see https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=86818
an exit code of 1 makes systemd believe that the service failed;
better return 0 to denote that PA sucessfully stopped on the user's
request
sidenote: systemd's SuccessExitStatus= could be used to turn code 1 into a
code denoting success
Signed-off-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net>
Cc: jan.steffens@gmail.com
Add a user defined parameter lfe-crossover-freq for the lfe-filter,
to pass this parameter to the lfe-filter, we need to change the
pa_resampler_new() API as well.
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>
FSF addresses used in PA sources are no longer valid and rpmlint
generates numerous warnings during packaging because of this.
This patch changes all FSF addresses to FSF web page according to
the GPL how-to: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
Done automatically by sed-ing through sources.
Pavel Machek reported in his blog that our message about the system mode
has a dead link in it. And this link is also present in translations.
So, I replaced it in the source and fixed all translations using a script:
for a in po/*.po ; do msgcat --no-wrap $a | sed
's@http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/WhatIsWrongWithSystemMod
@http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/WhatIsWrongWithSystemMode @g' | sed
's@http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/WhatIsWrongWithSystemMode@http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/Documentation/User/WhatIsWrongWithSystemWide/@g'
| sed 's@/\.@/ .@g' | sed 's@/,@/ ,@g' | msgcat - > $a.new
git add -i # to filter out formatting changes
The "/." and "/," replacements are needed so that various terminal
emulators don't include the trailing "." or "," into the clickable URL.
The resulting patch is attached, just in case, in order to avoid
damaging non-ASCII characters.
--
Alexander E. Patrakov
>From 7dcd197571840e467d688f0f7354253730bbcc15 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Alexander E. Patrakov" <patrakov@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 20:56:27 +0500
Subject: [PATCH] Fix the WhatIsWrongWithSystemWide URL
Reported by Pavel Machek in http://pavelmachek.livejournal.com/126190.html
All translations were also fixed using a script.
Signed-off-by: Alexander E. Patrakov <patrakov@gmail.com>
output DEPRECATED warnings for libsamplerate in configure and
PA daemon's log
libsamplerate offers no particular advantage over the speex
resampler and is distributed under GPL; support for it will be removed
in one of the next releases
v2: (thanks Arun Raghavan)
* log a warning (instead of info)
Signed-off-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net>
This adds support to module-native-protocol-unix to take over already
listening sockets passed in via socket activation (e.g. from systemd)
Most of the code is isolated to socket-server but some cleanup code also
had to be tweaked to ensure we do not overzealously close open fds.
We currently use the term SYSTEMD when referring to libsystemd-login
and JOURNAL when referring to libsystemd-journal.
I will be shortly adding support for libsystemd-daemon and in
preparation I figured it would be a good idea to clarify the names
used currently before adding another!
Debug and info messages are primarily meant for developers,
rather than end users. Let's save translators' time,
and leave them untranslated.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
The journal is a component of systemd, that captures Syslog messages,
Kernel log messages, initial RAM disk and early boot messages as well
as messages written to STDOUT/STDERR of all services, indexes them and
makes this available to the user.
It can be used in parallel, or in place of a traditional syslog daemon,
such as rsyslog or syslog-ng.
The journal offers a couple of improvements over traditional logging
facilities (e.g. advanced filtering capabilities).
This patch adds support for logging directly to the journal using its
native API.
The code got removed by accident during the cleanup in commit 9c438bcac6. So
this patch is needed to bring it back and make things work like documented.
Capability dropping when changing the user in the system
mode was previously implemented by calling
prctl(PR_SET_KEEPCAPS, 0), but that doesn't necessarily
work. It's possible that the KEEPCAPS flag is locked to 1,
in which case the prctl() call fails with EPERM (this
happens at least on Harmattan). This patch implements
explicit capability dropping after changing the user.
This makes updating of permissions on existing directories optional with
pa_make_secure_dir() and pa_make_secure_parent_dir(). This makes sure
that the recursive directory creation doesn't end up modifying existing
directories, and also fixes a problem where creating an auth cookie
(specifically ~/.esd_auth) would end up modifying permissions on ~.
Thanks to Frédéric Danis for reporting this.
In most cases, we use dbus from more than one thread, as we
e.g. enable real-time scheduling from the ALSA threads.
Therefore set dbus to thread-safe mode by default, as recommended
in https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47060#c5
This fixes a bug where PulseAudio could crash in two parallel
calls to pa_make_realtime.
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/937933
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This just covers Lennart's concern over the terminology used.
The majority of this change is simply the following command:
grep -rli sync[-_]volume . | xargs sed -i 's/sync_volume/deferred_volume/g;s/PA_SINK_SYNC_VOLUME/PA_SINK_DEFERRED_VOLUME/g;s/PA_SOURCE_SYNC_VOLUME/PA_SOURCE_DEFERRED_VOLUME/g;s/sync-volume/deferred-volume/g'
Some minor tweaks were added on top to tidy up formatting and
a couple of phrases were clarified too.
I don't know the exact cause for someone to submit a bug report for
this error message: if someone is truly offended by it (if so it is
a reminder that some people are more sensitive than others, and I do
want those people to feel welcome as well), or if it's a system's
check (if this goes through, it shows the system works, and the person
might put more work into his/her next patch), or if it's just a bug
(after all, it's not that weird to run two instances of PulseAudio?).
Either one could be reason enough to apply IMO.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
As various modules can subscribe to unlink callbacks unloading some modules
may trigger hooks in other modules.
The callbacks associated with these hooks could in turn need to use the core
in some capacity (e.g. perhaps they are module loading modules
(e.g. *-discover, filter-apply or gconf etc. and need to use the core to
unload modules they've loaded).
This change simply ensures that all modules and cached samples are unloaded
before freeing the core.
With Tanu's patch, the server no longer starts when a server is configured.
While this is sensible in most circumstances there is a corner case where
we still want to start.
In a typical X11 login, module-x11-publish will be loaded and will thus
set the PULSE_SERVER X11 property on the root window. This then hits the
check introduced in f1d1447e and exits. If PA had previously crashed
(thus leaving behind it's X11 properties) then this means that we will not
autospawn nor even allow ourselves to be started manually until
pax11publish -r is run to clear out the X11 properties. This is obviously
not desirable.
This patch introduces a more in-depth check of the server. If it looks like
a local unix domain socket, then we do not exit straight away and instead
probe further. This should not pose any problems with e.g. remote SSH
usage as the DBus Machine ID is used in the server string.
As spotted by Tanu Kaskinen:
The first process: daemon_pipe is not closed if the first fork() call
fails. Even if it doesn't fail, the first process never closes
daemon_pipe[0].
The second process: daemon_pipe[1] is not closed if anything fails
between the first and the second fork() call. Also, if the second fork
fails, then the finish section writes to daemon_pipe2[1], even though
only the third process should do that. Also, if anything fails between
the first and the second fork, then the second process never writes
anything to daemon_pipe[1]. I don't know what happens in the first
process in this case - does it get an error or does pa_loop_read() get
stuck.
The third process: No problems :)
The previous commit intoduced a double fork which caused a more or less immediate
successful return prior to the hard work of actually starting a daemon.
This patch simply used pipe() to only signal our father when the daemon really
has finished starting.
This adds volume scaling for 1- and 2-channel software volume scaling
using Orc. While testing the MMX and SSE backends on a Core2, I see an
~2x performance benefit over the hand-rolled MMX and SSE code. Since I
haven't been able to test on other architectures, the Orc code is only
used when MMX/SSE* is present. This can be changed in the future after
testing on AMD and ARM machines.
The check whether POSIX socket.h or WIN32 winsock2.h must be included can be
made centrally. The downside is that some functionality of e.g. arpa/inet.h is
also implemented in winsock.h, so that some files that don't use socket
functions, but do use inet.h functions, must also include pulsecore/socket.h.
(as well as arpa/inet.h)
Instead <pulsecore/poll.h> should be included. That file includes poll.h on
platform where it is appropriate. Also remove some unnecessary <ioctl.h>
includes.
This retains CPU information (processor type and supported features) in
pa_core, so that this information can be used by modules at init time to
figure out what optimisations may be used.