After updating to newest Tech Preview 22H2 (ARM), audio in Windows 11 during video playback is sometimes not working. When I play a video (MPC or WMC) some of the times audio is not working and a Fusion error message saying "Error in creating sound stream. Playback may not work." Same on new installed Windows 11 with tools and on the old Windows 11 without any changes (including vHW).
This is a known issue unfortunately. We have some work to do on the sound device.
My apologies for not having it in the 'Known Issues' section.
Internal folks (@higarg): I filed bug 3002482 on this.
Hi,
Can you please share your system details like Host OS Version, system type (x86 or arm) and we shall look into this and get back to you.
Running on MacBook Air M1 (2020).
Windows 11 Arm64, 21h2 build 22000.832
This is the ARM board so i will not post Intel problems 🙂
Actually this forum is not exclusively about the ARM version of the Tech Preview. It’s just that the TP was only out for APple Silicon Macs until today.
This is a known issue unfortunately. We have some work to do on the sound device.
My apologies for not having it in the 'Known Issues' section.
Internal folks (@higarg): I filed bug 3002482 on this.
ok. Thanks
I've had luck setting the sample rate of the virtual audio device to 44,100Hz in the guest, instead of the default 48,000. It seems macOS internal speakers use this sample rate by default. It also solved some crackling issues I was having.
Thank you @bzilli - I realize this post is for Windows but the same problem and thus fix / change worked for Fedora Linux as well.
So? Is there a working fix for this problem? Or, at least something that makes the aerror no longer show up? The annoyance for me is that the aerror takes away the focus from the vm which makes working with vmware fusion and a screenreader impossible.
From my experience, the 44,100Hz setting seems to reduce the frequency of the error and definitely improves audio quality, but your experience has been similar to mine in that the error does still appear from time to time.
Until they fix the issue, the following seems to resolve it more robustly, but it's very hacky and is of course not a permanent solution: you could try playing something inaudible in the background on the guest (e.g. a wav file with a constant tone of 18 Hz on loop) to keep the sound stream open. I imagine this would have unforeseen consequences on things like battery life, though.
I'd assume there's a better way to implement this (that is, forcing the sound stream to remain open all the time, perhaps some vmx file setting), but so far I haven't found it.
Thanks for the quick answer. I will try the second solution out and create an other post if it doesn't work.
How did you make that change in Fedora? I cant seem to find that setting
I really hope the sound problem is fixed before the official release. For people like me, who are totally blind and use screen readers, Windows will be unusable until it's fixed because almost every time the error pops up, the screen reader stops speaking. I assume the same is true for Linux.
The issue has been resolved internally.
I think there's some grace for users now if you just disable 'echo cancellation' the prompt doesn't happen nearly as much.
But we also did some code changes to stop the underlying issue from creating the prompt.
This is a serious bug for the visually
impaired customers!!!
we cannot use screen reader!!!!!!!
My expectation since VMware is aware of the issue and has fixed it internally is that we should see the fix in the upcoming official next version of Fusion. They’re not spinning another version of the Tech Preview, so you’re going to have to wait another couple of weeks or so.
Looks like if I disable input device (microphone) in Windows, audio output works without problems. On M1 Air.
@EvanKatz this was noted as a known issue in the Tech Preview Testing Guide. It's not related to Ventura. As stated in other replies to this thread, VMware was aware of the issue and had it fixed in internal builds. Let's see if this goes away once Fusion 13 is released "real soon now".