This removes the symdef header generation m4 magic in favour of a
simpler macro method, allowing us to skip one unnecessary build step
while moving to meson, and removing an 11 year old todo!
module-switch-on-connect would switch to any new sink, even if the sink
was a filter or a null-sink.
This patch adds a command line option ignore_virtual to the module, which
lets module-switch-on-connect ignore virtual sinks and sources. The flag
is true by default because the purpose of the module is to switch to new
hardware when it becomes available.
This allows us to restore the default device properly when a
hotpluggable device (e.g. a USB sound card) is set as the default, but
unplugged temporarily. Previously we would forget that the unplugged
device was ever set as the default, because we had to set
configured_default_sink to NULL to avoid having a stale pa_sink pointer,
and also because module-default-device-restore couldn't resolve the name
of a currently-unplugged device to a pa_sink pointer.
BugLink: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89934
In sink_put() and source_put(), pa_core_update_default_{sink,source}() was called
before the PA_CORE_HOOK_{SINK,SOURCE}_PUT hook. Therefore module-switch-on-connect
could not correctly determine the old default sink/source if no user default was
set and a sink/source with higher priority than any other sink/source turned up.
This patch corrects the problem by swapping the order of the hook call and the
pa_core_update_default_sink() call.
Additionally it corrects a problem in module-switch-on-connect. If, after the
change above, the new sink/source was the first sink/source to appear, pulseaudio
would crash because module-switch-on-connect assumed that the default sink/source
was not NULL. The patch checks if the default sink/source is NULL and only sets
the new default sink/source in that case.
Currently the default sink policy is simple: either the user has
configured it explicitly, in which case we always use that as the
default, or we pick the sink with the highest priority. The sink
priorities are currently static, so there's no need to worry about
updating the default sink when sink priorities change.
I intend to make things a bit more complex: if the active port of a sink
is unavailable, the sink should not be the default sink, and I also want
to make sink priorities dependent on the active port, so changing the
port should cause re-evaluation of which sink to choose as the default.
Currently the default sink choice is done only when someone calls
pa_namereg_get_default_sink(), and change notifications are only sent
when a sink is created or destroyed. That makes it hard to add new rules
to the default sink selection policy.
This patch moves the default sink selection to
pa_core_update_default_sink(), which is called whenever something
happens that can affect the default sink choice. That function needs to
know the previous choice in order to send change notifications as
appropriate, but previously pa_core.default_sink was only set when the
user had configured it explicitly. Now pa_core.default_sink is always
set (unless there are no sinks at all), so pa_core_update_default_sink()
can use that to get the previous choice. The user configuration is saved
in a new variable, pa_core.configured_default_sink.
pa_namereg_get_default_sink() is now unnecessary, because
pa_core.default_sink can be used directly to get the
currently-considered-best sink. pa_namereg_set_default_sink() is
replaced by pa_core_set_configured_default_sink().
I haven't confirmed it, but I expect that this patch will fix problems
in the D-Bus protocol related to default sink handling. The D-Bus
protocol used to get confused when the current default sink gets
removed. It would incorrectly think that if there's no explicitly
configured default sink, then there's no default sink at all. Even
worse, when the D-Bus thinks that there's no default sink, it concludes
that there are no sinks at all, which made it impossible to configure
the default sink via the D-Bus interface. Now that pa_core.default_sink
is always set, except when there really aren't any sinks, the D-Bus
protocol should behave correctly.
BugLink: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=99425
FSF addresses used in PA sources are no longer valid and rpmlint
generates numerous warnings during packaging because of this.
This patch changes all FSF addresses to FSF web page according to
the GPL how-to: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
Done automatically by sed-ing through sources.
On a machine without fixed connecting audio devices like internal
microphone or internal speaker, and when there is no external audio
devices plugging in, the default source/sink is alsa_input/alsa_output
and there is no input devices/output devices listed in the gnome
sound-setting.
Under this situation, if we connect a bluetooth headset, the gnome
sound-setting will list bluez input/output devices, but they are not
active devices by default. This looks very weird that sound-setting
lists only one input device and one output device, but they are not
active. To change this situation, we add an argument, the policy is
if a new source/sink is connected and current default source/sink's
active_port is AVAILABLE_NO, we let the new added one switch to
default one.
BugLink: http://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1369476
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>
Unlinked streams can not be moved, so don't try.
BugLink: http://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/837386
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This module implements a simply policy decision that any newly plugged
in devices should be used.
This is a reasonable approach and paprefs will be updated to allow for
this option to be turned on or off.
This is more or less a stop-gap solution. When priority lists are
implemented in the core, then policy modules may ultimately be
re-engineered to adjust the priority lists rather than doing any of
their own routing per-se.