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How to use

Gabriel Carneiro edited this page Mar 11, 2022 · 2 revisions

Devices

Hardware Inputs (hi[1...3])

Hardware inputs are your real microphones, select them in the comboboxes.

Virtual Inputs (vi[1...3])

Virtual inputs (virtual sinks) are virtual devices designed so you select them as your regular output devices in applications, you can use apps like pavucontrtol (apt/dnf/pacman) to select the device that the application will use. You can change the name of the device by clicking in the respective label.

Hardware outputs (A[1...3])

Hardware outputs are your real output devices (speakers, headphones), select them in the upper comboboxes, all audio routed here will be played on your device, so you can hear your hardware inputs and virtual outputs

Virtual outputs (B[1...3])

Virtual outputs are virtual devices designed so that they will act like a microphone, so you can route audio from hardware inputs and virtual inputs here. You'll have to use virtual outputs instead of your regular hardware inputs

Socket

Server

Client

GUI

Buttons

A[1...3]

When on, this will route the audio from the hardware/virtual input device to your real hardware output device. Right clicking this button will show a popover where you can change the loopback latency (be aware that really low latency will make your audio crackle)

B[1...3]

When on, this will route the audio from the hardware/virtual input device to the virtual outputs. Right clicking this button will show a popover where you can change the loopback latency (be aware that really low latency will make your audio crackle)

Noise reduction

When on, this will activate rnnoise noise supression algorithm for that hardware input source. Right clicking this button will show a popover where you can change the loopback latency and noise supression threshold.

EQ

When on, this will activate equalization for that hardware/virtual output. Right clicking this button will show a popver where you can change the eq settings