If you now play the Ardour project, you will see its output volume reflected in the meter in the ‘Mixer’ section in OBS and it will make it to your recording. In the Audio/MIDI setup dialog, you need to select ‘Loopback’ as your input device (the output device will be automatically set to the same value). Once the source has been added, you are ready to start (and configure) Ardour. It is also important here that you make sure the selected ‘Rate’ value matches the sample rate of your Ardour project, otherwise you’ll get in trouble later. In the ‘PCM’ text box that shows up, you need to enter: When the ‘Properties’ dialog pops up, under ‘Device’, you need to select ‘Custom’ (this is because OBS uses some weird syntax (the reason is way beyond me) that ALSA will fail to understand). In OBS, under ‘Sources’, you will add an ‘Audio Capture Device (ALSA)’. This is because, if Ardour has already been configured to use the loopback device and started, setting up the audio input in OBS will trigger errors and fail while attempting to set loopback parameters. It is important that you do this first, without Ardour running in the background. ![]() Once that has been taken care of, you can move on to configuring OBS. As a consequence, you need to note the card number Looback is assigned. ![]() The former is used for playback (Ardour will automatically use that one for output) and the latter is used for recording (you will need to set this one as the input device in OBS). The Loopback device shows up as one card (card 0) with two devices (device 0 and device 1).Code: Select all **** List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices ****Ĭard 0: Loopback, device 0: Loopback PCM Ĭard 0: Loopback, device 1: Loopback PCM
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