On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 4:32 PM, Colin Guthrie <gmane at colin.guthr.ie> wrote: > timo wrote: > > Good good. Wonder why Ubuntu went for system wide? ... > In my standard Intrepid (8.10), there is a system wide pulseaudio loader on init.d, but the default action is to avoid loading of pulseaudio system-wide. There is a switch in /etc/default/pulseaudio that disallows system-wide loading with a very strong warning against it:: # Start the PulseAudio sound server in system mode. # (enables the pulseaudio init script) # System mode is not the recommended way to run PulseAudio as it has some # limitations (such as no shared memory access) and could potentially allow # users to disconnect or redirect each others audio streams. The # recommend way to run PulseAudio is as a per-session daemon. For GNOME # sessions you can install pulseaudio-esound-compat and GNOME will # automatically start PulseAudio on login (if ESD is enabled in # System->Preferences->Sound). For other sessions, you can simply start # PulseAudio with "pulseaudio --daemonize". # 0 = don't start, 1 = start PULSEAUDIO_SYSTEM_START=0 -- A. C. Censi accensi [em] gmail [ponto] com accensi [em] montreal [ponto] com [ponto] br -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/pulseaudio-discuss/attachments/20081110/e046d260/attachment.htm>