this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2024
43 points (90.6% liked)
Linux Questions
1182 readers
3 users here now
Linux questions Rules (in addition of the Lemmy.zip rules)
- stay on topic
- be nice (no name calling)
- do not post long blocks of text such as logs
- do not delete your posts
- only post questions (no information posts)
Tips for giving and receiving help
- be as clear and specific
- say thank you if a solution works
- verify your solutions before posting them as facts.
Any rule violations will result in disciplinary actions
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Yeah, for JACK, the package should be called
pipewire-jack
.I installed that through the flatpak store, but do I need to set it up? Nothing was different after I installed it
Perhaps try installing it natively with the package manager in the OS instead of with flatpak.
I'm starting to warm up to flatpaks but the one place I think they really don't make sense is core OS stuff which I think is the case here.
I'm not saying it wouldn't work as flatpak, but I just think it would be better integrated if you install it directly in the OS, and I don't see much need for sandboxing a shim like that.
It's not available on Flathub. I'm guessing, @[email protected] just used the app-store-like UI for installing software, and that thing integrates both Flatpaks and native packages. So, it's probably installed correctly already, but yeah, just run
sudo apt install pipewire-jack
in a terminal to be sure.Oh man, I set it up once like a year ago, and around the time I also tried to get JACK working raw, so I'm very shaky on the details, but I believe, in principle, the configuration works as if you were using JACK.
So, you'll need to tell Reaper to use JACK. I don't know anything about Reaper, but maybe something like this: https://forums.cockos.com/showthread.php?t=272361
And then, I think, you use QjackCtl to link all the inputs and outputs together.