"Zam plugins now have a clap and vst3 version".
This is a large and varied cross-plaltform collection
The future can run, but it can't hide!
https://www.zamaudio.com/?p=976
If you are using DEB packages, I’ll assume you are using a Debian variant of some type. Your easiest and best bet is to install a tool called GDebi. It is a GUI based package installer. It makes things a breeze when downloading DEB plugins.mryan4 wrote: Wed Jan 11, 2023 5:25 pm This does help, thanks!
My main DAW is Reaper, which doesn't seem to have a Flatpak yet (seriously, why not?) I could try Bitwig, but I'm far more comfortable with Reaper. Is there any way to override this to make the Flatpak location readable from a non-Flatpak DAW? I can see the installed files at /var/lib/flatpak/runtime/, but Flatseal only seems to work with apps, not runtime folder.
I could just use deb file installers, but using the package manager just seems so convenient and part of the reason I switched to Linux over the mess of installers and files all over the place on Windows...
Using flatpak is a bad idea for audio software like VST and DAW's. Often the flatpaks (like Surge XT) are not official packages because of this. When you install a VST from a deb file, it will install it in /usr/lib/vst As you have seen, when you install a flatpak it will likely install it in it's own version of /usr/lib/vst which is why it won't show up on the DAW's can. Maybe you could manually set it each time to go to each flatpak's vst directory but that's not very user friendly.mryan4 wrote: Wed Jan 11, 2023 11:23 pm Thanks for the help, Audiojunkie!
I am using an Ubuntu based distro. I've searched in my package manager and I only see the Flatpak versions of plugins like Surge XT (such a great plugin that I don't think I will miss Windows only plugins too much). I've tested with Bitwig and I can't seem to get it to even see the Flatpak folder to select as a location for plugins.
For now, I've downloaded Surge XT and a few others from Plugins4Free, a site that I've trusted for years with Windows plugins. These have been either .deb installers or zip files that I can extract to a place Reaper can find them. It's not a perfect solution, but it's fine for now. After all, we should be spending our time writing music, right?
But if anyone has an idea of how to make Flatpak VSTs work, I'd love to hear it.
I believe it comes from the GUI-based click to install ease that Flatpak offers. Most of the package managers out there have GUI capability, but personally, I'm still a fan of DNF from the commandline.
It's because some people want "commercial" "pro" software to be on Linux to provide some kind of validation. They see Flatpak as a vehicle for this because it's a distro agnostic packaging system. Never mind the technological downsides of using it for audio production, that won't be addressed because they are inherent in the design and philosophy of a container app.
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