The PipeWire server configuration file
SYNOPSIS
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pipewire/pipewire.conf
/etc/pipewire/pipewire.conf
/usr/share/pipewire/pipewire.conf
/usr/share/pipewire/pipewire.conf.d/
/etc/pipewire/pipewire.conf.d/
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pipewire/pipewire.conf.d/
DESCRIPTION
PipeWire is a service that facilitates sharing of multimedia content between devices and applications.
On startup, the daemon reads a main configuration file to configure itself. It executes a series of commands listed in the config file.
The config file is looked up in the order listed in the SYNOPSIS. The environment variables PIPEWIRE_CONFIG_DIR
, PIPEWIRE_CONFIG_PREFIX
and PIPEWIRE_CONFIG_NAME
can be used to specify an alternative config directory, subdirectory and file respectively.
Other PipeWire configuration files generally follow the same lookup logic, replacing pipewire.conf
with the name of the particular config file.
DROP-IN CONFIGURATION FILES
All *.conf
files in the pipewire.conf.d/
directories are loaded and merged into the configuration. Dictionary sections are merged, overriding properties if they already existed, and array sections are appended to. The drop-in files have same format as the main configuration file, but only contain the settings to be modified.
As the pipewire.conf
configuration file contains various parts that must be present for correct functioning, using drop-in files for configuration is recommended.
Example
A configuration file ~/.config/pipewire/pipewire.conf.d/custom.conf
to change the value of the default.clock.min-quantum
setting in pipewire.conf
:
context.properties = {
default.clock.min-quantum = 128
}
CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT
The configuration file is in "SPA" JSON format.
The configuration file contains top-level keys, which are the sections. The value of a section is either a dictionary, { }
, or an array, [ ]
. Section and dictionary item declarations have KEY = VALUE
form, and are separated by whitespace. For example:
context.properties = { # top-level dictionary section
key1 = value # a simple value
key2 = { key1 = value1 key2 = value2 } # a dictionary with two entries
key3 = [ value1 value2 ] # an array with two entries
key4 = [ { k = v1 } { k = v2 } ] # an array of dictionaries
}
context.modules = [ # top-level array section
value1
value2
]
The configuration files can also be written in standard JSON syntax, but for easier manual editing, the relaxed "SPA" variant is allowed. In "SPA" JSON:
:
to delimit keys and values can be substituted by =
or a space.
"
around keys and string can be omitted as long as no special characters are used in the strings.
,
to separate objects can be replaced with a whitespace character.
#
can be used to start a comment until the line end
CONFIGURATION FILE SECTIONS
- context.properties
- Dictionary. These properties configure the PipeWire instance.
- context.spa-libs
- Dictionary. Maps plugin features with globs to a spa library.
- context.modules
- Array of dictionaries. Each entry in the array is a dictionary with the name of the module to load, including optional args and flags. Most modules support being loaded multiple times.
- context.objects
- Array of dictionaries. Each entry in the array is a dictionary containing the factory to create an object from and optional extra arguments specific to that factory.
- context.exec
Array of dictionaries. Each entry in the array is dictionary containing the path of a program to execute on startup and optional args.
This array used to contain an entry to start the session manager but this mode of operation has since been demoted to development aid. Avoid starting a session manager in this way in production environment.
- node.rules
- Array of dictionaries. Match rules for modifying node properties on the server.
- device.rules
- Array of dictionaries. Match rules for modifying device properties on the server.
CONTEXT PROPERTIES
Available PipeWire properties in context.properties
and possible default values.
- clock.power-of-two-quantum = true
- The quantum requests from the clients and the final graph quantum are rounded down to a power of two. A power of two quantum can be more efficient for many processing tasks.
- context.data-loop.library.name.system
- The name of the shared library to use for the system functions for the data processing thread. This can typically be changed if the data thread is running on a realtime kernel such as EVL.
- core.daemon = false
- Makes the PipeWire process, started with this config, a daemon process. This means that it will manage and schedule a graph for clients. You would also want to configure a core.name to give it a well known name.
- core.name = pipewire-0
- The name of the PipeWire context. This will also be the name of the PipeWire socket clients can connect to.
- cpu.zero.denormals = false
- Configures the CPU to zero denormals automatically. This will be enabled for the data processing thread only, when enabled.
- default.clock.rate = 48000
- The default clock rate determines the real time duration of the min/max/default quantums. You might want to change the quantums when you change the default clock rate to maintain the same duration for the quantums.
- default.clock.allowed-rates = [ ]
- It is possible to specify up to 32 alternative sample rates. The graph sample rate will be switched when devices are idle. Note that this is not enabled by default for now because of various kernel and Bluetooth issues. Note that the min/max/default quantum values are scaled when the samplerate changes.
- default.clock.min-quantum = 32
- Default minimum quantum.
- default.clock.max-quantum = 8192
- Default maximum quantum.
- default.clock.quantum = 1024
- Default quantum used when no client specifies one.
- default.clock.quantum-limit = 8192
- Maximum quantum to reserve space for. This is the maximum buffer size used in the graph, regardless of the samplerate.
- default.clock.quantum-floor = 4
- Minimum quantum to reserve space for. This is the minimum buffer size used in the graph, regardless of the samplerate.
- default.video.width
- Default video width
- default.video.height
- Default video height
- default.video.rate.num
- Default video rate numerator
- default.video.rate.denom
- Default video rate denominator
- library.name.system = support/libspa-support
- The name of the shared library to use for the system functions for the main thread.
- link.max-buffers = 64
- The maximum number of buffers to negotiate between nodes. Note that version < 3 clients can only support 16 buffers. More buffers is almost always worse than less, latency and memory wise.
- log.level = 2
- The default log level used by the process.
- mem.allow-mlock = true
- Try to mlock the memory for the realtime processes. Locked memory will not be swapped out by the kernel and avoid hickups in the processing threads.
- mem.warn-mlock = false
- Warn about failures to lock memory.
- mem.mlock-all = false
- Try to mlock all current and future memory by the process.
- settings.check-quantum = false
- Check if the quantum in the settings metadata update is compatible with the configured limits.
- settings.check-rate = false
- Check if the rate in the settings metadata update is compatible with the configured limits.
- support.dbus = true
- Enable DBus support. This will enable DBus support in the various modules that require it. Disable this if you want to globally disable DBus support in the process.
- vm.overrides = { default.clock.min-quantum = 1024 }
- Any property in the vm.overrides property object will override the property in the context.properties when PipeWire detects it is running in a VM.
- context.modules.allow-empty = false
- By default, a warning is logged when there are no context.modules loaded because this likely indicates there is a problem. Some applications might load the modules themselves and when they set this property to true, no warning will be logged.
The context properties may also contain custom values. For example, the context.modules
and context.objects
sections can declare additional conditions that control whether a module or object is loaded depending on what properties are present.
SPA LIBRARIES
SPA plugins are loaded based on their factory-name. This is a well known name that uniquely describes the features that the plugin should have. The context.spa-libs
section provides a mapping between the factory-name and the plugin where the factory can be found.
Factory names can contain a wildcard to group several related factories into one plugin. The plugin is loaded from the first matching factory-name.
Example
context.spa-libs = {
audio.convert.* = audioconvert/libspa-audioconvert
avb.* = avb/libspa-avb
api.alsa.* = alsa/libspa-alsa
api.v4l2.* = v4l2/libspa-v4l2
api.libcamera.* = libcamera/libspa-libcamera
api.bluez5.* = bluez5/libspa-bluez5
api.vulkan.* = vulkan/libspa-vulkan
api.jack.* = jack/libspa-jack
support.* = support/libspa-support
video.convert.* = videoconvert/libspa-videoconvert
}
MODULES
PipeWire modules to be loaded. See libpipewire-modules(7).
context.modules = [
#{ name = MODULENAME
# ( args = { KEY = VALUE ... } )
# ( flags = [ ( ifexists ) ( nofail ) ] )
# ( condition = [ { KEY = VALUE ... } ... ] )
#}
#
]
- name
- Name of module to be loaded
- args = { }
- Arguments passed to the module
- flags = [ ]
- Loading flags.
ifexists
to only load module if it exists, and nofail
to not fail PipeWire startup if the module fails to load.
- condition = [ ]
- A match rule
matches
condition. The module is loaded only if one of the expressions in the array matches to a context property.
CONTEXT OBJECTS
The context.objects
section allows you to make some objects from factories (usually created by loading modules in context.modules
).
context.objects = [
#{ factory = <factory-name>
# ( args = { <key> = <value> ... } )
# ( flags = [ ( nofail ) ] )
# ( condition = [ { <key> = <value> ... } ... ] )
#}
]
This section can be used to make nodes or links between nodes.
- factory
- Name of the factory to create the object.
- args = { }
- Arguments passed to the factory.
- flags = [ ]
- Flag
nofail
to not fail PipeWire startup if the object fails to load.
- condition = [ ]
- A match rule
matches
condition. The object is created only if one of the expressions in the array matches to a context property.
Example
This fragment creates a new dummy driver node, but only if core.daemon
property is true:
context.objects = [
{ factory = spa-node-factory
args = {
factory.name = support.node.driver
node.name = Dummy-Driver
node.group = pipewire.dummy
priority.driver = 20000
},
condition = [ { core.daemon = true } ]
}
]
COMMAND EXECUTION
The context.exec
section can be used to start arbitrary commands as part of the initialization of the PipeWire program.
context.exec = [
#{ path = <program-name>
# ( args = "<arguments>" )
# ( condition = [ { <key> = <value> ... } ... ] )
#}
]
- path
- Program to execute.
- args
- Arguments to the program.
- condition
- A match rule
matches
condition. The object is created only if one of the expressions in the array matches to a context property.
Example
The following fragment executes a pactl command with the given arguments:
context.exec = [
{ path = "pactl" args = "load-module module-always-sink" }
]
MATCH RULES
Some configuration file sections contain match rules. This makes it possible to perform some action when an object (usually a node or stream) is created/updated that matches certain properties.
The general rules object follows the following pattern:
<rules> = [
{
matches = [
# any of the following sets of properties are matched, if
# any matches, the actions are executed
{
# <key> = <value>
# all keys must match the value. ! negates. ~ starts regex.
#application.process.binary = "teams"
#application.name = "~speech-dispatcher.*"
# Absence of property can be tested by comparing to null
#pipewire.sec.flatpak = null
}
{
# more matches here...
}
...
]
actions = {
<action-name> = <action value>
...
}
}
]
The rules is an array of things to match and what actions to perform when a match is found.
The available actions and their values depend on the specific rule that is used. Usually it is possible to update some properties or set some quirks on the object.
AUTHORS
The PipeWire Developers <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/issues>; PipeWire is available from <https://pipewire.org>
SEE ALSO
pipewire(1), pw-mon(1), libpipewire-modules(7) pipewire-pulse.conf(5) pipewire-client.conf(5)