Description of problem: My Soundcore Life Q20 stopped being able to play A2DP audio of any kind when connecting to Fedora on both my desktop and my laptop running Fedora 33 with pulseaudio installed. I uninstalled puleaudio and installed pipewire, and I have the same problem. However, after installing pipewire, on first pairing I can see the HSP/HFP profile (never before with pulseaudio) and it can play and record low-quality audio when it is enabled. But this profile disappears upon reconnecting as well. 3 AD2P profiles are presented, none of which work: - (A2DP Sink, codec SBC) - (A2DP Sink, codec AAC) - (A2DP Sink) Prior to switching to Pipewire, I only had a single profile available (A2DP Sink). The headphones continue to connect and work as before with other bluetooth-capable devices like my cell phone. dmesg also gets the following flood of debug messages: [ 514.575766] Bluetooth: hci0: SCO packet for unknown connection handle 0 Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable): pipewire-0.3.24-1.fc33 How reproducible: Every time so far Steps to Reproduce: 1. Turn on bluetooth headset 2. Wait for headset to connect or manually connect 3. See device appear in volume control apps or managers 4. Play any audio, observe no audio sent to device though app registers playback. Actual results: No sound heard over device. Expected results: Audio being played in apps can be heard over device. Additional info:
This message is a reminder that Fedora 33 is nearing its end of life. Fedora will stop maintaining and issuing updates for Fedora 33 on 2021-11-30. It is Fedora's policy to close all bug reports from releases that are no longer maintained. At that time this bug will be closed as EOL if it remains open with a Fedora 'version' of '33'. Package Maintainer: If you wish for this bug to remain open because you plan to fix it in a currently maintained version, simply change the 'version' to a later Fedora version. Thank you for reporting this issue and we are sorry that we were not able to fix it before Fedora 33 is end of life. If you would still like to see this bug fixed and are able to reproduce it against a later version of Fedora, you are encouraged change the 'version' to a later Fedora version prior this bug is closed as described in the policy above. Although we aim to fix as many bugs as possible during every release's lifetime, sometimes those efforts are overtaken by events. Often a more recent Fedora release includes newer upstream software that fixes bugs or makes them obsolete.
Fedora 33 changed to end-of-life (EOL) status on 2021-11-30. Fedora 33 is no longer maintained, which means that it will not receive any further security or bug fix updates. As a result we are closing this bug. If you can reproduce this bug against a currently maintained version of Fedora please feel free to reopen this bug against that version. If you are unable to reopen this bug, please file a new report against the current release. If you experience problems, please add a comment to this bug. Thank you for reporting this bug and we are sorry it could not be fixed.