Hi there!
You may find jack_plumb useful.
It monitors and makes connections "sticky".
If connections drops but then the client congress back again, it'll be
reconnected immediately.
I am not using pipewire, but I hope this can work normally there too.
Hope this helps.
Athanasios
On Sun, Oct 26, 2025, 23:31 Worik <root(a)worik.org> wrote:
I've been
having problems with connections between jack clients
dropping out.
I would like to have a program that monitors the
state of connections.
I use `watch jack_lsp -c`
If it is too inconvenient to see that much I filter it with grep.
Is that not possible or suitable?
On Monday, 10/27/25 at 04:22 Bill Purvis <bill(a)billp.org> wrote:
I've been having problems with connections between jack clients dropping
out.
I would like to have a program that monitors the state of connections.
I've worked out how to locate the end client ports, but I don't want to
have
poll the connections at frequent intervals. Is there any way I can get a
callback when either of the clients drops out?
I suppose I could set up links between by monitor and the two client ports
and activate those connections, but that seems like overkill. Is there an
easier way.
I'm actually using pipewire-jack but don't know enough about pipewire to
do it
directly.
Bill
--
+---------------------------------------------+
| Bill Purvis G8DIO |
| bill(a)billp.org |
+---------------------------------------------+
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