Advanced Linux Sound Architecture
Advanced Linux Sound Architecture is a software framework and part of the Linux kernel that provides an application programming interface for sound card device drivers.
Some of the goals of the ALSA project at its inception were automatic configuration of sound-card hardware and graceful handling of multiple sound devices in a system. ALSA is released under GPL-2.0-or-later and LGPL-2.1-or-later.
On Linux, sound servers, like sndio, PulseAudio, JACK and PipeWire, and higher-level APIs work on top of ALSA and its sound card device drivers. ALSA succeeded the older Linux port of the Open Sound System.
History
The project to develop ALSA was led by Jaroslav Kysela, and was based on the Linux device driver for the Gravis Ultrasound sound card. It started in 1998 and was developed separately from the Linux kernel until it was introduced in the 2.5 development series in 2002.In the 2.6 version, it replaced the previous system, Open Sound System, by default.
ALSA has a larger and more complex API than OSS, so it can be more difficult to develop an application that uses ALSA as its sound technology. While ALSA may be configured to provide an OSS emulation layer, such functionality is no longer available or is not installed by default in many Linux distributions.
Features
ALSA was designed with some features which were not, at the time of its conception, supported by OSS:- Hardware-based MIDI synthesis.
- Hardware mixing of multiple channels.
- Full-duplex operation.
- Multiprocessor-friendly, thread-safe device drivers.
Applications
Additional to the software framework internal to the Linux kernel, the ALSA project also provides the command-line tools and utilitiesalsactl, amixer, arecord/aplay and alsamixer, an ncurses-based TUI.There also are GUIs programmed by third-party developers, such as GNOME-ALSAmixer, Kmix, XFCE4-mixer, LXpanel, QasHctl, QasMixer, Pavucontrol, AconnectGUI, tapiir, polarbear, ALSAmixerGUI, ZynAddSubFX, Yoshimi, and even more.
Concepts
Typically, ALSA supports up to eight cards, numbered 0 through 7; each card is a physical or logical kernel device capable of input and output. Furthermore, each card may also be addressed by its id, which is an explanatory string such as "Headset" or "ICH9".A card has devices, numbered starting at 0; a device may be of playback type, meaning it outputs sound from the computer, or some other type such as capture, control, timer, or sequencer; device number 0 is used by default when no particular device is specified.
A device may have subdevices, numbered starting at 0; a subdevice represents some relevant sound endpoint for the device, such as a speaker pair. If the subdevice is not specified, or if subdevice number −1 is specified, then any available subdevice is used.
A card's interface is a description of an ALSA protocol for accessing the card; possible interfaces include: hw, plughw, default, and plug:dmix. The hw interface provides direct access to the kernel device, but no software mixing or stream adaptation support. The plughw and default enable sound output where the hw interface would produce an error.
An application typically describes sound output by combining all of the aforementioned specifications together in a device string, which has one of the following forms :
- interface:card,device,subdevice
- interface:CARD=1,DEV=3,SUBDEV=2.
- sampling rate: often 44.1 kHz on home stereos, or 48 kHz on home theaters, yet up to 88.2 kHz, 96 kHz, or even 192 kHz for hi-fi audio production or reproduction.
- sample width: measured in some number of bits per sample
- sample encoding: such as endianness
- number of channels: 1 for mono, 2 for stereo, or 6 for AC-3/IEC958
Implementations
Open Sound System version 4 is able to emulate ALSA.
QNX uses a sound system derived from, but not directly compatible with ALSA. The header file and library names are still "asound", same as the ALSA names. ALSA API uses calls in a way not allowed in the QNX kernel.