On 05/02/2013 04:28 PM, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
Hi David,
On Thursday 02 May 2013 12:55:05 David Henningsson wrote:
Just had an idea which I'll write down here before I forget it again...and I'm not saying I'll implement this anytime soon either, but here goes:
There is a device reserve protocol between PulseAudio and JACK2 - when JACK needs the sound card, it'll send a dbus message to PulseAudio and grab a name in D-Bus.
However, there are plenty of applications who like to access ALSA directly, without going through JACK2 or PulseAudio. By making a "reserve" plugin, we could have this functionality for those apps too.
In practice, if the app usually opens "plughw:0" or "hw:0", it could instead open "reserve:plughw:0" or "reserve:hw:0" to also reserve the device from PulseAudio usage while the device is open. Meanwhile, PulseAudio is free to use other audio devices (which is not the case when using e g pasuspender).
How does that sound?
If I understand correctly you are saying essentially this:
- There is an existing device control protocol which works over DBus.
- Your idea is to add a equivalent device control protocol using ALSA PCM
plugin (well in fact not add but create a new proxy interface to it).
Is that right? If so, how do you provide this functionality to existing applications without teaching them about the reserve plugin?
Many ALSA applications lets you specify the device string on e g the command line or through a configuration interface. So the end user would configure the application to use "reserve:plughw:0" instead of "plughw:0".
The applications that do not follow this will have to be taught, and they have a extremely simple way to implement it - just add "reserve:" do the device string.
And if you have to modify the applications, is the only advantage then that you do not have to add DBus dependency to them? Or a PA dependency to talk directly to the server? If so then this solution feels a bit kludgy.
Perhaps you would want an extension to snd_pcm_open (or whatever, I am going from vague memory here) to have something like "SND_PCM_EXCLUSIVE | SND_PCM_NOTIFY_BUSY_OPEN" mode (if the former is not implied) which would notify the original owner that the second application is attempting to open it. Perhaps using SIGURG or something while returing -EBUSY or something to the caller signalling they should retry. Not sure if this would be doable completely in userspace so I might be leading you toward a generic kernel/glibc solution here. :)
What about the policy control as to which applications are allowed to take over? It sounds sub optimal to allow any ALSA application which knows about this new plugin or other release mechanism to take over just like that. That would create a bit of a mess.
That is a valid point - but so far the only app that can *give away* a sound card is PulseAudio. All of the others (at least in the simplest scenario), can only *take* a sound card. If the card is already used by some app that can't give away its sound card, it's going to be -EBUSY as usual.