Chris Bannister schrieb:
This makes no sense. Why would you unload a driver on shutdown? There is no
reason to do this.
What do you mean? OSS removes itself from modules during the daemon shutdown.
Maybe it does, but it makes no sense to do it. It only causes trouble
(as you are describing
2009/6/15 Thomas Bächler :
> Chris Bannister schrieb:
>>
>> If my soundcard is in use when I shutdown (which it normally is with
>> MPD because I just sudo halt and expect linux to shutdown), this
>> causes OSS to fail to unload, which in turn can leave my /var
>> partition mounted. Is there a spec
Chris Bannister schrieb:
If my soundcard is in use when I shutdown (which it normally is with
MPD because I just sudo halt and expect linux to shutdown), this
causes OSS to fail to unload, which in turn can leave my /var
partition mounted. Is there a specific reason it is done this way?
This ma
2009/6/15 Aaron Griffin :
> On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 3:36 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
>> If my soundcard is in use when I shutdown (which it normally is with
>> MPD because I just sudo halt and expect linux to shutdown), this
>> causes OSS to fail to unload, which in turn can leave my /var
>> partiti
On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 3:36 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
> If my soundcard is in use when I shutdown (which it normally is with
> MPD because I just sudo halt and expect linux to shutdown), this
> causes OSS to fail to unload, which in turn can leave my /var
> partition mounted. Is there a specific
If my soundcard is in use when I shutdown (which it normally is with
MPD because I just sudo halt and expect linux to shutdown), this
causes OSS to fail to unload, which in turn can leave my /var
partition mounted. Is there a specific reason it is done this way?
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