On Tuesday 15 February 2011 11:44:24 Duncan wrote: > Peter Nikolic posted on Tue, 15 Feb 2011 08:24:01 +0000 as excerpted: > > I have been looking at opensuse 11.4 RC1 with KDE 4.6 now i am not > > sure where the correct place for this is but here goes . > > > > OS11.4rc1 install seems to default to pulseaudio (pa) which if it works > > is fine apart from with pa running Kmix adopts a dire personality where > > each slider id it it's own Tab . > > > > Question is how can i revert Kmix back to the old sensible method but > > keep with pa i have tried binning /home/user/.kde4/config/kmix* that > > just stops kmix until i log out and back in again when we are back in > > the same disgusting boat of one slider oer tab dont like it dont > > appreaciate it find it very clunky to use all in all hard work for > > something that should be simple . > > I'm not an OpenSuSE user (Gentoo) nor a pulseaudio user (straight alsa, > phonon-vlc as the kde/phonon backend), but here's a simple trick that may > well fix it for you, given the above: > > Those kmix config files? Instead of deleting them, truncate them to zero > bytes (delete everything in them, or delete them and then touch them to > recreate @ 0 bytes), then set permissions on them read-only. (I've used > this trick to good effect with a number of other kde uncooperatives. If > they can't write the bad config...) > > If that doesn't work (it might not depending on the config saving > mechanism) try setting them to root ownership and read-only. > > If that doesn't work (depending on the technique used by config-saving > mechanism, you may need to set perms on the containing directory, which > isn't ideal given its a general kde config dir, not kmix specific), > there's three more complex options you might be able to try depending on > how your system is setup: > > If the filesystem in question is ext2/3/4 based, consider setting the > files in question "immutable". (FWIW I've never done this as I run > reiserfs here and IIRC it doesn't have an immutable bit, but it's an > interesting concept.) > > If your system runs SELinux security contexts, you can try editing the > security contexts of the files so kmix can't touch them. (Again, no > selinux here so I've not actually tried it.) > > Setup a script that deletes the files either as part of the login process, > before kmix is up and running to read them, or perhaps as part of the > logout process. (I HAVE done this sort of thing, before, actually > somewhat frequently, as because the technique simply runs a script, it's > as flexible as the commands I can run from a script. =:^) Well fixed it uninstalled pulseaudio all fine now mixer back to sanity sound still working from what i have been told on the suse list it seems it is a personality used for pulseaudio henc i will not use pa till this problem is solved Unless anyone knows how to doctor this so called personality Pete . -- Powered by openSUSE 11.3 (x86_64) Kernel: 2.6.34.7-0.7-desktop KDE Development Platform: 4.5.5 (KDE 4.5.5) "release 1" 16:36 up 4 days 17:33, 5 users, load average: 0.31, 0.12, 0.04 ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.