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pulseaudio(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
pulseaudio(1) |
pulseaudio - The PulseAudio Sound System
pulseaudio [options]
pulseaudio --help
pulseaudio --version
pulseaudio --dump-conf
pulseaudio --dump-modules
pulseaudio --dump-resample-methods
pulseaudio --cleanup-shm
pulseaudio --start
pulseaudio --kill
pulseaudio --check
PulseAudio is a networked low-latency sound server for Linux, POSIX and Windows
systems.
- -h | --help
- Show help.
- --version
- Show version information.
- --dump-conf
- Load the daemon configuration file daemon.conf (see below), parse
remaining configuration options on the command line and dump the resulting
daemon configuration, in a format that is compatible with
daemon.conf.
- --dump-modules
- List available loadable modules. Combine with -v for a more
elaborate listing.
- --dump-resample-methods
- List available audio resamplers.
- --cleanup-shm
- Identify stale PulseAudio POSIX shared memory segments in /dev/shm
and remove them if possible. This is done implicitly whenever a new daemon
starts up or a client tries to connect to a daemon. It should normally not
be necessary to issue this command by hand. Only available on systems with
POSIX shared memory segments implemented via a virtual file system mounted
to /dev/shm (e.g. Linux).
- --start
- Start PulseAudio if it is not running yet. This is different from starting
PulseAudio without --start which would fail if PA is already
running. PulseAudio is guaranteed to be fully initialized when this call
returns. Implies --daemonize.
- -k | --kill
- Kill an already running PulseAudio daemon of the calling user (Equivalent
to sending a SIGTERM).
- --check
- Return 0 as return code when the PulseAudio daemon is already running for
the calling user, or non-zero otherwise. Produces no output on the console
except for errors to stderr.
Note that a non-zero return value doesn't necessarily mean
that PulseAudio is not usable. Even if the server is not running, it may
get automatically started via PulseAudio's autospawning mechanism or
systemd's socket activation, or the environment might be such that
checking for processes doesn't work (for example, the running server
might not show up in a container, even if the server is accessible via a
socket). Also disabling PID files with --use-pid-file=no prevents
--check from detecting running servers.
A more robust check in most situations would be to try
establishing a client connection to the server. Unfortunately there's
currently no --check-connection option to replace --check,
but running "pactl info" could be a pretty good
substitute.
- --system[=BOOL]
- Run as system-wide instance instead of per-user. Please note that this
disables certain features of PulseAudio and is generally not recommended
unless the system knows no local users (e.g. is a thin client). This
feature needs special configuration and a dedicated UNIX user set up. It
is highly recommended to combine this with
--disallow-module-loading (see below).
- -D | --daemonize[=BOOL]
- Daemonize after startup, i.e. detach from the terminal. Note that when
running as a systemd service you should use --daemonize=no for
systemd notification to work.
- --fail[=BOOL]
- Fail startup when any of the commands specified in the startup script
default.pa (see below) fails.
- --high-priority[=BOOL]
- Try to acquire a high Unix nice level. This will only succeed if the
calling user has a non-zero RLIMIT_NICE resource limit set (on systems
that support this), or we're configured to be run as system daemon (see
--system above). It is recommended to enable this, since it is only
a negligible security risk (see below).
- --realtime[=BOOL]
- Try to acquire a real-time scheduling for PulseAudio's I/O threads. This
will only succeed if the calling user has a non-zero RLIMIT_RTPRIO
resource limit set (on systems that support this), or rtkit is available
and allows PulseAudio to enable real-time scheduling, or we are configured
to be run as system daemon (see --system above).
- --disallow-module-loading[=BOOL]
- Disallow module loading after startup. This is a security feature since it
disallows additional module loading during runtime and on user request. It
is highly recommended when --system is used (see above). Note
however, that this breaks certain features like automatic module loading
on hot plug.
- --disallow-exit[=BOOL]
- Disallow user requested exit
- --exit-idle-time=SECS
- Terminate the daemon after the last client quit and this time in seconds
passed. Use a negative value to disable this feature. Defaults to 20.
When PulseAudio runs in the per-user mode and detects a login
session, then any positive value will be reset to 0 so that PulseAudio
will terminate immediately on logout. A positive value therefore has
effect only in environments where there's no support for login session
tracking (or if the user is logged in without a session spawned, a.k.a.
lingering). A negative value can still be used to disable any automatic
exit.
When PulseAudio runs in the system mode, automatic exit is
always disabled, so this option does nothing.
- --scache-idle-time=SECS
- Unload autoloaded samples from the cache when they haven't been used for
the specified number of seconds.
- --log-level[=LEVEL]
- If an argument is passed, set the log level to the specified value,
otherwise increase the configured verbosity level by one. The log levels
are numerical from 0 to 4, corresponding to error, warn,
notice, info, debug. Default log level is
notice, i.e. all log messages with lower log levels are printed:
error, warn, notice.
- -v | --verbose
- Increase the configured verbosity level by one (see --log-level
above). Specify multiple times to increase log level multiple times.
- --log-target={auto,syslog,journal,stderr,file:PATH,newfile:PATH}
- Specify the log target. If set to auto (which is the default), then
logging is directed to syslog when --daemonize is passed, otherwise
to STDERR. If set to journal logging is directed to the systemd
journal. If set to file:PATH, logging is directed to the file
indicated by PATH. newfile:PATH is otherwise the same as file:PATH,
but existing files are never overwritten. If the specified file already
exists, a suffix is added to the file name to avoid overwriting.
- --log-meta[=BOOL]
- Show source code location in log messages.
- --log-time[=BOOL]
- Show timestamps in log messages.
- --log-backtrace=FRAMES
- When FRAMES is greater than 0, log for each message a stack trace up to
the number of specified stack frames.
- -p | --dl-search-path=PATH
- Set the search path for dynamic shared objects (plugins).
- --resample-method=METHOD
- Use the specified resampler by default (See --dump-resample-methods
above for possible values).
- --use-pid-file[=BOOL]
- Create a PID file. If this options is disabled it is possible to run
multiple sound servers per user.
- --no-cpu-limit[=BOOL]
- Do not install CPU load limiter on platforms that support it. By default,
PulseAudio will terminate itself when it notices that it takes up too much
CPU time. This is useful as a protection against system lockups when
real-time scheduling is used (see below). Disabling this mechanism is
useful when debugging PulseAudio with tools like valgrind(1) which
slow down execution.
- --disable-shm[=BOOL]
- PulseAudio clients and the server can exchange audio data via POSIX or
memfd shared memory segments (on systems that support this). If disabled
PulseAudio will communicate exclusively over sockets. Please note that
data transfer via shared memory segments is always disabled when
PulseAudio is running with --system enabled (see above).
- --enable-memfd[=BOOL]
- PulseAudio clients and the server can exchange audio data via memfds - the
anonymous Linux Kernel shared memory mechanism (on kernels that support
this). If disabled PulseAudio will communicate via POSIX shared
memory.
- -L | --load="MODULE ARGUMENTS"
- Load the specified plugin module with the specified arguments.
- -F | --file=FILENAME
- Run the specified script on startup. May be specified multiple times to
specify multiple scripts to be run in order. Combine with -n to
disable loading of the default script default.pa (see below).
- -C
- Open a command interpreter on STDIN/STDOUT after startup. This may be used
to configure PulseAudio dynamically during runtime. Equivalent to
--load=module-cli.
- -n
- Don't load default script file default.pa (see below) on startup.
Useful in conjunction with -C or --file.
~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf, /usr/local/etc/pulse/daemon.conf:
configuration settings for the PulseAudio daemon. If the version in the user's
home directory does not exist the global configuration file is loaded. See
pulse-daemon.conf(5) for more information.
~/.config/pulse/default.pa,
/usr/local/etc/pulse/default.pa: the default configuration script to
execute when the PulseAudio daemon is started. If the version in the user's
home directory does not exist the global configuration script is loaded. See
default.pa(5) for more information.
~/.config/pulse/client.conf,
/usr/local/etc/pulse/client.conf: configuration settings for
PulseAudio client applications. If the version in the user's home directory
does not exist the global configuration file is loaded. See
pulse-client.conf(5) for more information.
SIGINT, SIGTERM: the PulseAudio daemon will shut down (Same as
--kill).
SIGHUP: dump a long status report to STDOUT or syslog,
depending on the configuration.
SIGUSR1: load module-cli, allowing runtime reconfiguration
via STDIN/STDOUT.
SIGUSR2: load module-cli-protocol-unix, allowing runtime
reconfiguration via a AF_UNIX socket. See pacmd(1) for more
information.
Group pulse-access: if PulseAudio is running as a system daemon (see
--system above) access is granted to members of this group when they
connect via AF_UNIX sockets. If PulseAudio is running as a user daemon this
group has no meaning.
User pulse, group pulse: if PulseAudio is running as
a system daemon (see --system above) and is started as root the
daemon will drop privileges and become a normal user process using this user
and group. If PulseAudio is running as a user daemon this user and group has
no meaning.
To minimize the risk of drop-outs during playback it is recommended to run
PulseAudio with real-time scheduling if the underlying platform supports it.
This decouples the scheduling latency of the PulseAudio daemon from the system
load and is thus the best way to make sure that PulseAudio always gets CPU
time when it needs it to refill the hardware playback buffers. Unfortunately
this can be a security risk on some systems, since PulseAudio runs as user
process, and giving realtime scheduling privileges to a user always comes with
the risk that the user misuses it to lock up the system -- which is possible
since making a process real-time effectively disables preemption. To solve
this problem, PulseAudio uses rtkit to safely acquire real-time scheduling
when available.
If the risk of locking up the machine is considered too big to
enable real-time scheduling, high-priority scheduling can be enabled instead
(i.e. negative nice level). This can be enabled by passing
--high-priority (see above) when starting PulseAudio and may also be
enabled with the appropriate option in daemon.conf. Negative nice
levels can only be enabled when the appropriate resource limit RLIMIT_NICE
is set (see setrlimit(2) for more information), possibly configured
in /etc/security/limits.conf. A resource limit of 31 (corresponding
with nice level -11) is recommended.
The PulseAudio client libraries check for the existence of the following
environment variables and change their local configuration accordingly:
$PULSE_SERVER: the server string specifying the server to
connect to when a client asks for a sound server connection and doesn't
explicitly ask for a specific server. The server string is a list of server
addresses separated by whitespace which are tried in turn. A server address
consists of an optional address type specifier (unix:, tcp:, tcp4:, tcp6:),
followed by a path or host address. A host address may include an optional
port number. A server address may be prefixed by a string enclosed in {}. In
this case the following server address is ignored unless the prefix string
equals the local hostname or the machine id (/etc/machine-id).
$PULSE_SINK: the symbolic name of the sink to connect to
when a client creates a playback stream and doesn't explicitly ask for a
specific sink.
$PULSE_SOURCE: the symbolic name of the source to connect
to when a client creates a record stream and doesn't explicitly ask for a
specific source.
$PULSE_BINARY: path of PulseAudio executable to run when
server auto-spawning is used.
$PULSE_CLIENTCONFIG: path of file that shall be read
instead of client.conf (see above) for client configuration.
$PULSE_COOKIE: path of file that contains the PulseAudio
authentication cookie. Defaults to ~/.config/pulse/cookie.
These environment settings take precedence -- if set -- over the
configuration settings from client.conf (see above).
The PulseAudio Developers <pulseaudio-discuss (at) lists (dot) freedesktop
(dot) org>; PulseAudio is available from http://pulseaudio.org/
pulse-daemon.conf(5), default.pa(5), pulse-client.conf(5),
pacmd(1)
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