as pulseaudio is run as the logged-in user, the fix is to also run mpd
as the logged-in user, which is what will happen automatically if you
disable mpd as a system service and provide your own ~/.mpdconf - see
README.Debian for details
** Changed in: mpd (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Fix
** Changed in: mpd (Ubuntu)
Status: New = Confirmed
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Title:
mpd no access to soundcard using pulseaudio
To manage notifications about
This problem reappeared in Maverick (for me at least). I tried the
paprefs fix and adding the auth-anonymous=1 line into default.pa (after
uncommented the proper line) without any success. MPD complains about
being unable to connect to pulse audio instance due to authentication
error (Access
I managed find a fix by applying the suggested fixes (paprefs fix and modifying
the default.pa) and also by copying the pulse-cookie file from the user home
directory over the pulse-cookie that can be found in /var/lib/mpd.
I find that this is an unsatisfying and pretty ugly hack.
Could somebody
[Expired for mpd (Ubuntu) because there has been no activity for 60
days.]
** Changed in: mpd (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete = Expired
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Title:
I just hit this problem after upgrading to Ubuntu 10.10. Volume slider
wasn't working at all, even though sound output worked.
Turned out the 10.10 upgrade had installed pulseaudio. Purging it and
rebooting fixed the problem.
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mpd no access to soundcard using pulseaudio
My first impression when reading #17 was that it shouldn't be necessary
to use system mode for PulseAudio to get mpd to work right. In Jaunty I
had it working as desired without changing /etc/default/pulseaudio. The
mpd wiki page referenced above seems to say that mpd can launch
pulseaudio itself
Ah I didn't know that. But at least, the PulseAudio output could be
added (MPD accept multiple configured outputs), and then user just chose
the appropriate audio output (or we could even detect at install time
that pulseaudio is the used audio backend in order to enable it for
MPD).
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On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 1:05 PM, dhenry tfc.duke+launch...@gmail.com wrote:
Ah I didn't know that. But at least, the PulseAudio output could be
added (MPD accept multiple configured outputs), and then user just chose
the appropriate audio output (or we could even detect at install time
that
Maybe we can also look if PulseAudio is installed and if a pulseaudio
process is running? If yes, we select it as the default Audio Output for
MPD, if not we keep ALSA.
But anyway, we should enable (i.e. uncomment in /etc/mpd.conf) both ALSA
and PulseAudio outputs, so that in case the wrong one
The problem is still present in Karmic.
Enabling pulse output in /etc/mpd.conf:
audio_output {
typepulse
nameMy Pulse Output
}
And tunning PulseAudio preferences with paprefs as said in #15 (enable
network access to local sound devices and don't require
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 3:34 AM, dhenry tfc.duke+launch...@gmail.com wrote:
Enabling pulse output in /etc/mpd.conf:
...
MPD is still not ready out-of-the-box for Ubuntu.
Kubuntu and Xubuntu users also use MPD, and neither distribution ships
PulseAudio. Until all Ubuntu derivatives use the same
Thanks for reporting, does this work with version 0.14.2 from the
official repositories? If not, could you please also try the version
available in my ppa (https://edge.launchpad.net/~amoog/+archive/ppa)?
Thanks.
** Changed in: mpd (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided = Medium
** Changed in: mpd
Hi Andreas,
I've since upgraded to 13.2 and it still working okay. I am pretty busy
but I will try to find time in the next week to check with 14.2. I assume
you mean to check if it can be made to authenticate through the
pulse-cookie?
Cheers
-Ted
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 9:51 AM, Andreas Moog
Yeah, so that we can find out if it works on a freshly installed system.
I tried in Virtualbox with Jaunty and did not need a tweak to make it
work.
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** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Invalid
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I initially got this working by using the paprefs applet. pulse-related
changes to my mpd.conf file are the same as the de facto solution. this
solution is noted as an alternate solution in
http://mpd.wikia.com/wiki/PulseAudio#For_Distros_where_PulseAudio_output_is_broken
This solution works
more info:
mpd needs the following in /etc/mpd.conf otherwise i cant get anything
to happen, so this should surely be added by default:
audio_output {
typepulse
nameMy pulse output
}
then (without having done the load-module
i should mention that:
installing paprefs and selecting enable network access to local sound devices
and don't require authentication is the user specific equivalent to:
load-module module-native-protocol-tcp auth-anonymous=1
which is system wide
The user specific solution is probably a much
** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided = Wishlist
Status: New = Confirmed
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Confirm that Josh Smith's fix works.
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** Also affects: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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I'm glad I found this bug. The solution seems to work for me. So the fix
needs to go to pulseaudio then?
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i confirm that:
adding load-module module-native-protocol-tcp auth-anonymous=1 to
/etc/pulse/default.pa
and having in /etc/mpd.conf:
audio_output {
# use the pulse output
type pulse
# name
name My Pulse Device
}
this works.
like the above poster says mpd has to be started after
Do you have the line: load-module module-native-protocol-tcp twice in
your config now? atleast that is what the error is telling me.
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No, I did only have this one line. There was a similar line without the
auth, but it was commented out.
But after doing a apt-get remove --purge on all pulseaudio packages, and
installing them again using
apt-get install pulseaudio pulseaudio-esound-compat pulseaudio-modules-gconf,
and
There seems to be nothing with mpd.
using this audio_output (I am not sure the previous one is correct.)
audio_output {
# use the pulse output
type pulse
# name
name My Pulse Device
}
running mpd as user mpd (what is default in ubuntu) you need to make pulse a
bit more easy on
After adding load-module module-native-protocol-tcp auth-anonymous=1 to
/etc/pulse/default.pa I cannot get pulseaudio to start.
The above ine was insertet at de end of the config file.
After rebooting the computer, pulseaudio (or ps aux | grep pulse) does not
show pulse running.
When starting
problem still exist on hardy alpha 6 live cd by default.
if you run mpd as a user, with settings:
userubuntu
audio_output {
type pulse
driver esd
options host=localhost
name esd
}
then you can succesfully get sound to play through mpd whilst another
app is using the
If paplay works, then it's not a PulseAudio issue. Please see mpd.
** Changed in: mpd (Ubuntu)
Sourcepackagename: pulseaudio = mpd
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Does paplay /usr/share/sounds/*up.wav result in audible audio?
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paplay /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Front_Center.wav results in audioble
audio.
Regards,
Rune
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I forgot to add the audio_output section of /etc/mpd.conf
audio_output {
typepulse
nameMy MPD PulseAudio
# server localhost # optional
#sinkalsa_output # optional
}
Rune
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mpd no access to soundcard using pulseaudio
I'm assuming from where mpd is logging, that you are running mpd as
root, orfrom /etc/init.d/mpd. Have you tried running it as a user? By
default, PulseAudio runs as the user, which is why mpd cannot find it.
** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Status: New = Incomplete
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mpd no access to
MPD is running as the user mpd.
I manually added mpd to the pulseaudio groups.
This is default in the mpd ubuntu package as far as I can remebember from
when I installed it.
Rune
On 17/02/2008, Luke Yelavich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm assuming from where mpd is logging, that you are
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