That support this), or we're called SUID root (see below), or we areĬonfigure to be run as system daemon (see -system above). This will only succeed if theĬalling user has a non-zero RLIMIT_NICE resource limit set (on systems high-priority Try to acquire a high Unix nice level. fail Fail startup when any of the commands specified in the startup scriptĭefault.pa (see below) fails. Running as a systemd service you should use -daemonize=no for D | -daemonize Daemonize after startup, i.e. Is highly recommended to combine this with Thisįeature needs special configuration and a dedicated UNIX user set up. Unless the system knows no local users (e.g. Please note that thisĭisables certain features of PulseAudio and is generally not recommended system Run as system-wide instance instead of per-user. Produces no output on the consoleĮxcept for errors to stderr.
Pulseaudio command line code#
check Return 0 as return code when the PulseAudio daemon is already running for k | -kill Kill an already running PulseAudio daemon of the calling user (Equivalent PulseAudio is guaranteed to be fully initialized when this call PulseAudio without -start which would fail if PA is already start Start PulseAudio if it is not running yet. POSIX shared memory segments implemented via a virtual file system mounted It should normally notīe necessary to issue this command by hand. Starts up or a client tries to connect to a daemon. This is done implicitly whenever a new daemon cleanup-shm Identify stale PulseAudio POSIX shared memory segments in /dev/shmĪnd remove them if possible. dump-resample-methods List available audio resamplers. Combine with -v for a moreĮlaborate listing. dump-modules List available loadable modules. Remaining configuration options on the command line and dump the resultingĭaemon configuration, in a format that is compatible withĭnf. dump-conf Load the daemon configuration file nf (see below), parse
Pulseaudio command line windows#
2.Ĭall pulseaudio -start to start the PulseAudio daemon.Ĭall ps -e | grep pulse to check the process started correctly.PulseAudio is a networked low-latency sound server for Linux, POSIX and Windows Open the /etc/pulse/nf file to enable PulseAudio for all users.
Open the ~/.pulse/nf file to enable PulseAudio for the current user, To start the PulseAudio daemon, do the following: 1. Additionally, the desktop audio slider may be removed. Stop and start the application to re-enable audio output.
Note:Ending PulseAudio while other applications are running may disable audio output. Set the following attribute and ensure the line is not commented out:Ĭall pulseaudio -kill to end the PulseAudio process.Ĭall ps -e | grep pulse to check the process stopped correctly. Open the /etc/pulse/nf file to disable PulseAudio for all users. Open the ~/.pulse/nf file to disable PulseAudio for the current user, Note:PulseAudio restarts automatically when you restart you machine, but you can prevent this by navigating to System > Preferences > Startup Applications and disabling the PulseAudio Sound System. You can disable PulseAudio for the current user or all users on a machine.
If Nuke Studio detects that your setup is running PulseAudio alongside the application, a warning message displays. PulseAudio on Linux distributions has been linked with fluctuating frame rates due to the latency when retrieving audio samples.