On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 3:11 AM, Michal Jaegermann <michal@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 05:27:03PM -0500, David A. De Graaf wrote:A way to undo this "travesty" is to add a file in
>
> 4) Permissions that are automatically set for /dev/snd/* prevent
> users from using the sound devices. I have been unable to find the
> "proper" way to undo this travesty,
/etc/security/console.perms.d, say 90-my.perms, with permissions
like you want them to see. A format should be obvious if you will
look at other files but see also 'man 5 console.perms' and
'rpm -qd pam' for a bigger picture. The location name indicates that
this does have security implications but in a particular setup you
may not care.
To an extent. Logging from a keyboard and logging out, I guess,
> but a brute force solution works.
will revert them to a state specified in existing files from
/etc/security/ tree.
That sounds a bit too overgeneralized; but did you bother to look at
> Pulseaudio is a travesty and abomination.
'man pulseaudio'? Among other things it explains how to run it as a
system-wide daemon instead of an instance for every user and what
are tradeoffs. I tend to agree that this is not that well thought
off and geared to "windoze user" even if that user happens to run
something else.
Michal
I use Linux since RH9 aka Shrike and still can't stand pulseaudio.
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