Hope this helps those on Linux annoyed that they're not getting the sound quality a dedicated player would give! I'm able to confirm that a 192 kHz track on Qobuz is streamed as such through Linux, and output as such through the DAC. Then all is good! Another reason I love this Topping DAC is the display output. Pacmd list-sink-inputs | grep -e 'sample spec:' -e 'resample method:' -e 'application\.name' To test this works, while playing Qobuz, run this command: This won't affect the stream being 24bit as increasing is harmless. If left false, it will convert the sample to the best multiple integer if edited as thus: And it's lossy!) The following applies to Debian/Ubuntu distros.Īvoid-resampling = true (default - false)Īnd that's it! This enables Pulseaudio to use the streams native sample rate. Here's how i'm able to stream up to 192 kHz directly to my Topping D10s DAC, something I can't do with Tidal (even with Masters quality, I'm limited to 44.1 kHz. It kicks Tidal's ass, which i've been using for a few years now. Quelques frayeurs en scooter mais les paysages, les sites et les gens sont géniaux.I use Linux Mint on my desktop PC, and have been using Qobuz for the last 24 hours through the browser LibreWolf (fork of Firefox). PS: Je me suis arrêté à singapore, en indonésie puis à bali il y a deux ans. Nothing comparable with the guys trying to make the Rasp PI work flawlessly. You can not go wrong with that.Ībout the A20 (same clock as the A10), it has far enough speed to make the usb2 output scream. I have done some tests with another owner of a Teac UD-501: The biggest sound difference is the DAC you’re using.Īgainst a CD player, it’s only depends on the N/A stage of your cd player against the DAC. If you have no problem with linux and mpd, i can only say: go for it □ The sound is better than a desktop with any switching power supply (and i have a good and pricey one) and the same as a laptop on battery. Here is my final setup with a linear power supply: That’s it! Thanks to Guillaume for the original info. Sticker_file “/home/mele/mpd/sticker.sql” Playlist_directory “/home/mele/mpd/playlists” Here are the settings that worked for me in /etc/mpd.conf Make sure they are owned by ‘mele’ and have the correct permissions To let MPD run as the user ‘mele’, I set up the mpd.conf to store its data in that users home folder. * If you don’t have wget, install it withĬreate a standard user account to run MPD under if you don’t already have oneįix some permissions to let MPD access the soundcard without having to run it as rootĬhmod 770 /dev/snd -R & chgrp audio /dev/snd -R I downloaded these from the ‘precise’ PPA, which installed fine.ĭpkg -i libmad0-dev_0.15.1b-7ubuntu2_bĭpkg -i libmad0_0.15.1b-7ubuntu2_b Pcm.!default įix a segmentatition fault issue with MPD and libmad by upgrading the libmad package to 0.15.1b-7ubuntu2. I’m no expert.Įdit /etc/modules by adding the following 4 lines at the bottomĬreate a file at /etc/nf with these two lines Hope it helps if someone else needs it… I take no responsibilty for you screwing anything up. Here’s the additional steps I needed to finally get the SPDIF working. I’ve managed answer my last two comments with hours of trial and error. My final Setup ! Posted in allwinner a10, debian, ubuntu Tagged bit perfect, DAC, MPD The best sub-$500 sound server package you could ever ear. # cat /proc/asound/MYDAC/pcm0p/sub0/hw_paramsīit perfect studio master 96KHz 32bit from Lynn Record with a Mele at 0.3 of load, the Micromega MyDac (up to 192kHz) and an audio grade usb2 cable. I’m using this:įor the Micromega MyDac, i can check the status directly here: You can now access your mele mpd with any mpd client, your choice. # Put the card name listed with 'aplay -l' Metadata_to_use "artist,album,title,track,name,genre,date,disc" # keep my DB on the nas to index it with a mpd running on my nas, i have 2To **** List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices ****Ĭard 0: sun4icodec, device 0: M1 PCM Ĭard 1: sun4isndhdmi, device 0: SUN4I-HDMIAUDIO sndhdmi-0 Ĭard 2: MYDAC, device 0: USB Audio You can use nfs also or simply mount your sata disk with your music files in one directory.Ĭheck you device (this is the output with GFX version – hdmi is creating 2 cards). I have create a share on my nas and mounted it in /nas (replace XXX with samba ShareName, login, password) The mele is hosting mpd without resampling (because resampling is evil).Ĭhoose ubuntu or debian headless and update the kernel. I’m using a Micromega MyDac in usb2 (299 Euros, the best sounding sub-1KEuro DAC). ultra low power consumption – always ready to play.Since 2 weeks, i’m using one of mine as a bit perfect audio player: Mele is just a great little platform for so many usage.
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