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pulseaudio command in a .conf file inside etc ... - Ask …

    https://askubuntu.com/questions/835121/pulseaudio-command-in-a-conf-file-inside-etc-init-not-running-at-start-up
    Following the post here Run terminal command (python command) at start up I created a .conf file in etc/init folder with the following content.. description "initializes audio" start on filesystem task script pulseaudio -D exit end script I use the root account in Ubuntu 16.04.

PulseAudio - OpenWrt Wiki

    https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/hardware/audio/pulseaudio
    In system mode pulseaudio runs under user pulse but it does not have the permissions to access alsa. cat << EOF >> / etc / init.d / pulseaudio chown -R : 51 / dev / snd chmod -R g+rw / dev / snd EOF Client configuration You can enter network-sinks manually (which is described below).

PulseAudio - Ubuntu Wiki

    https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PulseAudio
    PulseAudio is a sound server for POSIX and Win32 systems. A sound server is basically a proxy for your sound applications. It allows you to do advanced operations on your sound data as it passes between your application and your hardware. Things like transferring the audio to a different machine, changing the sample format or channel count and ...

Running PulseAudio in system mode with TCP listening on ...

    https://blog.dhampir.no/content/running-pulseaudio-in-system-mode-with-tcp-listening-on-debian-wheezy
    Restart pulseaudio: /etc/init.d/pulseaudio start /etc/init.d/pulseaudio restart The above restart includes “start”, because pulseaudio’s default script does not start it on “restart” unless it’s not already running. Stupid. Because pulseaudio now runs as the “pulse” user, commands like pacmd are a pain to use.

LEDE/OpenWRT — Setting Up A PulseAudio Sound Server …

    https://medium.com/openwrt-iot/openwrt-setting-up-a-pulseaudio-sound-server-d138cffc0883
    Next, we need to restart PulseAudio to ensure that the updated config is loaded, so run the following command /etc/init.d/pulseaudio restart You can go ahead and add this process to …

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