Bug 747744

Summary: 2.2. Sound Servers
Product: [Fedora] Fedora Documentation Reporter: Jonquil <jonquil>
Component: musicians-guideAssignee: Christopher Antila <christopher>
Status: CLOSED CURRENTRELEASE QA Contact: Nobody's working on this, feel free to take it <nobody>
Severity: low Docs Contact:
Priority: low    
Version: develCC: bcotton, zach
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Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
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Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
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Last Closed: 2013-01-19 17:55:51 UTC Type: ---
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oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
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Description Jonquil 2011-10-20 22:03:18 UTC
2.2. Sound Servers
Sound servers are programs that run "in the background," meaning that they do not have a user interface. Sound servers provide a level of abstraction to automate some aspects of using ALSA, and to allow multiple applications to simultaneously access your audio hardware. The three sound servers discussed in this chapter have different goals and different features. The sound server you should use depends on what you are doing.
2.2.1. PulseAudio
PulseAudio is an advanced sound server, intended to make audio programming in Linux operating systems as easy as possible. The idea behind its design is that an audio application needs only to output audio to PulseAudio.PulseAudio will take care of the rest: choosing and controlling a particular device, adjusting the volume, working with other applications, and so on. PulseAudio even has the ability to use "networked sound," which allows two computers using PulseAudio to communicate as though they were one computer - either computer can input from or output to either computer's audio hardware just as easily as its own audio hardware. This is all controlled within PulseAudio, so no further complication is added to the software.
The Fedora Project's integration of PulseAudio as a vital part of the operating system has helped to ensure that audio applications can "just work" for most people under most circumstances. This has made it much easier for users to carry out basic audio tasks.

Comment 1 Karsten Wade 2011-12-14 03:49:40 UTC
Removing myself for these bug components as I'm either no longer involved in that aspect of the project, or no longer care to watch this particular bug. Sorry if you are caught in a maelstrom of bug changes as a result!

Comment 2 Ben Cotton 2011-12-15 19:42:15 UTC
This has been fixed in the git master branch.

Comment 3 Christopher Antila 2013-01-19 17:55:51 UTC
Fixed with publication for Fedora 18:

https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/18/html/Musicians_Guide/index.html