I have a “Dell Inc. Latitude 5290 2-in-1”, and it comes with a stereo microphone array that, by default, has a gain that is way too extreme.
A value of 100% is screeching / over-blasted to any listener, while a value of 25% is most reasonable.
Thus, I wanted to limit the gain of the microphones through PipeWire.
I created the following WirePlumber configuration file.
# For "Dell Inc. Latitude 5290 2-in-1"
# The analog input array is way too loud
monitor.alsa.rules = [
{
matches = [
# This matches the value of the 'node.name' property of the node.
{
node.name = "alsa_input.pci-0000_00_1f.3.analog-stereo"
}
]
actions = {
update-props = {
node.description = "Dell Latitude 5290 2-in-1 Stereo Microphone"
channelmix.min-volume = 0.0
channelmix.max-volume = 0.25
channelmix.normalize = true
}
}
}
]
I know this is applying to the correct node, because executing wpctl status
shows that the node description has been properly changed.
The problem is that the “channelmix.max-volume” is not applied as I expect it to be. I expect it to make it so that 25% max volume is the new 100%, Instead it seems to do nothing.
What am I doing wrong, and how can I achieve what I want?
Edit 1: Channel Mix is working, but it seems the “Volume” as of wpctl get-volume
is referring to gain. Essentially Channel Mix is making it quieter, but the gain because of “Volume” is nonsensical.
Edit 2: RedHat developer says there isn’t support for thatcurrently :( https://fosstodon.org/@wtay/113532113977083665
Edit 3: EasyEffects is not the solution here, This is a lower level issue, not something done via an affect to the audio stream. EasyEffects cannot “undo” gain changes.
I use easy effects, a lot easier to control these things
Doesn’t have the support for hardware gain limitation.
I am trying to prevent the system from being able to change the microphone gain at all, not apply an affect.