I currently have a Serviio server setup on my PC, which feeds DSD (and PCM) files to my Yamaha RX-A660. 2ch DSF's are a breeze to listen to.
I recently encountered an iso file that has both stereo and Multichannel tracks. I used SACD_extract to extract the stereo DSF's in one directory and the Multichannel DSF's in another.
The stereo files play over DLNA. In the signal info screen, the info shows up properly as 2.0, DSD64.
However, the Multichannel files refuse to play at all. The receiver sees the file on the server, but I suspect, cannot decode them.
How do people on this forum listen to digital Multichannel DSD files through their receiver?
DSD is not PCM and is very difficult to deal with.
Few if any receivers have DSD decoders now. They were more common some years ago.
So that means there are two options. The first is to use the multichannel analog inputs on the receiver or pre pro if it has them.
The other option is to have the player convert the DSD to PCM over HDMI.
You can not extract a DSD file or stream it. That takes an expensive studio.
The two channel on a multi channel SACD is standard CD 16/44.1.
The problem with the analog connection is that there will be no bass management or channel levels setting on the receiver, that must be done in the player. A lot of SACDs are 5.0 and so when going via analog you have to provide external bass management. I have a switch over when using the analog inputs. This is of my own design and construction.
If you convert to PCM, then you loose the "claimed and perceived" advantages of DSD.
There is a final problem the speaker layout for US and Europe is different. In most European mastering the surrounds should be the rear backs of 7.1 and not the surrounds of 5.1. This is easy for the analog connection, but not so easy for multichannel over HDMI.
DSD is a mess. It should never have been introduced. The sooner it finally dies the better, but it continues to hang on because of the myth that PCM can not construct a curve, when in fact you can exactly describe a point on a curve in binary language. The whole mess was created out of ignorance, to which loony audiophools can't resist falling prey to.
Audio only BD should have totally replaced this mess a long time ago.