etple.blogg.se

Arch linux obs
Arch linux obs













I’m pretty happy about this, I use OBS quite a bit for recording walk-through videos for the development and support teams at Castos, so this is going to save me a lot of time and stress. In development the past number of months and going through a number of rounds of review is RISC-V hibernation/suspend-to-disk support. I initially couldn’t find where to enable the Virtual Camera, until I saw the button under my Stream/Recording Controls.Īfter clicking “Start Virtual Camera” I fired up my Zoom application, and lo and behold, there it is as an option for my camera feed. One of the missing RISC-V features now in place for the in-development Linux 6.4 kernel is system hibernation / suspend-to-disk support. Rainsberger, I was able to configure a working virtual camera, but for some reason, I could never get it to work right every single time, and had to reinstall things every time I wanted to use it.įortunately, since the latest release, OBS Studio for Linux now includes support for a Virtual Camera.Īll I needed to do to enable it, was to install v4l2loopback-dkms using this command: sudo apt install -y v4l2loopback-dkms Recently I was trying to see if the Linux version supported the Virtual Camera option that the Windows version did, and at the time it sadly did not. It lags a bit when it comes to releasing new features vs the Windows version, but it’s perfect for what I need. As a Linux user, I was pleased to find that it was both open-source, and therefore available for Linux. Some time ago I discovered OBS Studio as a solution for recording internal screencasts for tutorials and workshop videos.















Arch linux obs