David Baron:What might be a jack-enabled equivalent of: /usr/bin/ogg123 -d alsa <1> (<1> is and ogg file, obviously) Preferrable would be something that will play through jack if the daemon be running, alsa not (mplayer can work this way but this is a bit heavy for a short file play, i.e., a signal from a program).With pulseaudio, you can simply use ogg123, and you don't have to give any special options for ogg123, just write "ogg123 <1>" and you'll get sound through jack. Pulseaudio has amazingly well-working jack audio drivers and alsa interfaces, so finally linux audio works without hassle for all programs all the time. This is the only modification I had to do to make it work: $ grep jack /etc/pulse/* /etc/pulse/default.pa:load-module module-jack-source /etc/pulse/default.pa:load-module module-jack-sink Can you please clarify what you did? Did you add those lines above to a specifc file or did you just run grep and everything magically worked? I don't know how pulseaudio is set up on other distributions, but on fedora 11 everything seems to work very well. It seems more stable to me too and I find the control interface and associated apps are more user friendly than previous versions. Patrick Shirkey Boost Hardware Ltd On fedora 10, on the other hand, pulseaudio sometime started its own jack daemon called "jackdbus" which hogged the soundcard but didn't produce any sound, but that's not the case with fedora 11. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user |
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