->>In response to your message<<- --received from Karl E. Jorgensen-- > > On Tue, Aug 03, 2004 at 02:49:24PM -0700, Paul Yeatman wrote: > > Hi, I tried taking "-terminate" out of my esd.conf. I logged out and > > back in. Indeed esd was started by Gnome (as I have sound for Gnome > > enabled) and without the "-terminate" argument but Flash would not play > > correctly in a browser until I killed the esd process. > > Have you tried > $ esdctl off > ? That should have the effect of making esd "shut up", and free up > /dev/dsp (might still need -as on esdctl though > > $ esdctl on > should "unmute" esd again... > > > Once I killed > > the process, I could play Flash and applications like xmms would start > > their own esd process for sound but system/event sounds (from Gnome > > and such) could no longer be heard. > > Because you killed the original esd, which the gnome panel (and others) > were connected to...
You are completely right. The real point I meant to make, rather, is that running esd without the "-terminate" commandline option did not allow non-esd applications to access /dev/dsp while esd was running and when esd apps where not being run (at least not in my case which admittedly seems to be a bit odd compared to others). My message was a response to Carl Johnson's message in this thread on July 23rd. If I understood him correctly, he was suggesting that removing the "-terminate" commandline option for esd would allow esd to continue running while unlocking the /dev/dsp when not being directly used by esd (by an esd app, I suppose). Yet, I didn't find this to be true in my case. Even when I removed the -terminate option when running esd (thus esd continued to run) I could not use a non-esd audio application, such as Flash appears to be. Apparently, such non-esd apps were still not allowed to access /dev/dsp while an esd process (without the "-terminate" commandline option) was running. The hope was that the esd process started by Gnome (without the -terminate option) would continue running (play event sounds) while releasing /dev/dsp when not being directly used by an esd app so that non-esd apps (like Flash) could also access /dev/dsp. Yet in my case, I couldn't successfully play Flash from a web browser until the esd process was entirely killed (and, thus, no more event sounds). Paul -- Paul Yeatman (858) 534-9896 [EMAIL PROTECTED] ================================== ==Proudly brought to you by Mutt== ================================== -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]