Following last week’s PipeWire 1.0 release candidate, today a second release candidate was published as part of the project’s plan for reaching v1.0 before the end of the year for this widely-used Linux audio/video streams server that is a viable replacement to the likes of PulseAudio and JACK.
With today’s PipeWire 0.3.82 (1.0 RC2) it mostly consists of bug-fixes but there is also improved rate switching, RAOP module enhancements, improved client property checks, and more.
Some of the highlights for this second PipeWire 1.0 release candidate include: - Fix a regression in some devices when the Pro-Audio profile was selected.
Only enable the IRQ based scheduling and device linking in specific safe cases.
Fix regression in alsa wakeups that would cause silence in VMs.
Fix a leak in the SBC codecs for SCO.
The original article contains 177 words, the summary contains 136 words. Saved 23%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Following last week’s PipeWire 1.0 release candidate, today a second release candidate was published as part of the project’s plan for reaching v1.0 before the end of the year for this widely-used Linux audio/video streams server that is a viable replacement to the likes of PulseAudio and JACK.
With today’s PipeWire 0.3.82 (1.0 RC2) it mostly consists of bug-fixes but there is also improved rate switching, RAOP module enhancements, improved client property checks, and more.
Some of the highlights for this second PipeWire 1.0 release candidate include: - Fix a regression in some devices when the Pro-Audio profile was selected.
Only enable the IRQ based scheduling and device linking in specific safe cases.
Fix regression in alsa wakeups that would cause silence in VMs.
Fix a leak in the SBC codecs for SCO.
The original article contains 177 words, the summary contains 136 words. Saved 23%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!