Hi,
I want to measure one GPIO (high) pulse time. GPIO is connected to device which gives measurement results by pulling this pin HIGH in micro seconds.
Could you please help me on this if there is any better way other than keep polling?
Hi All, brand new to Garuda and just installed it yesterday. However, I seem to be having trouble getting my pulse audio to work. I installed a few things but I only had music coming out of one speaker. I have a 5.1 audio system here. Can anyone tell me what I need to install in order to have full access to my pulse audio? I seem to have seen that pipeline is replacing pulse audio. Is this correct? Anyway, please help me Obi-Wan, you're my only hope. lol
I switched to pipewire from the start since I installed manjaro because when I was in another distro had crackling sound due pulseaudio and only pipewire fixed it (I had to restart pulseaudio constantly)
i have a problem that all my audio playback is too fast. I have found this: bbs.archlinux.org but i dont know where to disable the multirate locking and decreas the multitrack internal clock samplerate to 48000
The following setup creates the pulseaudio server unix socket at a place whereevery user can find it, and only accepts users that belong to the audiogroup. Data transfer of audio will happen via memfd shared memory.
@Beinje Thanks for the reporting. Enabling the pulsesecure service in the package installation steps is discouraged due to permission issue. I'll change the after-installation message in future release to ensure that the service should be enabled.
I am running this package on EndeavourOS, with Gnome and X11.I have the same issue as @AshEnke, @amwalters, @xxmlud and others related to the message:GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.ServiceUnknown: The name net.psecure.pulse was not provided by any .service files error message when running the program.
This (Server Name: PulseAudio (on PipeWire 0.3.72)) is the confusing line: what am I to make of it? Which one of them actually provides the audio on my system? And how would I go about completely removing pulseaudio? What would be the command?
(Clearly I do not have sufficient understanding of the relation between the two, so you may want to humor me with some details. As far as I know, pipewire is supposed to completely replace pulseaudio.)
I'm reading and trying to understand why would anyone want to use Pulse Audio and I'm failing to understand.I read this -why-you-should-care-about-pulseaudio-and-how-to-start-doing-it, and I'm still not getting a convincing answer.I have a set up, with one sound card. ( I don't need to multiplex sounds from or to several sound cards).I know that all applications are written with different APIs, ALSA, OSS, JACK etc. So if I configure all those frameworks to route the sound through pulse audio, what benefit do I get, vs allowing all those frameworks talking directly to the sound card driver?In addition, I don't see that Pulse Audio has it's own Application API. So I need to choose a framework anyway (like ALSA).Thanks
Since introduction of Dmix in alsa, pulseaudio turned to be useless. Bare alsa with Dmix somehow enabled deep inside (I haven't have to set anything) works much better for me. For example, there is no delays while a sound level is being changed.
You don't. It's a piece of middleware that for most users is completely unnecessary. Most applications that need audio can use ALSA directly just fine. ALSA can handle things like basic multiplexing perfectly well (although it might possibly need a plugin). On my system, I don't have pulseaudio installed and I can play a video game and have music playing in the background from Rhythmbox, no problem. It works right out of the box with ALSA, no intricate setup required.
I would recommend to anyone that is experiencing any audio-related problems at all: first thing to try is tear out pulseaudio. I had some audio issues myself recently, took it out and they went away immediately.
Tbh, it's hard to think of a case where someone would actually need pulseaudio. For a 'typical' home system user that just wants the sound to work with their desktop applications, ALSA by itself is perfectly suitable. For a more advanced user that wants to do more complex audio tasks, or someone who needs professional quality audio, JACK is clearly what you want. Pulse, imo, seems to be rather bloaty and superfluous.
Thanks @Princemachiavelli for the tip about openconnect. I ended up going on a rabbit hole and managed to get it to work based on this comment. It was stupidly simple and took all of 2 minutes as opposed to the 4 hours i wasted on trying to package pulse secure vpn client.
The pulse-cookie package looks pretty good and your packaging of it is pretty neat @erahhal. I started with no choices and now this thread has given me two choices and I am conflicted as I much prefer the Qt version over the selenium/Chromedriver version I got to work 2 days ago. Here is what I am using for reference,
I recently installed Volumio on my Raspberry Pi in order to use with Pulse Audio on my linux machine. What I would like to do is stream all of my audio output to the Pi. I am able to enable Airplay from paprefs and I can see the volumio sink in pavucontrol, however when I select it nothing happens. I am able to play music from my Android phone over Volumio/Airplay.
I tried the same some time ago. I wanted to use a kubutu with touchscreen and rhythmbox to send via airplay. However I did not succeed. My investigations showed that airplay used to work from pulse but in a later update they (airplay) changed something to udp instead of tcp and it stoped working. I did find some library that was supposed to work but I t seemed that work on that had stopped.
I then moved to a android tablet instead.
where servername is faclinux for faculty and staff and stdlinux for students. X11 Forwarding has been disabled for compliance with University security policy. All users requiring a graphical session should use FastXv3 instead.
The Ohio State University Department of Computer Science & Engineering has replaced X-Win32 with FastX3 for remote Linux sessions. You would usually use this to open a remote session to stdlinux.coeit.osu.edu OR faclinux.coeit.osu.edu.
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