Am Donnerstag, den 24.12.2009, 19:39 +0100 schrieb Paul Menzel: > Am Mittwoch, den 07.10.2009, 23:49 +0200 schrieb Paul Menzel: > > Am Mittwoch, den 07.10.2009, 21:35 +0100 schrieb Sjoerd Simons: > > > On Sat, Sep 26, 2009 at 05:00:13PM +0200, Paul Menzel wrote: > > > > […] > > > > > I don't think this is fixed in 0.9.19, but it would be cool if you could > > > verify > > > that it's still there? > > > > As written I do not know how to reproduce the problem. I will report > > back, when this happens again. > > I can reproduce it with Skype and on two different systems with > PulseAudio installed but different sound hardware (VIA and Intel). > > Skype and PulseAudio have half of the available CPU usage. > > Sorry, I know that Skype is not Free Software but other users of this > system really need to use it. I am using > > $ dpkg -l skype > […] > ii skype 2.1.0.47-1 Skype - Take a deep breath > > which can be downloaded from [1]. But I guess PulseAudio should not max > out too. > > It would be nice if you can tell me how I could find the cause of this > problem. At least what PulseAudio processes are the reason.
Ok, the problem also surfaces if I just open `gnome-volume-control` – the one from PulseAudio I think. $ dpkg -S /usr/bin/gnome-volume-control gnome-media: /usr/bin/gnome-volume-control PulseAudio shows 150 % of system usage in `top` but it goes back to normal if I close `gnome-volume-control` afterward. Thanks, Paul > [1] http://download.skype.com/linux/skype-debian_2.1.0.47-1_i386.deb
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