Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-09 Thread Yoann LE BARS



Hello everybody out there!

	One last question before deciding to use Fedora, what about use this 
repository:


https://pipewire-debian.github.io/pipewire-debian/

	Well, it seems a bit making some kind of a Frankendebian, but it seems 
to be less susceptible to broke anything else in the system.


What do you think about it?

Best regards.

--
Yoann LE BARS
https://le-bars.net/yoann/
Diaspora* : yleb...@framasphere.org



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-09 Thread Henning Follmann
On Mon, Nov 08, 2021 at 11:15:00PM +0100, Yoann LE BARS wrote:
> 
> Hello, everybody out there!
> 
> On 2021/11/08 at 2:39 pm, Henning Follmann wrote:
> > The easiest way to get a current version of pipewire is
> > to install fedora core.
> 
>   Yes, this is something I have considered. I have already tried and use
> Fedora, but I prefer Debian in general.
> 

So do I. But when it comes to kernel development and
more current tools I sometimes use fc.


-H


-- 
Henning Follmann   | hfollm...@itcfollmann.com



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread Yoann LE BARS



Hello, everybody out there!

On 2021/11/09 at 05:06 am, riveravaldez wrote:

Sorry if late and obvious, but just in case, have you already checked this?

https://wiki.debian.org/PipeWire#Debian_Testing.2FUnstable


	Yes, I have read the Wiki. However, I am disinclined to use unstable 
repositories into Debian stable.


Thank you anyway.

Best regards.

--
Yoann LE BARS
https://le-bars.net/yoann/
Diaspora* : yleb...@framasphere.org



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread riveravaldez
On 11/8/21, Yoann LE BARS  wrote:
>
> Hello, everybody out there!
>
> On 2021/11/08 at 2:39 pm, Henning Follmann wrote:
>> The easiest way to get a current version of pipewire is
>> to install fedora core.
>
>   Yes, this is something I have considered. I have already tried and use
> Fedora, but I prefer Debian in general.

Sorry if late and obvious, but just in case, have you already checked this?

https://wiki.debian.org/PipeWire#Debian_Testing.2FUnstable

Kind regards and good luck!



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread Yoann LE BARS



Hello, everybody out there!

On 2021/11/08 at 2:39 pm, Henning Follmann wrote:

The easiest way to get a current version of pipewire is
to install fedora core.


	Yes, this is something I have considered. I have already tried and use 
Fedora, but I prefer Debian in general.


Best regards.

--
Yoann LE BARS
https://le-bars.net/yoann/
Diaspora* : yleb...@framasphere.org



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread Yoann LE BARS



Hello, everybody out there!

Thank you for the answer.

On 2021/11/08 at 2:08 pm, Charles Curley wrote:

Do you know that the version in Bullseye will not work? Have you tried
it?


	No, I have not tested it yet. I thought I would rather get some 
information first.



You could pull in the package for Bookworm or Sid and try installing
that. "apt pipewire." But if the installation breaks, you get to
keep all the pieces.


Yes. I am not really found in breaking my distro!


You could also try pulling it in from the git repo and installing that.
https://pipewire.org To be consistent with Linux standards, I would set

--prefix=/usr/local



It appears Ardour and Musescore are available as Debian packages,
although neither is the most recent version. That suggests that one or
both will build easily on Debian. I would consider building them from
source. Then you can bypass the flatpack entirely.


Well, concerning Ardour, it is not that easy to compile.

Best regards.

--
Yoann LE BARS
https://le-bars.net/yoann/
Diaspora* : yleb...@framasphere.org



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread Henning Follmann
On Mon, Nov 08, 2021 at 08:15:47AM +0100, Yoann LE BARS wrote:
> 
> Hello, everybody out there!
> 
>   I am running Debian stable (Bullseye). Now, it turns out I need to use 
> some
> new version of Musescore and Ardour–because of few bugs and several
> functionalities I need. As these applications are available as flatpaks, I
> can easily use them. The trouble is, to be able to use flatpaks with Jack, I
> have to use Pipewire. As Pipewire is quite recent, I probably would rather
> use some recent version of Pipewire.
> 
>   As far as I know, Pipewire is not available on Backports:
> 
> https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=pipewire=names=all=all
> 
>   Is there a way to use some recent version of Pipewire with Debian 
> stable?
> 
>   Best regards.


I aknow this amounts to heresy saying this in a debian ML
But..
The easiest way to get a current version of pipewire is
to install fedora core.

-H



-- 
Henning Follmann   | hfollm...@itcfollmann.com



Re: Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-08 Thread Charles Curley
On Mon, 8 Nov 2021 08:15:47 +0100
Yoann LE BARS  wrote:

> As Pipewire is quite recent, I probably 
> would rather use some recent version of Pipewire.

Do you know that the version in Bullseye will not work? Have you tried
it?

> 
>   As far as I know, Pipewire is not available on Backports:
> 
> https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=pipewire=names=all=all
> 
>   Is there a way to use some recent version of Pipewire with
> Debian stable?

You could pull in the package for Bookworm or Sid and try installing
that. "apt pipewire." But if the installation breaks, you get to
keep all the pieces.

You could also try pulling it in from the git repo and installing that.
https://pipewire.org To be consistent with Linux standards, I would set

--prefix=/usr/local

It appears Ardour and Musescore are available as Debian packages,
although neither is the most recent version. That suggests that one or
both will build easily on Debian. I would consider building them from
source. Then you can bypass the flatpack entirely.

-- 
Does anybody read signatures any more?

https://charlescurley.com
https://charlescurley.com/blog/



Following Pipewire developments

2021-11-07 Thread Yoann LE BARS



Hello, everybody out there!

	I am running Debian stable (Bullseye). Now, it turns out I need to use 
some new version of Musescore and Ardour–because of few bugs and several 
functionalities I need. As these applications are available as flatpaks, 
I can easily use them. The trouble is, to be able to use flatpaks with 
Jack, I have to use Pipewire. As Pipewire is quite recent, I probably 
would rather use some recent version of Pipewire.


As far as I know, Pipewire is not available on Backports:

https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=pipewire=names=all=all

Is there a way to use some recent version of Pipewire with Debian 
stable?

Best regards.

--
Yoann LE BARS
https://le-bars.net/yoann/
Diaspora* : yleb...@framasphere.org