Audio forwarding is supported for devices with Android 11 or higher, and it is enabled by default:
- For Android 12 or newer, it works out-of-the-box.
- For Android 11, you'll need to ensure that the device screen is unlocked when starting scrcpy. A fake popup will briefly appear to make the system think that the shell app is in the foreground. Without this, audio capture will fail.
- For Android 10 or earlier, audio cannot be captured and is automatically disabled.
If audio capture fails, then mirroring continues with video only (since audio is
enabled by default, it is not acceptable to make scrcpy fail if it is not
available), unless --require-audio
is set.
To disable audio:
scrcpy --no-audio
The audio codec can be selected. The possible values are opus
(default), aac
and raw
(uncompressed PCM 16-bit LE):
scrcpy --audio-codec=opus # default
scrcpy --audio-codec=aac
scrcpy --audio-codec=raw
In particular, if you get the following error:
Failed to initialize audio/opus, error 0xfffffffe
then your device has no Opus encoder: try scrcpy --audio-codec=aac
.
Several encoders may be available on the device. They can be listed by:
scrcpy --list-encoders
To select a specific encoder:
scrcpy --audio-codec=opus --audio-encoder='c2.android.opus.encoder'
For advanced usage, to pass arbitrary parameters to the MediaFormat
,
check --audio-codec-options
in the manpage or in scrcpy --help
.
The default audio bit rate is 128Kbps. To change it:
scrcpy --audio-bit-rate=64K
scrcpy --audio-bit-rate=64000 # equivalent
This parameter does not apply to RAW audio codec (--audio-codec=raw
).
Audio buffering is unavoidable. It must be kept small enough so that the latency is acceptable, but large enough to minimize buffer underrun (causing audio glitches).
The default buffer size is set to 50ms. It can be adjusted:
scrcpy --audio-buffer=40 # smaller than default
scrcpy --audio-buffer=100 # higher than default
Note that this option changes the target buffering. It is possible that this target buffering might not be reached (on frequent buffer underflow typically).
If you don't interact with the device (to watch a video for example), a higher latency (for both video and audio) might be preferable to avoid glitches and smooth the playback:
scrcpy --display-buffer=200 --audio-buffer=200