The structure itself will contain various bits of info so exposing this fully to the client is a bad idea.
By keeping to a rename operation we keep what we do store abstracted from the clients.
Also fix some doxy comments.
This allows clients to edit the priroity order. What is not yet in place is the initialisation of that priority list
when new devices are detected or the cleaning (remove holes) when devices are removed.
In order to keep the storage transparent I will likely remove the write functionality and replace it with a
simple rename method.
I also still need to expose the priority itself when reading the data.
The routing logic itself does not yet exist, but the command currently will unload/load module-stream-restore as approriate.
(module-stream-restore would conflict with the role-based priority-routing).
This will be used as the basis for a queryable system for past and present devices, initially for use in KDE.
Currently all this module does is save lists of sinks/sources and their descriptions, so it needs to
gain a protocol extension to make this queryable.
As things stand it will save the device descriptions of all sinks and restore them if they differ from whats on record.
In virtual machines sound card clocks and OS scheduling tend to become
unreliable, adding various 'uneven' latencies. The adaptive algorithm
that handles drop-outs does not handle it this well: in contrast to
drop-outs on real machines that are evenly distributed, small and can
easily be encountered via the adpative algorithms, drop-outs in VMs tend
to happen abruptly, and massively, which is not easy to counter.
This patch simply disables timer based scheduling in VMs reverting to
classic IO based scheduling. This should help make PA perform better in
VMs.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=532775
Lennart,
Apparently I was debugging this at the same time as you. I can't figure out
why my Fedora 11 install with glibc-2.10 has a glibc realpath that doesn't
match the gnu documentation and returns null. But it does.
Your commit aa8ce5bb9b almost fixed my
problem, but it needs a tweak.
Thanks,
David Yoder
There are multiple package management systems out there which implement
packages using symlinks. The recent (otherwise useful) check to ensure that
a re-executed pulseaudio is actually reexecuting itself unfortunately breaks
in the presence of all these packaging systems, because PA_BINARY refers
to its installed location (e.g. /usr/local/bin/pulseaudio), which is a
symlink to the binary (e.g. /usr/local/stow/pulseaudio-0.9.18/bin/pulseaudio),
because /proc/self/exe always contains the canonical path of the executable,
with all symlinks resolved.
(At least one distribution uses a symlink-based packaging system, so
will be forced to apply this locally in any case.)
The fix is simple: canonicalize PA_BINARY before equality-testing. (This
should be completely safe, because the OS does just that when PA_BINARY
is executed.)
The patch is against 0.9.18, but applies without fuzz to current master.