The -D tells it to daemonize. You'll find output in /var/log/messages. The RT spam is irrelevant.
Tim Skinner <[email protected]> wrote: >it doesn't run in the terminal with the -D flag, I just get: > >t...@bellerophon:~$ pulseaudio -D -vv >I: main.c: PolicyKit refuses acquire-high-priority privilige. >I: main.c: Called SUID root and real-time/high-priority scheduling was >requested in the configuration. However, we lack the necessary priviliges: >I: main.c: We are not in group 'pulse-rt' and PolicyKit refuse to grant us >priviliges. Dropping SUID again. >I: main.c: For enabling real-time scheduling please acquire the appropriate >PolicyKit priviliges, or become a member of 'pulse-rt', or increase the >RLIMIT_NICE/RLIMIT_RTPRIO resource limits for this user. >I: main.c: Note that real-time/high-priority scheduling is NOT normally >required. If you experience crackling or other sound anomalies, consider one >or more of the above solutions. >I: main.c: High-priority scheduling enabled in configuration but now allowed >by policy. Disabling forcibly. >W: ltdl-bind-now.c: Failed to find original dlopen loader. >I: main.c: daemon startup successful. >t...@bellerophon:~$ > >sorry, If I'm just being slow or something... Perhaps those warnings >about real-time scheduling are significant? > >-- >Pulseaudio stutters and crashes under high cpu load >https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/279847 >You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu >Audio Team, which is subscribed to pulseaudio in ubuntu. -- Pulseaudio stutters and crashes under high cpu load https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/279847 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
