Apparently, _Thomas Hood_, on 24/10/04 15:56,typed:
On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 21:50:07 +0200, H. S. wrote:

I could do that. But how does that relate to Alsa? If I install esound, can I just uninstall Alsa altogether?



If you use ALSA and esound then you should install libesd-alsa0 instead of libesd0.


I already have libesd-alsa0 installed and removed libesd0 (which was 'rc' and not 'ii' in dpkg info):


~$ dpkg -l libesd*
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Installed/Config-files/Unpacked/Failed-config/Half-installed
|/ Err?=(none)/Hold/Reinst-required/X=both-problems (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Description
+++-==========================-==========================-====================================================================
ii libesd-alsa0 0.2.35-2 Enlightened Sound Daemon (ALSA) - Shared libraries
un libesd-alsa0-dev <none> (no description available)
un libesd-dev <none> (no description available)
pn libesd0 <none> (no description available)
pn libesd0-dev <none> (no description available)



Still the behaviour is the same. The problem is that when the first user to use esd logs out .esd in /tmp is not removed:
~$ ls /tmp/.esd/socket -l
srwxrwxrwx 1 <user> <user> 0 2004-10-24 20:00 /tmp/.esd/socket


is still there when the second user logs in to gdm.

->HS


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