mollusk 25a5b597f7 repair: unload orphan pixelpass_capture_* sinks and paired loopbacks
Replaces the Phase-2 stub. Parses `pactl list short modules` for
`module-null-sink` entries whose `sink_name=pixelpass_capture_<pid>`
names a PID with no /proc/<pid>, and `module-loopback` entries whose
`sink=` names one of those orphan sinks. Unloads loopbacks first, then
sinks (mirrors Routing::shutdown order so PipeWire doesn't leave
zombie links).

Live PIDs — including this process and any other running pixelpass —
are skipped and reported. Same-tab parser is robust to multi-line
{ ... } argument blocks from other modules because continuation lines
never parse as a u32 module ID.

Verified with synthetic orphans against this build:
  - single dead orphan (sink + loopback) → both cleaned, count = 2
  - single live orphan (pid 1) → both preserved, message names the
    live count
  - mixed dead + live → dead pair cleaned, live pair preserved,
    output reports both

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 16:33:33 -04:00

pixelpass

P2P screen sharing CLI for Linux. Single binary, hole-punched over iroh — no port forwarding, no signup, no server-side accounts. Hardware-encoded H.264 + AAC audio, viewed in mpv or VLC.

Built for people who just want to show their screen to a friend without spinning up a Discord call or fighting with NAT.

Status

v0.1.0 — verified end-to-end on the public internet (LTE relay path, ~2s latency, real carrier-grade NAT) as of 2026-05-20.

Working:

  • Wayland capture via the screencast portal (KDE Plasma 6 confirmed; other Wayland compositors with the portal should work but are untested)
  • VAAPI H.264 encode in GStreamer (RDNA3 confirmed; other VAAPI-capable GPUs should work)
  • Audio capture of the default sink's monitor
  • iroh QUIC bi-stream tunnel, direct-UDP and relay paths both verified
  • Interactive Host/View menu with clipboard auto-copy and mpv/VLC picker
  • Headless mode for scripts (pixelpass <ticket>)
  • Multi-viewer fanout (default 2, configurable via --max-viewers; shared gst pipeline, one broadcast channel per host)
  • First-run upstream bandwidth pre-flight, persisted to ~/.config/pixelpass/config.toml and used to auto-size the default viewer cap

Not yet working:

  • X11 capture (stubbed, returns an error)
  • Per-app audio routing (--app <name> is a flag stub)
  • --repair (PipeWire orphan cleanup) is a stub

Quick start

pixelpass

On the host machine: pick "Host", share a monitor via the portal dialog, the ticket lands on your clipboard. Send it to your viewer however you like (chat, email, paste in a note). The same ticket works for multiple viewers up to your --max-viewers cap.

The very first host launch offers a one-time upstream bandwidth test (~5 s, ~5 MB to Cloudflare's open speed-test endpoint) so it can pick a sensible default for the viewer cap. You can skip it and a conservative default (2 viewers) is used; re-run it later with pixelpass --reconfigure.

On the viewer machine: run pixelpass, pick "View", paste the ticket, pick mpv or VLC. The player launches detached and the stream starts.

Headless

# host: prints a ticket on stdout, waits for a peer
pixelpass

# viewer: skips the menu
pixelpass <ticket>
# then run the printed mpv command in another terminal

Requirements

  • Linux (Wayland session for now; X11 stubbed)
  • A VAAPI-capable GPU and the right driver:
    • AMD: libva-mesa-driver
    • Intel: intel-media-driver (modern iGPUs) or intel-vaapi-driver (older)
    • NVIDIA: libva-nvidia-driver (untested)
  • vainfo from libva-utils should list at least one H.264 entrypoint
  • GStreamer with these plugin packages installed:
    • gstreamer, gst-plugins-base, gst-plugins-good, gst-plugins-bad, gst-plugins-ugly, gst-libav, gst-plugin-va, gst-plugin-pipewire
  • A player: mpv (recommended) or vlc
  • If you use VLC, two split plugin packages are also needed on Arch-family distros — the base vlc package does not pull them in:
    • vlc-plugin-dvb — provides the MPEG-TS demuxer (libts_plugin.so). Without it, VLC can't parse the container.
    • vlc-plugin-ffmpeg — provides the H.264 decoder (libavcodec_plugin.so). Without it, VLC parses the container, identifies the codec as H.264, then errors with Codec h264 ... is not supported. mpv ships its own decoder stack and doesn't share either dependency.
  • PipeWire (for screencast portal + audio capture)

On Arch / CachyOS / EndeavourOS:

sudo pacman -S gstreamer gst-plugins-base gst-plugins-good gst-plugins-bad \
               gst-plugins-ugly gst-libav gst-plugin-va gst-plugin-pipewire \
               libva-utils mpv
# plus your GPU's VAAPI driver
# plus, if you want to use VLC instead of mpv:
sudo pacman -S vlc vlc-plugin-dvb vlc-plugin-ffmpeg

If the viewer is running on battery, set the CPU governor to performance or balanced — power-saver can choke even hardware-decoded 1080p H.264.

Build

cargo build --release
./target/release/pixelpass --help

rustc 1.95+ / edition 2024.

How it works

  Host                                                          Viewer
  ────                                                          ──────
  Wayland portal (ashpd) ──> PipeWire fd
                              │
                              ▼
              gst-launch: pipewiresrc -> videorate -> vah264enc ->
                          h264parse -> mpegtsmux
                          (audio:    pulsesrc <sink>.monitor ->
                                     avenc_aac -> aacparse ─┘)
                              │ stdout
                              ▼
              tokio HTTP server (in-process, ~30 lines)
                              │
                              ▼
              iroh QUIC bi-stream (ALPN pixelpass/0) ◄══════════►
                                                                 │
                                                                 ▼
                                                  tokio TcpListener
                                                  on 127.0.0.1:rand
                                                                 │
                                                                 ▼
                                                  mpv / VLC HTTP client

The viewer's player connects to a localhost HTTP server, which is just one end of the iroh tunnel. The host's HTTP server sits on the other end and streams GStreamer's stdout (an MPEG-TS containing hardware-encoded H.264 + AAC) through with no demux or remux.

iroh handles NAT traversal: direct UDP if hole-punching succeeds, relay path otherwise. Both have been verified end-to-end.

Why these choices

  • iroh over Holesail / dumbpipe / Tailscale: single Rust dep, no Node runtime, no signup, no daemon — fits the "one self-contained binary" goal.
  • GStreamer for capture/encode, not ffmpeg: stride/format pitfalls when bridging raw video between processes; one in-process pipeline sidesteps them.
  • In-process Rust HTTP server, not ffmpeg-as-server: ffmpeg's -listen 1 is one-shot and probe-budget-sensitive; the Rust task is pure passthrough with no codec assumptions.
  • MPEG-TS over fragmented MP4: every player on Linux handles it out of the box. AV1-in-MPEG-TS was tried and is unworkable through libavformat — if AV1 ever comes back, it has to ride a different container.
  • VAAPI H.264 over x264: ~5% of one CPU core instead of ~50% on the host's hardware.

Configuration

pixelpass keeps a small TOML config at ~/.config/pixelpass/config.toml (or the XDG equivalent). Right now it only stores the result of the bandwidth pre-flight:

[bandwidth]
status = "measured"            # measured | skipped | failed | unmeasured
upstream_mbps = 8.78           # safe estimate (raw * 0.8)
measured_at = "2026-05-21T20:41:16Z"
  • pixelpass --reconfigure re-runs the test (e.g. after an ISP change).
  • Deleting the file resets pixelpass to first-run state.
  • Skip is sticky — once you skip the test, pixelpass won't ask again unless you reconfigure.

Multi-viewer

One gst capture pipeline fans out to N concurrent viewers via a tokio::sync::broadcast channel. The same ticket is reusable: as long as a viewer is connected, capture stays alive; when the last one leaves, the pipeline tears down and the portal stops streaming. A new viewer connecting after that re-triggers the portal dialog.

Capacity is bounded by upstream bandwidth (each viewer is its own encrypted egress). The default cap comes from the bandwidth pre-flight result; --max-viewers <N> overrides it. When the cap is hit, additional connections are politely refused with a "host is full" message and the host keeps running.

For more viewers, drop the per-viewer bitrate: e.g. pixelpass --bitrate 2500 --max-viewers 4 fits four 2.5 Mbps streams in roughly 12 Mbps of upstream.

Known limitations and gotchas

  • VLC needs vlc-plugin-dvb and vlc-plugin-ffmpeg on Arch-family distros — the base vlc package doesn't pull these in, and missing either one breaks playback (the first kills the demuxer, the second kills the H.264 decoder). pixelpass warns at player-launch time if either plugin isn't on disk. mpv doesn't share these dependencies.
  • Audio echo if the host plays the stream through speakers and captures system audio — expected, the mic / monitor picks up the playback. Headphones bypass it.
  • Late joiners see ~2 s of garbage before the next keyframe lets their decoder lock. Expected behavior, not a bug.
  • VAAPI driver must be package-tracked, not an orphaned .so on disk. mpv's --hwdec=auto silently falls back to software decode otherwise, which then chokes on a low-power viewer.

License

MIT OR Apache-2.0, your pick.

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