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The alsa backend is also available for use. you can use `--help` to view options | The alsa backend is also available for use. you can use `--help` to view options | ||
3. In another terminal run the following command to launch the OS in QEMU. which will connect the QEMU pci device frontend to the vhost-device-sound backend via the unix socket. | 3. In another terminal: clone QEMU from upstream and checkout tag v9.0.0: | ||
$git clone https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu.git | |||
$git checkout v9.0.0 | |||
run the following command to launch the OS in QEMU. which will connect the QEMU pci device frontend to the vhost-device-sound backend via the unix socket. | |||
$./qemu-system-x86_64 -smp 4 -m 4G -mem-prealloc \ | $./qemu-system-x86_64 -smp 4 -m 4G -mem-prealloc \ | ||
-object memory-backend-file,share=on,id=mem0,size=4096M,mem-path="/dev/shm" \ | -object memory-backend-file,share=on,id=mem0,size=4096M,mem-path="/dev/shm" \ |
Revision as of 10:33, 20 May 2024
vhost-device-sound
vhost-device-sound from rust-vmm is an emulation of the virtio-sound device using the vhost-user protocol. The vhost-device-sound crate is based on the virtio-specification standard This device implements the virtio-sound emulation with mono and stereo audio support which can be used with either a Pipewire or Alsa audio backend for playback or capture.
This VIRTIO sound device works on VMMs that support VIRTIO device emulation. A typical use case is QEMU.
More information about this device can be found in:
1. The vhost-device-sound crate: https://crates.io/crates/vhost-device-sound
2. The vhost-user-snd-pci device in QEMU: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/blob/master/hw/virtio/vhost-user-snd-pci.c
Setting up the virtual image for the system
1. Download a fedora image from the download site i.e: https://eu.edge.kernel.org/fedora/releases/39/Server/x86_64/images/ it's a regular persistent Fedora image, instead of booting a live iso every time.
2. Start the fedora qcow image using the QEMU command:
$./qemu-system-x86_64 -smp 4 -m 4G -enable-kvm \ -drive file=../Fedora-Server-KVM-39-1.5.x86_64.qcow2,format=qcow2
At first boot, it ask for a user creation:
Select 5 for user creation, Select 1 to create user Select the following options accordingly to set username and set password Press c to continue
Then a login prompt will appear: login with your already created user name and password
Check if the virtio_snd module is available. Run lsmod | grep virtio_snd
to see if the module exists on your guest system. If it doesn't, you may need to install the appropriate kernel headers or a specific package that provides this module, also ensure the correct kernel version is being used.
For a fedora image run this command to install the necessary modules
$sudo dnf install kernel-modules-extra-$(uname -r) $sudo modprobe virtio_snd $lsmod | grep virtio_snd
To test a simple playback or capture, install alsa-utils package
$sudo dnf install alsa-utils -y
Now shutdown the qemu window and launch your new OS with QEMU, this time with the vhost-device-sound daemon already running in another terminal.
Testing the vhost-device-sound with QEMU sound-pci device.
1. In one terminal install the vhost-device-sound package
$sudo dnf install vhost-device-sound
2. Run the following command to start the vhost-device-sound daemon
$vhost-device-sound --socket=/tmp/mysnd.socket --backend pipewire
The alsa backend is also available for use. you can use --help
to view options
3. In another terminal: clone QEMU from upstream and checkout tag v9.0.0:
$git clone https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu.git $git checkout v9.0.0
run the following command to launch the OS in QEMU. which will connect the QEMU pci device frontend to the vhost-device-sound backend via the unix socket.
$./qemu-system-x86_64 -smp 4 -m 4G -mem-prealloc \ -object memory-backend-file,share=on,id=mem0,size=4096M,mem-path="/dev/shm" \ -machine q35,memory-backend=mem0 \ -chardev socket,id=char0,reconnect=0,path=/tmp/mysnd.socket -enable-kvm -snapshot \ -device vhost-user-snd-pci,chardev=char0 \ -drive file=../Fedora-Server- KVM-39-1.5.x86_64.qcow2,format=qcow2
to be specific this is the QEMU command that uses the device backend's socket
$-chardev socket,id=vsnd,path=/tmp/mysnd.sock \ -device vhost-user-snd-pci,chardev=vsnd
4. now the guest OS is running in QEMU, you can play a sound from the guest or perform a simple speaker-test