Hi Diego,
Diego Nicola Barbato skribis:
>>> That's a known [0] (but AFAIK undocumented) side effect of the
>>> PulseAudio service, which was added to %desktop-services in January [1].
>>> If you want PulseAudio to read your user configuration files you'll have
>>> to remove that service from you
Hi,
Ludovic Courtès writes:
> Hi Diego,
>
> Diego Nicola Barbato skribis:
>
>> pkill9 writes:
>>
>>> Pulseaudio doesn't read my user configuration files according to strace.
>>>
>>> Attached is the output of `strace -o /tmp/log.log pulseaudio` - It only
>>> looks for /etc/pulse/daemon.conf.
>>
Hi Diego,
Diego Nicola Barbato skribis:
> pkill9 writes:
>
>> Pulseaudio doesn't read my user configuration files according to strace.
>>
>> Attached is the output of `strace -o /tmp/log.log pulseaudio` - It only
>> looks for /etc/pulse/daemon.conf.
>
> That's a known [0] (but AFAIK undocumente
> That's a known [0] (but AFAIK undocumented) side effect of the
> PulseAudio service, which was added to %desktop-services in January
> [1]. If you want PulseAudio to read your user configuration files
> you'll have to remove that service from your system services or unset
> PULSE_CONFIG and PUL
Hey,
pkill9 writes:
> Pulseaudio doesn't read my user configuration files according to strace.
>
> Attached is the output of `strace -o /tmp/log.log pulseaudio` - It only
> looks for /etc/pulse/daemon.conf.
That's a known [0] (but AFAIK undocumented) side effect of the
PulseAudio service, which
On Fri, 10 Apr 2020 18:20:25 +0100
pkill9 wrote:
> Pulseaudio doesn't read my user configuration files according to
> strace.
>
> Attached is the output of `strace -o /tmp/log.log pulseaudio` - It
> only looks for /etc/pulse/daemon.conf.
Weird, when I put flat_volumes in my user config it fixed