Add a check for the device being unlinked to our callback to fix.
Signed-off-by: Juho Hämäläinen <juho.hamalainen@jolla.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/624>
With USB Alternate Setting 3 size of HCI payload is 72 bytes which is already
larger than mSBC frame size. Largest known size of HCI payload is with USB
Alternate Setting 5 (144 bytes), make it the default SCO socket MTU.
Reserve additional space in bluetooth encoder buffer to cover this case.
Since mSBC encoder and decoder will now work with larger packet sizes, drop
assertions about MTU larger than mSBC frame size.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/617>
Try to register profile support again after RegisterProfile fails, when
BlueZ indicates no one else is implementing the profiles we are
interested in.
Ideally this would rely on a list of UUIDs supported by the profile
manager instead of the adapter, but BlueZ has no such API.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/593>
Create pa_bluetooth_profile_status_t to represent all stages an external
Bluetooth profile can go through:
0. Inactive: Initial state, no D-Bus object has been registered for
this profile yet.
1. Active: an object implementing the org.bluez.Profile1 interface has
been registered on the system bus.
2. Registering: RegisterProfile has been called.
3. Registered: RegisterProfile succeeded.
This will be useful to handle RegisterProfile failures, as well as
dynamically register and un-register a profile based on the current
active seat.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/593>
HF indicator 2 (see [assigned-numbers], Hands-Free Profile) is able to
report battery percentage at 1% intervals (in range [0, 100]), contrary
to the `+XAPL` `+IPHONEACCEV` extension which only supports 10%
increments. This does not guarantee increased granularity however, as
peers may still be limited to imprecise battery measurements internally
or round to coarser percentages.
Supporting both additionally broadens the range of devices for which PA
can report its battery level.
[assigned-numbers]: https://www.bluetooth.com/specifications/assigned-numbers/
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/482>
Whenever a device disconnects the device is not removed from BlueZ, only
the profiles that had an active connection are disconnected. Since we
were providing this battery level based on AT commands received through
HSP/HFP these services should be responsible for deregistering it again.
Deregister the interface to signal BlueZ (And UPower in return) that the
battery level won't be accurate/updated anymore.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/482>
The peer will wait some time and eventually time out the connection if
no reply is sent back. When sending `ERROR` the peer can decide to break
the RFCOMM connection immediately or continue when a command is not
critical.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/482>
Devices for Apple's iOS uses a few extra HFP AT commands to
inform the iPhone about the headphone's battery status.
Apple documented the AT commands in the following document:
https://developer.apple.com/hardwaredrivers/BluetoothDesignGuidelines.pdf
The patch has been tested with a Bose QC35, which results
in the following communication:
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM << AT+VGS=14
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM >> OK
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM << AT+XAPL=009E-400C-0129,3
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM >> +XAPL=iPhone,2
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM >> OK
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM << AT+XEVENT=Bose SoundLink,158
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM >> OK
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM << AT+IPHONEACCEV=2,1,4,2,0
N: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: Battery Level: 50%
N: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: Dock Status: undocked
D: [pulseaudio] backend-native.c: RFCOMM >> OK
[Marijn: Adapt for recent HSP/HFP code changes]
Co-authored-by: Marijn Suijten <marijns95@gmail.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/482>
The Volume property on org.bluez.MediaTransport1 is required to utilize
Absolute Volume, but it will only become availabe if the peer device
supports the feature. This happens asynchronously somewhere after the
transport itself has been acquired, after which the callbacks are
attached and software volume is reset.
To prevent race conditions availability of the property is also checked
on startup through a "Get" call.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/239>
Write the current volume to the `Volume` DBus property to keep the
volume on the remote in sync. Without this the remote device shows the
wrong volume, and any attempts to change it will cause an unexpected
jump when the local volume has also been adjusted.
Thanks to prior investments to improve volume synchronization, setting
up callbacks and sending initial volume to the peer for HFP/HSP
implementing this feature is as easy as unconditionally assigning a
valid function to `set_source_volume`. `source_setup_volume_callback`
is already responsible for attaching a `SOURCE_VOLUME_CHANGED` hook and
sending initial (restored) volume to the peer (signifying support for
Absolute Volume - if not derived from the presence of FEATURE_CATEGORY_2
on the profile yet).
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/239>
Like the previous commit this handles `Volume` property changes but
applies them to an A2DP sink instead of source stream. As mentioned in
the AVRCP spec v1.6.2 §5.8 the rendering device (A2DP sink) is
responsible for performing volume attenuation meaning PulseAudio should
pass through audio as-is without performing any attenuation in SW.
Setting a valid pointer to `set_sink_volume` and returning `true` from
`should_attenuate_volume` attaches a hardware callback to `pa_sink` such
that no volume attenuation is performed anymore.
In addition to receiving volume change notifications it is also possible
to control remote volume by writing a new value to the DBus property.
This is especially useful when playing back to in-ear audio devices
which usually lack physical buttons to adjust the final volume on the
sink.
While software volume (used before this patch) is generally fine it is
annoying to crank it up all the way to 100% when a previous connection
to a different device left saved volume on the peer at a low volume.
Providing this bidirectional synchronization is most natural to users
who wish to use physical controls on their headphones, are used to this
from their smartphone, or aforementioned volume mismatches where both PA
as source and the peer as sink/rendering device are performing
attenutation.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/239>
The A2DP spec mandates that the audio rendering device - the device
receiving audio, in our case a `pa_source` - is responsible for
performing attenuation:
AVRCP v1.6.2, §5.8:
The SetAbsoluteVolume command is used to set an absolute volume to be used by the rendering device.
BlueZ models this call as a change of the `Volume` property on the
`org.bluez.MediaTransport1` interface. Supporting Absolute Volume is
optional but BlueZ unconditionally reports feature category 2 in its
profile, mandating support. Hence remote devices (ie. a phone) playing
back audio to a machine running PulseAudio assume volume is to be
changed through SetAbsoluteVolume, without performing any local
attenuation.
Future changes will implement this feature the other way around: setting
an initial value for the `Volume` property as well as propagating
`pa_source` volume changes back to the peer.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/239>
A few headsets have issues if HFP HF profile connection is attempted before
HSP HS profile connection is closed. Looks like this could happen because
bluez bluetoothd alows to make simultaneous HSP HS and HFP HF peer connections.
One of affected headsets is WH-1000XM2
Until we find out how to prevent simultaneous HSP HS and HFP HF connections,
when native backend has HFP HF profile enabled (this is the default) do disable
HSP HS completely unless user explicitly request it via discovery modarg.
Do this by adding module-bluetooth-discover arg enable_native_hsp_hs,
default to inverse of enable_native_hfp_hf.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pulseaudio/pulseaudio/-/merge_requests/538>