On Thu, Jun 17, 2004 at 08:15:23PM -0000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: > Hi list, > > I read http://www.linuxgazette.com/node/view/9074 and tried to adopt this > script to my ipfw firewall: > > #!/bin/sh > tail -f /var/log/security | \ > awk ' > $0 ~ /ICMP/ { > system("cat /root/sounds/icmp.wav > /dev/dsp "); > } > $0 ~ /TCP/ { > system("cat /root/sounds/tcp.wav > /dev/dsp "); > } > $0 ~ /UDP/ { > system("cat /root/sounds/udp.wav > /dev/dsp "); > } > ' > > This is what I got. However, sounds won't play one after another. e.g, if > 3 packets are blocked at the same time, 2 TCP and one UDP, the system will > always wait for a sound to finish before playing the next. I want it to be > able to play the sounds in sequence (as fast as possible), but I couldn't > figure a way out!
This is the behaviour of the device, not your script. Only one process can access the device at any one time, and so your subsequent sounds must wait for the first one to finish before it will be able to use /dev/dsp. When using /dev/dsp, programs like artsd (which comes with KDE) allow other artsd-aware programs to send sound events through the artsd daemon, and artsd controls all the mixing of sounds together to send them out through /dev/dsp. So, you need something like this to play your events, rather than catting them to /dev/dsp. Unfortunately I don't know of any console programs that do this. Try looking in /usr/ports/audio :) -- Adam Smith Internode : http://www.internode.on.net Phone : (08) 8228 2999 Dog for sale: Eats lots and is fond of children. _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"