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[SOLVED] How do I kill Pulseaudio? - Linux Lite

    https://www.linuxliteos.com/forums/sound/(solved)-how-do-i-kill-pulseaudio/
    I just installed Linux Lite 2.0 32bit on my Dell 3000 desktop alongside Zorin 9 Lite. In Zorin I don't have to worry about Pulseaudio. I just have to go into Alsamixer set my settings and that's it. I'd love to be able to do the same thing in Linux Lite so that Pulseaudio is never part of the equation. Alsamixer for me seems to be much easier ...

sound - How do i stop pulseaudio? - Ask Ubuntu

    https://askubuntu.com/questions/1197420/how-do-i-stop-pulseaudio
    > pulseaudio -k > systemctl --user stop pulseaudio > changing pulse.conf to include autospawn=no > systemctl daemon-reload > systemctl --user stop pulseaudio > pkill -9 pulseaudio It respawns all the time because systemd restarts it. Should i kill the systemd --user instance or is there something else that is tweakable?

Running PulseAudio - freedesktop.org

    https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/Documentation/User/Running/
    pulseaudio --kill or. killall pulseaudio Those commands work also when autospawning is enabled, but typically some background application will immediately reconnect, causing the server to get immediately restarted. In the simplest form, the server can be started with this command: pulseaudio

How to Fix pulseaudio issues in Linux - Appuals.com

    https://appuals.com/how-to-fix-pulseaudio-issues-in-linux/
    You could hold down the Super or Windows key and push R to open up the run box and then type pulseaudio -D into it. Push the enter key or click the button to issue the command. Technically you could even use this box to kill an existing pulseaudio instance with pulseaudio -k, which is useful if you have no other reason to bring up a terminal. Some people actually write a …

cannot kill pulseaudio - Debian User Forums

    https://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=140753
    #!/bin/bash #Kill PulseAudio and PulseAudio Device Chooser pulseaudio --kill killall padevchooser Postby morgon » 2019-02-20 15:23 I did read it, it does exactly what I tried (I tried with and wiithout the demon-binary setting) and it does not work here (it should though).

How to temporarily disable PulseAudio while ... - Ask …

    https://askubuntu.com/questions/8425/how-to-temporarily-disable-pulseaudio-while-running-a-game-under-wine
    In /etc/pulse/client.conf, you can uncomment the line autospawn=yes and replace the yes with a "no". Of course this should be possible to set this in .pulse directory in your home directory. A cleaner way to do this would be to create a client.conf in your .pulse dir in ~ and put the line "autospawn=no" in it.

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