On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 3:45 PM, João Matos <jaon...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > 2012/10/29 Canek Peláez Valdés <can...@gmail.com> >> >> On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 4:42 PM, João Matos <jaon...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > I found the solution a few hours ago here >> > >> > http://en.gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/Systemd#PAM_support:_su.2C_sudo.2C_screen... >> > . Now everything is fine :) >> > >> > About the packages you mentioned, you've ran 'equery uses pambase polkit >> > udisks upower', and none of them has the userflag systemd. >> >> # equery uses pambase polkit udisks upower >> [ : I - package is installed with flag ] >> * Found these USE flags for sys-auth/pambase-20120417-r1: >> [snip] >> + + systemd : Use pam_systemd module to register user sessions >> in the systemd control group hierarchy. >> >> * Found these USE flags for sys-auth/polkit-0.107-r1: >> [snip] >> + + systemd : Use sys-apps/systemd instead of >> sys-auth/consolekit for session tracking >> >> * Found these USE flags for sys-fs/udisks-2.0.0: >> [snip] >> + + systemd : Support sys-apps/systemd's logind >> >> * Found these USE flags for sys-power/upower-0.9.18: >> [snip] >> + + systemd : Use sys-apps/systemd for hibernate and suspend >> >> Depends on the versions ;) > > > yep. I've used ~amd64 for about 5 years, but last year I decided to use > amd64. Maybe systemd suport is better in more recent packages.
Indeed it is. I don't run ~amd64, BTW; I just keyword some things (the kernel, systemd+udev, and GNOME, basically). > Well, I've just find out a new little problem: PulseAudio. I've found > nothing about systemd+pulseaudio on google, what means that it is too easy > to some one carry about writing about it, or nobody tried it yet. Does > anyone knows how to start it? Maybe writing a pulseaudio.service or > something like that. Both projects have the same author: Lennart Poettering. There is usually nothing to be done so they work together; in GNOME, PulseAudio is started automatically by the session manager, I suppose it should be something similar in KDE-land. Actually, since PA is a user (not a system) service, the init system you use doesn't matter. Regards. -- Canek Peláez Valdés Posgrado en Ciencia e Ingeniería de la Computación Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México