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You may be a candidate for running pulseaudio as a system service. That is how I solved the problem of sharing audio devices on my headless NAS connected to my studio monitors.<BR>
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On Sun, 2012-06-03 at 18:54 +0200, Reindl Harald wrote:
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Am 03.06.2012 18:46, schrieb Paul Menzel:
>> i'm using "ecryptfs" to encrypt my home directory and "pam_mount" to
>> have it automatically
>> mounted/unmounted at login/logout. The unmounting never worked and i
>> discoverd that a pulseaudio process of my user was keept running
>> although my user was already logged out. This process had some files
>> opened in "~./pulse" which is why i think my home dir is not unmounted.
>
> I will not be able to help you, but you can give more information. What
> distribution do you use? What version of Linux, PulseAudio, systemd?
> Maybe even attach the PulseAudio’s unit file for reference.
pulseaudio process is not stopped on Fdora 15/16 as example after logout
i generally hate the idea of sound.daemon depeding on user-sessions
because it prevents things like mpd from running completly in
background and if i hear music on my desktop and switch with CTRL+F2
to a terminal it is simply idiotic that music stops to play
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