- #PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY INSTALL#
- #PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY UPDATE#
- #PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY DRIVER#
Volume buttons adjust volume locally, not on host device. Tested with bluez-alsa (currently 1.3.1), not Pulse Audio. Hence microphone does not work.Ĭonfirmed working with older versions, but not sure how far back. With bluez 5.58-r1 switch of audio profile from A2DP to HSP/HFP does not work.
Microfone tested successfully in 2011 with BlueZ 4.x/HSF.
#PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY DRIVER#
Buttons work when "User level driver support" is added in the kernel. Pulseaudio have to be built with native-headset useflag to have the microphone working. You should only make sure that pulseaudio is built with native-headset useflag, and that pulseaudio spawns correctly from your X session. No special bluetooth configuration is required. Volume and play-pause buttons recognized as Multimedia events in Xfce (XF86AudioNext - XF86AudioPrev - XF86AudioPlay). Microphone tested successfully with BlueZ 5.50-r1 and HSP/HFP profile. Microphone not applicableīlutooth Headset Speaker and Microphone both tested successfully. Media-sound/bluez-alsa-3.1.0 is necessaryīlutooth Speaker tested successfully. If supported, AAC codec is selected, otherwise SBC Compile alsa-plugins with speex libsamplerate and ffmpeg USE flags to provide options for better sampling. Tested on desktop PC without built-in Bluetooth. Media key presses work for volume, double press next, single press pause, triple click previous.
#PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY UPDATE#
Update headset firmware to latest version 0.2.7.Īpply module loading to /etc/pulse/default.pa and system.pa with latest version of Bluez as device and module will not load otherwise. The capabilities of the device are dependent on the Bluetooth controller being used. This setup can be used either completely without Pulseaudio, or you can then use your headset as another ALSA device in Pulseaudio (in which case disable its bluetooth support, so the two don't collide). You can use bluez-alsa to provide integration between Bluez and ALSA.
You might have luck building the current development version from source using this merge request 288 and the accompanying hsphfpd. Pulseaudio 13.0 does not support HFP properly. Headset using HSP will usually work out-of-the-box with the current pulseaudio version. In order for the microphone to work the headset has to switch from the A2DP protocol to HSP/HFP. There is two protocols for handling microphone input (and button input) from headsets: HSP and HFP.
pcm.FILE /etc/portage/e/pulseaudio media-sound/pulseaudio native-headset ofono-headset Configuration PulseAudioįollowing instructions from PulseAudio and BlueZ 5 should be sufficient to make Bluetooth headsets work (through pavucontrol for instance). The first two declarations (including the commented one) was in the original file. This sets up pulseaudio to be used as an alsa device by default so applications use it without any additional configuration.
#PULSEAUDIO NOT STARTING AUTOMATICALLY INSTALL#
eric) is part of the audio group: sudo apt-get install pulseaudio pulseaudio-utilsĬhange /etc/nf look like the following. Install pulseaudio and make sure user (e.g. I found this information in various places, hopefully gathering it here will help someone. Setting up server will require some more work. System mode may work as well, I haven't attempted it. The following is what I did just to get it working in per-session mode (not system mode). I had a hard time getting pulseaudio running on Wheezy raspbian () using the analog output.