We have collected the most relevant information on Pulseaudio-Daemon-Avahi. Open the URLs, which are collected below, and you will find all the info you are interested in.


[OpenWrt Wiki] package: pulseaudio-daemon-avahi

    https://openwrt.org/packages/pkgdata/pulseaudio-daemon-avahi
    pulseaudio-daemon-avahi Version: 14.0-1 Description: PulseAudio (formerly Polypaudio) is a cross-platform, networked sound server.\\ This package enables avahi,bluez and is compiled against dbus, sbc, and avahi.\\ \\ Installed size: 1058kB Dependencies:

[OpenWrt Wiki] PulseAudio

    https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/hardware/audio/pulseaudio
    If you want to automatically discover new Pulseaudio devices on your network, you can install pulseaudio-daemon-avahi. This will pull in dbus and avahi. This will pull in dbus and avahi. You are then able to use padevchooser on the client to find and connect to Pulseaudio sinks in the local network.

How-to set up network audio server based on PulseAudio …

    https://blogs.gnome.org/ignatenko/2015/07/31/how-to-set-up-network-audio-server-based-on-pulseaudio-and-auto-discovered-via-avahi/
    I have installed minimal Fedora so it means that I don’t have avahi, pulseaudio and other tools in system. Let’s install them: # dnf install pulseaudio pulseaudio-module-zeroconf avahi Nothing needs to be set up in avahi, so just start and enable daemon: # systemctl start avahi-daemon # systemctl enable avahi-daemon

Pulseaudio Download (APK, DEB, EOPKG, IPK, PKG, RPM, TGZ ...

    https://pkgs.org/download/pulseaudio
    pulseaudio-daemon-avahi_14.0-1_aarch64_cortex-a72.ipk PulseAudio (formerly Polypaudio) is a cross-platform, networked sound server OpenWrt Packages x86_64 Official

Now you know Pulseaudio-Daemon-Avahi

Now that you know Pulseaudio-Daemon-Avahi, we suggest that you familiarize yourself with information on similar questions.