pulse-client.conf - PulseAudio client configuration file
~/.config/pulse/client.conf
~/.config/pulse/client.conf.d/*.conf
/usr/local/etc/pulse/client.conf
/usr/local/etc/pulse/client.conf.d/*.conf
The PulseAudio client library reads configuration directives from a
configuration file on startup. If the per-user file
~/.config/pulse/client.conf exists, it is used, otherwise the system
configuration file /usr/local/etc/pulse/client.conf is used. In
addition to those main files, configuration directives can also be put in
files under directories ~/.config/pulse/client.conf.d/ and
/usr/local/etc/pulse/client.conf.d/. Those files have to have the .conf
file name extension, but otherwise the file names can be chosen freely. The
files under client.conf.d are processed in alphabetical order. In case the
same option is set in multiple files, the last file to set an option overrides
earlier files. The main client.conf file is processed first, so options set in
files under client.conf.d override the main file.
The configuration file is a simple collection of variable
declarations. If the configuration file parser encounters either ; or # it
ignores the rest of the line until its end.
For the settings that take a boolean argument the values
true, yes, on and 1 are equivalent, resp.
false, no, off, 0.
- default-sink= The default sink to connect to. If specified
overwrites the setting in the daemon. The environment variable
$PULSE_SINK however takes precedence.
- default-source= The default source to connect to. If specified
overwrites the setting in the daemon. The environment variable
$PULSE_SOURCE however takes precedence.
- default-server= The default sever to connect to. The environment
variable $PULSE_SERVER takes precedence.
- autospawn= Autospawn a PulseAudio daemon when needed. Takes a
boolean value, defaults to yes. Note that setting this to
"no" doesn't disable the systemd service. The autospawn option is
only meant to be used on systems without systemd. If you use systemd to
start PulseAudio, use "systemctl --user stop pulseaudio.service
pulseaudio.socket" to stop the daemon temporarily, or "systemctl
--user mask pulseaudio.service pulseaudio.socket" to permanently
disable the units (the "disable" command of systemctl probably
won't work, because the pulseaudio.socket unit is often installed to
/usr/lib/systemd/user/sockets.target.wants/, which makes it impossible to
disable the unit with the "disable" command).
- daemon-binary= Path to the PulseAudio daemon to run when
autospawning. Defaults to a path configured at compile time.
- extra-arguments= Extra arguments to pass to the PulseAudio daemon
when autospawning. Defaults to --log-target=syslog
- cookie-file= Specify the path to the PulseAudio authentication
cookie. Defaults to ~/.config/pulse/cookie.
- enable-shm= Enable data transfer via POSIX or memfd shared memory.
Takes a boolean argument, defaults to yes. If set to no,
communication with the server will be exclusively done through data-copy
over sockets.
- enable-memfd=. Enable data transfer via memfd shared memory. Takes
a boolean argument, defaults to yes.
- shm-size-bytes= Sets the shared memory segment size for clients, in
bytes. If left unspecified or is set to 0 it will default to some
system-specific default, usually 64 MiB. Please note that usually there is
no need to change this value, unless you are running an OS kernel that does
not do memory overcommit.
- auto-connect-localhost= Automatically try to connect to localhost
via IP. Enabling this is a potential security hole since connections are
only authenticated one-way and a rogue server might hence fool a client into
sending it its private (e.g. VoIP call) data. This was enabled by default on
PulseAudio version 0.9.21 and older. Defaults to no.
- auto-connect-display= Automatically try to connect to the host
X11's $DISPLAY variable is set to. The same security issues apply as to
auto-connect-localhost=. Defaults to no.
The PulseAudio Developers <pulseaudio-discuss (at) lists (dot) freedesktop
(dot) org>; PulseAudio is available from http://pulseaudio.org/
pulse-daemon.conf(5), pulseaudio(1)