Codex's review of the v0 design correctly pointed out that PLAN's
"hard −0.1 dBTP ceiling" claim only holds at the filter's output,
not at the speaker, when the real sink runs at a non-48 kHz native
rate. PipeWire inserts a resampler at the
`filter.playback → real-sink` edge, and any polynomial /
windowed-sinc reconstruction can elevate inter-sample peaks
slightly through its own math. The elevation is small in practice
(a few tenths of a dB for a clean band-limited resampler) and the
contract still holds where headroom is in control of the graph,
but the README and §3 had been silent on the leak.
This commit only edits docs:
- §3.1 grows a "Contract scope (caveat)" paragraph next to the
"Never bypassed, never disabled" hard-tier description, naming
the leak, its magnitude, and the fix-for-real (filter rate
matching).
- §11 picks up a new tracked follow-up entry alongside the
other dormant items. Scope: dynamic `FILTER_SAMPLE_RATE`,
kernel rebuild on real-sink change, Layer A's
block-period constant goes dynamic too. Gated on a multi-rate
hardware test bench — no point shipping the refactor without
something to validate it against. **v1 scope.**
No code changes; no tests; clippy and tests are unaffected.
|
||
|---|---|---|
| contrib/systemd | ||
| crates | ||
| docs | ||
| nix | ||
| profiles | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| Cargo.lock | ||
| Cargo.toml | ||
| flake.lock | ||
| flake.nix | ||
| IPC.md | ||
| PLAN.md | ||
| README.md | ||
| rust-toolchain.toml | ||
headroom
AGC + compressor + true-peak limiter daemon for PipeWire, in Rust.
Headroom puts a per-application audio safety net between noisy sources (browsers, voice chat, random video) and your speakers, while leaving the things you don't want compressed (music players, games, DAWs) untouched.
- Hard −0.1 dBTP ceiling on the processed route, with proper
inter-sample-peak handling, enforced inline so the contract holds
regardless of control-plane state. Streams routed
bypassride the real sink directly and are not in scope of the contract — that's the trade-off that makes the per-app exclusion useful. - Per-app exclusion with profile-driven rules.
- Layer A per-app level control (peak + RMS detector → smoothed
channelVolumeswrites) for taming individual streams without touching the bus path. Zero added signal-path latency; safe to use on bypass-routed streams. - Single binary daemon + CLI, controlled over a Unix-domain socket
with a documented JSON wire protocol (see
IPC.md). - First-party Rust crate (
headroom-client) for programmatic use; third-party clients (Qt panels, status bars, …) target the wire protocol directly. - Live profile reload — edit a TOML file in
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/headroom/profiles/and the daemon picks up changes within ~500 ms; the audio thread doesn't glitch.
See PLAN.md for the full design and roadmap.
Status
Alpha. The signal chain (AGC, compressor, two-tier limiter, Layer A
per-app), the routing engine (explicit-link enforcement, sink hotplug,
sticky default sink), the IPC server with topic subscriptions, the
headroom monitor TUI, and live profile reload all work end-to-end.
Packaging exposes a systemd user unit and Nix modules. What's missing
is real-world soak time on multi-rate / Bluetooth setups and other
distros' init systems.
Installing
Nix (flake)
This repo is a flake; the daemon plus its systemd user unit and the canonical profiles are exposed as a package.
nix run github:amaanq/headroom -- daemon # one-shot run
nix profile install github:amaanq/headroom # add to $PATH
For Home Manager, add the flake as an input and enable the module:
{
inputs.headroom.url = "github:amaanq/headroom";
# In your Home Manager configuration:
imports = [ inputs.headroom.homeModules.default ];
services.headroom.enable = true;
}
The module symlinks the shipped profiles into
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/headroom/profiles/, drops the systemd user unit
into the user's services dir, and the unit starts after PipeWire and
WirePlumber come up. services.headroom.extraProfiles lets you add
your own.
For NixOS (system-wide binary install + systemd-user discovery):
{
inputs.headroom.url = "github:amaanq/headroom";
# In your NixOS configuration:
imports = [ inputs.headroom.nixosModules.default ];
programs.headroom.enable = true;
}
Then any user can systemctl --user enable --now headroom.
Other distros (manual)
cargo install --path crates/headroom-cli # or: cargo build --release
# Profiles
mkdir -p ~/.config/headroom/profiles
cp profiles/*.toml ~/.config/headroom/profiles/
# systemd user unit (edit the ExecStart path to point at your binary)
install -Dm644 contrib/systemd/headroom.service \
~/.config/systemd/user/headroom.service
sed -i "s|@bindir@|$(dirname "$(command -v headroom)")|" \
~/.config/systemd/user/headroom.service
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable --now headroom
Usage
Once the daemon is running:
headroom status # JSON snapshot — sinks, streams, active profile
headroom profile list # available profiles
headroom profile use night # activate one
headroom monitor # full-screen TUI (bus gauges + per-stream)
headroom monitor --json meters # line-delimited JSON, for scripting
headroom route set firefox processed
headroom set compressor.threshold_db -28
headroom bypass on # kill switch — straight to the real sink
See headroom --help for the full surface.
Building
nix develop # toolchain + pipewire dev libs + helpers
cargo build # iterate
cargo test --workspace
nix build # final packaged headroom binary
License
GPL-3.0-or-later for the daemon and CLI. headroom-dsp and headroom-ipc
are MPL-2.0 so they can be reused by non-GPL plugin hosts and clients.