Thanks for all the info, guys! I have lots of things to try, now. I'll let you 
know how it goes.

For now, bluez-alsa works, I still have Pipewire to test.

Regards,

Zala



------- Original Message -------
Le dimanche 26 juin 2022 à 09:58, Stuart Longland <stua...@longlandclan.id.au> 
a écrit :


> On Wed, 22 Jun 2022 11:45:22 +0000
> Zala Pierre GOUPIL via Alsa-user alsa-user@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
>
> > I don't know which compilation option is missing this time but I have
> > a problem accessing a Bluetooth headset: I can pair and trust it but
> > the only connection to it that is proposed to me is through the
> > serial port of the headset. Needless to say that no sound is produced
> > here.
>
>
> You're not alone in compiling your own kernels… Bluetooth is a bit of a
> strange beast, the host controllers have kernel drivers, but for things
> like peripherals, there's a userspace driver stack called BlueZ that
> talks to the peripheral.
>
> There are three ways I know of to access audio devices in this manner:
>
> 1. PulseAudio BlueZ plug-in: this has been the "official" way for some
> time now. A2DP is pretty mature, but I find I only get low-quality
> audio when used full-duplex.
> 2. PipeWire BlueZ plug-in: Experimental, combines features of both
> PulseAudio and JACK (which is real nice), but there are some sharp
> edges. PipeWire is steadily improving however, and features CODECs
> that provide better quality audio CODECs on Bluetooth.
> 3. Bluez-ALSA: Skips the user-space media stack and links ALSA directly
> up to BlueZ. Haven't tried it in a looong time, the latest version
> is a re-write of the earlier attempt.
>
> I'm having reasonably good results with (2). With some coaxing, you
> can get headsets to operate in mSBC mode when being used full-duplex,
> which yields somewhat improved audio quality over the standard
> telephone-quality audio usually available.
>
> (3) is apparently landing in Debian 12 if that's the distribution you
> use. It is in the Gentoo portage tree. Not sure about Red Hat/Fedora
> derivatives.
>
> I note Ubuntu 22.04 seemed to ship PipeWire, so it may be starting to
> replace PulseAudio already.
> --
> Stuart Longland (aka Redhatter, VK4MSL)
>
> I haven't lost my mind...
> ...it's backed up on a tape somewhere.


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