Bluetooth
Enabling Bluetooth support
To enable support for Bluetooth devices, add hardware.bluetooth.enable
to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix:
{
...
hardware.bluetooth.enable = true;
...
}
Pairing Bluetooth devices
In order to use Bluetooth devices, they must be paired with your NixOS machine. Heavier desktop environments will usually provide a Bluetooth management GUI which you can use to pair devices.
If your desktop environment does not provide such a GUI, you can install the blueman package. This provides a tray icon process (blueman-applet) and a GUI management application (blueman-manager).
Pairing devices from the command line
Alternatively, Bluetooth devices can be paired from the command line using bluetoothctl.
$ bluetoothctl
[bluetooth] # power on
[bluetooth] # agent on
[bluetooth] # default-agent
[bluetooth] # scan on
...put device in pairing mode and wait [hex-address] to appear here...
[bluetooth] # pair [hex-address]
[bluetooth] # connect [hex-address]
Using Bluetooth headsets with PulseAudio
To allow Bluetooth audio devices to be used with PulseAudio, amend /etc/nixos/configuration.nix as follows:
{
...
hardware.pulseaudio = {
enable = true;
# NixOS allows either a lightweight build (default) or full build of PulseAudio to be installed.
# Only the full build has Bluetooth support, so it must be selected here.
package = pkgs.pulseaudioFull;
};
hardware.bluetooth.enable = true;
...
}
You will need to restart PulseAudio; try pkill '^pulseaudio$'.
You can verify that PulseAudio has loaded the Bluetooth module by running pactl list | grep -i 'Name.*module.*blue'; Bluetooth modules should be present in the list.
Enabling A2DP Sink
Modern headsets will generally try to connect using the A2DP profile. To enable this for your bluetooth connection, add the following to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
...
hardware.bluetooth.extraConfig = "
[general]
Enable=Source,Sink,Media,Socket
"
...
}
Managing audio devices
pavucontrol can be used to reconfigure the device:
- To enable A2DP, change the profile to “High Fidelity Playback (A2DP Sink)” on the “Configuration” tab.
- To set the device as the default audio output, select “set as fallback” on the “Output Devices” tab.
Alternatively, the device can be configured via the command line:
- To enable A2DP, run:
$ pacmd set-card-profile "$(pactl list cards short | egrep -o bluez_card[[:alnum:]._]+)" a2dp_sink
- To set the device as the default audio output, run:
$ pacmd set-default-sink "$(pactl list sinks short | egrep -o bluez_sink[[:alnum:]._]+)"
Troubleshooting
USB device needs to be unplugged/re-plugged after suspend
Some USB device/host combinations don't play well with the suspend/resume cycle, and need to be unplugged and then re-plugged to work again.
It is possible to simulate a unplug/re-plug cycle using the /sys filesystem.
This gist provides a script and instructions to set-up a workaround for these devices.