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Posted on 2021-02-21
For the first "real" post of this year, I'll talk about a quick script I had to write to simplify my life with pulseaudio profile for bluetooth headset (namely A2DP and Headset_head_unit).
I've purchased my first nice bluetooth headset a couple of weeks ago. And while I really enjoy the freedom and great quality (as well as good noise cancelling), I found out that when connecting a bluetooth headset (via bluez library and the blueman UI), I had the possibility to use 2 different profiles: A2DP or Headset_head_unit…
I won't go here into the details of these 2 profiles as there are some info online, but the main thing is that in the end I have to mix between the two multiple times a day.
Why? Because the A2DP provides the best sound quality, but when in that mode, the microphone is not working… Whereas the Headset_head_unit profile provides a poor sound quality but at least the microphone works… Yeah I know… And because I do lots of calls during the day but still listen to music or videos often, I need to switch very quickly between the two modes (because yes, it is bad enough to not want to listen to music in the Headset_head_unit profile… It is fine for calls though.)
Anyway, the first few days, I was opening pavucontrol and then change the configuration as needed and keeping the pavucontrol screen open somewhere in a dedicated i3wm workspace. But I got very quickly fed up with that, so I thought about a way to improve this. Two things came 2 mind: a keyboard shorcut (via i3 keybindings) and a i3blocks block that would toggle the pulseaudio profile when clicked.
(For those who don't know i3blocks[1], it is very often used tool with i3wm[2] to display information in the status bar)
1: http://vivien.github.io/i3blocks/
I created a small python script that can be used with i3blocks and that display nothing when the bluetooth headset is not connected. A green mic icone when connected in Headset_head_unit profile and a red headphones icon when connected in A2DP profile. You can see the icons on the README page[3].
3: https://gitlab.com/bacardi55/i55blocks/-/tree/main/bluetooth-headset-mode
First, clone the repo (I've created public gitlab[4] and github[5] repo for convenience)
4: https://gitlab.com/bacardi55/i55blocks
5: https://github.com/bacardi55/i55blocks
git clone https://gitlab.com/bacardi55/i55blocks.git
or
git clone https://github.com/bacardi55/i55blocks.git
To use it, add in your ~/.config/i3blocks/config file:
[bt_headset_mode] command=$SCRIPT_DIR/bluetooth-headset-mode/bt_headset_mode markup=pango interval=10 bluetoothcard=<NameOfYourBluetoothCard>
is the name of your bluetooth card that you can find using:
pactl list cards | grep bluez_card
You should get something like this:
Name: bluez_card.4C_87_5D_2B_62_1D
use the full name for the bluetoothcard variable.
Reload i3blocks and you should see either of the 2 icons if your headset is connected, nothing otherwise.
Now, as a quick alternative tip, if I don't have my hand on my mouse, I like having quick i3wm keybind to do the same only via keyboard.
To do so, open your i3wm config file (~/.config/i3/config) and add:
bindsym $mod+Mod1+p exec --no-startup-id export BLOCK_BUTTON=true && export bluetoothcard="<NameOfYourBluetoothCard>" && /usr/bin/python3 /home/bacardi55/workspace/perso/i55blocks/bluetooth-headset-mode/bt_headset_mode
And voilĂ , you should reload i3 and be able to use the shortcut (remember to put the correct name of your bluetooth card) :)