PipeWire 1.1.0
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Tutorial - Part 1: Getting Started

Index | Tutorial - Part 2: Enumerating Objects

In this tutorial we show the basics of a simple PipeWire application. Use this tutorial to get started and help you set up your development environment.

Initialization

Let get started with the simplest application.

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
pw_init(&argc, &argv);
fprintf(stdout, "Compiled with libpipewire %s\n"
"Linked with libpipewire %s\n",
pw_get_headers_version(),
pw_get_library_version());
return 0;
}
void pw_init(int *argc, char **argv[])
Initialize PipeWire.
Definition pipewire.c:489
pipewire/pipewire.h

Before you can use any PipeWire functions, you need to call pw_init().

Compilation

PipeWire provides a pkg-config file named libpipewire-0.3 (note: the version suffix may change with future releases of PipeWire). To compile the simple test application, copy it into a test1.c file and use pkg-config to provide the required dependencies:

gcc -Wall test1.c -o test1 $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libpipewire-0.3)

then run it with:

# ./test1
Compiled with libpipewire 0.3.5
Linked with libpipewire 0.3.5
#

Use your build system's pkg-config support to integrate it into your project. For example, a minimal meson.build entry would look like this:

project('test1', ['c'])
pipewire_dep = dependency('libpipewire-0.3')
executable('test1', 'test1.c',
           dependencies: [pipewire_dep])

Index | Tutorial - Part 2: Enumerating Objects