On 03.06.2012 18:46, Paul Menzel wrote:
Dear Robert,
Am Sonntag, den 03.06.2012, 11:35 +0200 schrieb Robert Buhren:
i'm using "ecryptfs" to encrypt my home directory and "pam_mount" to
have it automatically
mounted/unmounted at login/logout. The unmounting never worked and i
discoverd that a pulseaudio process of my user was keept running
although my user was already logged out. This process had some files
opened in "~./pulse" which is why i think my home dir is not unmounted.
The only client that was accessing my pulseaudio process was the module
systemd-login.c
[pulseaudio] main.c: 1 client(s) logged in.
[pulseaudio] main.c: index: 0
[pulseaudio] main.c: driver:<module-systemd-login.c>
[pulseaudio] main.c: owner module: 19
[pulseaudio] main.c: properties:
[pulseaudio] main.c: application.name = "Login Session 2"
[pulseaudio] main.c: systemd-login.session = "2"
I already tried using "KillUserProcesses=yes" in "logind.conf",to to
have systemd kill all user process on logout, but it didn't help.
So is it true that systemd keeps my pusleaudio alive? If so how can i
avoid that? And is this behavior intended?
I will not be able to help you, but you can give more information. What
distribution do you use? What version of Linux, PulseAudio, systemd?
Maybe even attach the PulseAudio’s unit file for reference.
Thanks,
Paul
Dear Paul,
i'm using archlinux with gnome3.4. Pulseaudio 2.0, systemd 184, and
Linux 3.4.
Pulseaudio has no unitfile, as it is started by gnome itself.
Regards,
Robert
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