summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in')
-rw-r--r--man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in586
1 files changed, 586 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in b/man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..52223fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/man/pulse-daemon.conf.5.xml.in
@@ -0,0 +1,586 @@
+<?xml version="1.0"?><!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE manpage SYSTEM "xmltoman.dtd">
+<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="xmltoman.xsl" ?>
+
+<!--
+This file is part of PulseAudio.
+
+PulseAudio is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
+under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as
+published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the
+License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+PulseAudio is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
+ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
+or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General
+Public License for more details.
+
+You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+License along with PulseAudio; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+-->
+
+<manpage name="pulse-daemon.conf" section="5" desc="PulseAudio daemon configuration file">
+
+ <synopsis>
+ <p><file>~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf</file></p>
+ <p><file>~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf.d/*.conf</file></p>
+ <p><file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/daemon.conf</file></p>
+ <p><file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/daemon.conf.d/*.conf</file></p>
+ </synopsis>
+
+ <description>
+ <p>The PulseAudio sound server reads configuration directives from
+ a configuration file on startup. If the per-user file
+ <file>~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf</file> exists, it is used, otherwise the
+ system configuration file <file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/daemon.conf</file>
+ is used. In addition to those main files, configuration directives can also
+ be put in files under directories
+ <file>~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf.d/</file> and
+ <file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/daemon.conf.d/</file>. Those files have to
+ have the .conf file name extension, but otherwise the file names can be
+ chosen freely. The files under daemon.conf.d are processed in alphabetical
+ order. In case the same option is set in multiple files, the last file to
+ set an option overrides earlier files. The main daemon.conf file is
+ processed first, so options set in files under daemon.conf.d override the
+ main file.</p>
+
+ <p>Please note that the server also reads a configuration script on
+ startup. See <manref name="default.pa" section="5"/>.</p>
+
+ <p>The configuration file is a simple collection of variable
+ declarations. If the configuration file parser encounters either ;
+ or # it ignores the rest of the line until its end.</p>
+
+ <p>For the settings that take a boolean argument the values
+ <opt>true</opt>, <opt>yes</opt>, <opt>on</opt> and <opt>1</opt>
+ are equivalent, resp. <opt>false</opt>, <opt>no</opt>,
+ <opt>off</opt>, <opt>0</opt>.</p>
+
+ </description>
+
+ <section name="General Directives">
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>daemonize=</opt> Daemonize after startup. Takes a
+ boolean value, defaults to <opt>no</opt>. The <opt>--daemonize</opt>
+ command line option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>fail=</opt> Fail to start up if any of the directives
+ in the configuration script <file>default.pa</file>
+ fail. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to <opt>yes</opt>. The <opt>--fail</opt> command line
+ option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>allow-module-loading=</opt> Allow/disallow module
+ loading after startup. This is a security feature that if
+ disabled makes sure that no further modules may be loaded into
+ the PulseAudio server after startup completed. It is recommended
+ to disable this when <opt>system-instance</opt> is
+ enabled. Please note that certain features like automatic
+ hot-plug support will not work if this option is enabled. Takes
+ a boolean argument, defaults to <opt>yes</opt>. The
+ <opt>--disallow-module-loading</opt> command line option takes
+ precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>allow-exit=</opt> Allow/disallow exit on user
+ request. Defaults to <opt>yes</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>resample-method=</opt> The resampling algorithm to
+ use. Use one of <opt>src-sinc-best-quality</opt>,
+ <opt>src-sinc-medium-quality</opt>, <opt>src-sinc-fastest</opt>,
+ <opt>src-zero-order-hold</opt>, <opt>src-linear</opt>,
+ <opt>trivial</opt>, <opt>speex-float-N</opt>,
+ <opt>speex-fixed-N</opt>, <opt>ffmpeg</opt>, <opt>soxr-mq</opt>,
+ <opt>soxr-hq</opt>, <opt>soxr-vhq</opt>. See the
+ documentation of libsamplerate and speex for explanations of the
+ different src- and speex- methods, respectively. The method
+ <opt>trivial</opt> is the most basic algorithm implemented. If
+ you're tight on CPU consider using this. On the other hand it has
+ the worst quality of them all. The Speex resamplers take an
+ integer quality setting in the range 0..10 (bad...good). They
+ exist in two flavours: <opt>fixed</opt> and <opt>float</opt>. The former uses fixed point
+ numbers, the latter relies on floating point numbers. On most
+ desktop CPUs the float point resampler is a lot faster, and it
+ also offers slightly better quality. The soxr-family methods
+ are based on libsoxr, a resampler library from the SoX sound processing utility.
+ The mq variant has the best performance of the three. The hq is more expensive
+ and, according to SoX developers, is considered the best choice for audio of up to 16 bits per sample.
+ The vhq variant has more precision than hq and is more suitable for larger samples. The Soxr resamplers
+ generally offer better quality at less CPU compared to other resamplers, such as speex.
+ The downside is that they can add a significant delay to the output
+ (usually up to around 20 ms, in rare cases more).
+ See the output of <opt>dump-resample-methods</opt> for a complete list of all
+ available resamplers. Defaults to <opt>speex-float-1</opt>. The
+ <opt>--resample-method</opt> command line option takes precedence.
+ Note that some modules overwrite or allow overwriting of the
+ resampler to use.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>avoid-resampling=</opt> If set, try to configure the
+ device to avoid resampling. This only works on devices which
+ support reconfiguring their rate, and when no other streams are
+ already playing or capturing audio. The device will also not be
+ configured to a rate less than the default and alternate sample
+ rates.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>enable-remixing=</opt> If disabled never upmix or
+ downmix channels to different channel maps. Instead, do a simple
+ name-based matching only. Defaults to <opt>yes</opt>.
+ There is no known valid use case for setting this option to
+ <opt>no</opt>, therefore, this option is deprecated and may be
+ removed in a future version of PulseAudio.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>remixing-use-all-sink-channels=</opt> If enabled, use
+ all sink channels when remixing. Otherwise, remix to the minimal
+ set of sink channels needed to reproduce all of the source
+ channels. (This has no effect on LFE remixing.) Defaults to
+ <opt>yes</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>enable-lfe-remixing=</opt> This is a way to set
+ <opt>remixing-produce-lfe</opt> and <opt>remixing-consume-lfe</opt>
+ to the same value at once. This option only exists for backward
+ compatibility and may be removed in a future version of PulseAudio.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>remixing-produce-lfe=</opt> If enabled, and the sink input
+ does not have the LFE channel, synthesize the output LFE channel
+ as a (lowpass-filtered, if <opt>lfe-crossover-freq</opt> is not 0)
+ average of all input channels. Also, when <opt>lfe-crossover-freq</opt>
+ is not 0, filter out low frequencies from other channels while
+ producing a synthetic LFE output. If disabled, the output LFE channel
+ will only get a signal when an input LFE channel is available as well.
+ Defaults to <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>remixing-consume-lfe=</opt> If enabled, and the sink does not
+ have an LFE channel, redirect the input LFE channel (if any) to other
+ channels. If disabled, the input LFE channel will remain unused unless
+ the sink has the LFE channel as well. Defaults to <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>lfe-crossover-freq=</opt> The crossover frequency (in Hz) for the
+ LFE filter. Set it to 0 to disable the LFE filter. Defaults to 0.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>use-pid-file=</opt> Create a PID file in the runtime directory
+ (<file>$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/pulse/pid</file>). If this is enabled you may
+ use commands like <opt>--kill</opt> or <opt>--check</opt>. If
+ you are planning to start more than one PulseAudio process per
+ user, you better disable this option since it effectively
+ disables multiple instances. Takes a boolean argument, defaults
+ to <opt>yes</opt>. The <opt>--use-pid-file</opt> command line
+ option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>cpu-limit=</opt> If disabled do not install the CPU load
+ limiter, even on platforms where it is supported. This option is
+ useful when debugging/profiling PulseAudio to disable disturbing
+ SIGXCPU signals. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to
+ <opt>no</opt>. The <opt>--no-cpu-limit</opt> command line
+ argument takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>system-instance=</opt> Run the daemon as system-wide
+ instance, requires root privileges. Takes a boolean argument,
+ defaults to <opt>no</opt>. The <opt>--system</opt> command line
+ argument takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>local-server-type=</opt> Please don't use this option if
+ you don't have to! This option is currently only useful when you
+ want D-Bus clients to use a remote server. This option may be
+ removed in future versions. If you only want to run PulseAudio
+ in the system mode, use the <opt>system-instance</opt> option.
+ This option takes one of <opt>user</opt>, <opt>system</opt> or
+ <opt>none</opt> as the argument. This is essentially a duplicate
+ for the <opt>system-instance</opt> option. The difference is the
+ <opt>none</opt> option, which is useful when you want to use a
+ remote server with D-Bus clients. If both this and
+ <opt>system-instance</opt> are defined, this option takes
+ precedence. Defaults to whatever the <opt>system-instance</opt>
+ is set.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>enable-shm=</opt> Enable data transfer via POSIX
+ or memfd shared memory. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to
+ <opt>yes</opt>. The <opt>--disable-shm</opt> command line
+ argument takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>enable-memfd=</opt>. Enable memfd shared memory. Takes
+ a boolean argument, defaults to <opt>yes</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>shm-size-bytes=</opt> Sets the shared memory segment
+ size for the daemon, in bytes. If left unspecified or is set to 0
+ it will default to some system-specific default, usually 64
+ MiB. Please note that usually there is no need to change this
+ value, unless you are running an OS kernel that does not do
+ memory overcommit.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>lock-memory=</opt> Locks the entire PulseAudio process
+ into memory. While this might increase drop-out safety when used
+ in conjunction with real-time scheduling this takes away a lot
+ of memory from other processes and might hence considerably slow
+ down your system. Defaults to <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>flat-volumes=</opt> Enable 'flat' volumes, i.e. where
+ possible let the sink volume equal the maximum of the volumes of
+ the inputs connected to it. Takes a boolean argument, defaults
+ to <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rescue-streams=</opt> Enable rescuing of streams if the
+ used sink or source becomes unavailable. Takes a boolean argument.
+ If set to <opt>yes</opt>, pulseaudio will try to move the streams
+ from a sink or source that becomes unavailable to the default sink
+ or source. If set to <opt>no</opt>, streams will be killed if the
+ corresponding sink or source disappears. Defaults to <opt>yes</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Scheduling">
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>high-priority=</opt> Renice the daemon after startup to
+ become a high-priority process. This a good idea if you
+ experience drop-outs during playback. However, this is a certain
+ security issue, since it works when called SUID root only, or
+ RLIMIT_NICE is used. root is dropped immediately after gaining
+ the nice level on startup, thus it is presumably safe. See
+ <manref section="1" name="pulseaudio"/> for more
+ information. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to <opt>yes</opt>. The <opt>--high-priority</opt>
+ command line option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>realtime-scheduling=</opt> Try to acquire SCHED_FIFO
+ scheduling for the IO threads. The same security concerns as
+ mentioned above apply. However, if PA enters an endless loop,
+ realtime scheduling causes a system lockup. Thus, realtime
+ scheduling should only be enabled on trusted machines for
+ now. Please note that only the IO threads of PulseAudio are made
+ real-time. The controlling thread is left a normally scheduled
+ thread. Thus enabling the high-priority option is orthogonal.
+ See <manref section="1" name="pulseaudio"/> for more
+ information. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to <opt>yes</opt>. The
+ <opt>--realtime</opt> command line option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>realtime-priority=</opt> The realtime priority to
+ acquire, if <opt>realtime-scheduling</opt> is enabled. Note: JACK uses 10
+ by default, 9 for clients. Thus it is recommended to choose the
+ PulseAudio real-time priorities lower. Some PulseAudio threads
+ might choose a priority a little lower or higher than the
+ specified value. Defaults to <opt>5</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>nice-level=</opt> The nice level to acquire for the
+ daemon, if <opt>high-priority</opt> is enabled. Note: on some
+ distributions X11 uses -10 by default. Defaults to -11.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Idle Times">
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>exit-idle-time=</opt> Terminate the daemon after the
+ last client quit and this time in seconds passed. Use a negative value to
+ disable this feature. Defaults to 20. The <opt>--exit-idle-time</opt>
+ command line option takes precedence.</p>
+
+ <p>When PulseAudio runs in the per-user mode and detects a login
+ session, then any positive value will be reset to 0 so that PulseAudio
+ will terminate immediately on logout. A positive value therefore has
+ effect only in environments where there's no support for login session
+ tracking (or if the user is logged in without a session spawned, a.k.a.
+ lingering). A negative value can still be used to disable any automatic
+ exit.</p>
+
+ <p>When PulseAudio runs in the system mode, automatic exit is always
+ disabled, so this option does nothing.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>scache-idle-time=</opt> Unload autoloaded sample cache
+ entries after being idle for this time in seconds. Defaults to
+ 20. The <opt>--scache-idle-time</opt> command line option takes
+ precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Paths">
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>dl-search-path=</opt> The path where to look for dynamic
+ shared objects (DSOs/plugins). You may specify more than one
+ path separated by colons. The default path depends on compile
+ time settings. The <opt>--dl-search-path</opt> command line
+ option takes precedence. </p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-script-file=</opt> The default configuration
+ script file to load. Specify an empty string for not loading a
+ default script file. The default behaviour is to load
+ <file>~/.config/pulse/default.pa</file>, and if that file does not
+ exist fall back to the system wide installed version
+ <file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/default.pa</file>. If run in system-wide
+ mode the file <file>@PA_DEFAULT_CONFIG_DIR@/system.pa</file> is used
+ instead. If <opt>-n</opt> is passed on the command line
+ or <opt>default-script-file=</opt> is disabled the default
+ configuration script is ignored.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>load-default-script-file=</opt> Load the default
+ configuration script file as specified
+ in <opt>default-script-file=</opt>. Defaults to <opt>yes</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Logging">
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>log-target=</opt> The default log target. Use either
+ <opt>stderr</opt>, <opt>syslog</opt>, <opt>journal</opt> (optional),
+ <opt>auto</opt>, <opt>file:PATH</opt> or <opt>newfile:PATH</opt>. On traditional
+ systems <opt>auto</opt> is equivalent to <opt>syslog</opt>. On systemd-enabled
+ systems, auto is equivalent to <opt>journal</opt>, in case <opt>daemonize</opt>
+ is enabled, and to <opt>stderr</opt> otherwise. If set to <opt>file:PATH</opt>,
+ logging is directed to the file indicated by PATH. <opt>newfile:PATH</opt> is
+ otherwise the same as <opt>file:PATH</opt>, but existing files are never
+ overwritten. If the specified file already exists, a suffix is added to
+ the file name to avoid overwriting. Defaults to <opt>auto</opt>. The
+ <opt>--log-target</opt> command line option takes precedence.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>log-level=</opt> Log level, one of <opt>debug</opt>,
+ <opt>info</opt>, <opt>notice</opt>, <opt>warning</opt>,
+ <opt>error</opt>. Log messages with a lower log level than
+ specified here are not logged. Defaults to
+ <opt>notice</opt>. The <opt>--log-level</opt> command line
+ option takes precedence. The <opt>-v</opt> command line option
+ might alter this setting.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>log-meta=</opt> With each logged message log the code
+ location the message was generated from. Defaults to
+ <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>log-time=</opt> With each logged message log the
+ relative time since startup. Defaults to <opt>no</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>log-backtrace=</opt> When greater than 0, with each
+ logged message log a code stack trace up the specified
+ number of stack frames. Defaults to <opt>0</opt>.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Resource Limits">
+
+ <p>See <manref name="getrlimit" section="2"/> for
+ more information. Set to -1 if PulseAudio shall not touch the resource
+ limit. Not all resource limits are available on all operating
+ systems.</p>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-as</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-rss</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-core</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-data</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-fsize</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-nofile</opt> Defaults to 256.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-stack</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-nproc</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-locks</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-sigpending</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-msgqueue</opt> Defaults to -1.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-memlock</opt> Defaults to 16 KiB. Please note
+ that the JACK client libraries may require more locked
+ memory.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-nice</opt> Defaults to 31. Please make sure that
+ the default nice level as configured with <opt>nice-level</opt>
+ fits in this resource limit, if <opt>high-priority</opt> is
+ enabled.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-rtprio</opt> Defaults to 9. Please make sure that
+ the default real-time priority level as configured with
+ <opt>realtime-priority=</opt> fits in this resource limit, if
+ <opt>realtime-scheduling</opt> is enabled. The JACK client
+ libraries require a real-time priority of 9 by default.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>rlimit-rttime</opt> Defaults to 1000000.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Default Device Settings">
+
+ <p>Most drivers try to open the audio device with these settings
+ and then fall back to lower settings. The default settings are CD
+ quality: 16bit native endian, 2 channels, 44100 Hz sampling.</p>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-sample-format=</opt> The default sampling
+ format. See
+ https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/Documentation/User/SupportedAudioFormats/
+ for possible values.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-sample-rate=</opt> The default sample frequency.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-sample-channels</opt> The default number of channels.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-channel-map</opt> The default channel map.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>alternate-sample-rate</opt> The alternate sample
+ frequency. Sinks and sources will use either the
+ default-sample-rate value or this alternate value, typically 44.1
+ or 48kHz. Switching between default and alternate values is
+ enabled only when the sinks/sources are suspended. This option
+ is ignored in passthrough mode where the stream rate will be used.
+ If set to the same value as the default sample rate, this feature is
+ disabled.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Default Fragment Settings">
+
+ <p>Some hardware drivers require the hardware playback buffer to
+ be subdivided into several fragments. It is possible to change
+ these buffer metrics for machines with high scheduling
+ latencies. Not all possible values that may be configured here are
+ available in all hardware. The driver will find the nearest
+ setting supported. Modern drivers that support timer-based
+ scheduling ignore these options.</p>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-fragments=</opt> The default number of
+ fragments. Defaults to 4.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>default-fragment-size-msec=</opt>The duration of a
+ single fragment. Defaults to 25ms (i.e. the total buffer is thus
+ 100ms long).</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Default Deferred Volume Settings">
+
+ <p>With the flat volume feature enabled, the sink HW volume is set
+ to the same level as the highest volume input stream. Any other streams
+ (with lower volumes) have the appropriate adjustment applied in SW to
+ bring them to the correct overall level. Sadly hardware mixer changes
+ cannot be timed accurately and thus this change of volumes can sometimes
+ cause the resulting output sound to be momentarily too loud or too soft.
+ So to ensure SW and HW volumes are applied concurrently without any
+ glitches, their application needs to be synchronized. The sink
+ implementation needs to support deferred volumes. The following
+ parameters can be used to refine the process.</p>
+
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>enable-deferred-volume=</opt> Enable deferred volume for the sinks that
+ support it. This feature is enabled by default.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>deferred-volume-safety-margin-usec=</opt> The amount of time (in
+ usec) by which the HW volume increases are delayed and HW volume
+ decreases are advanced. Defaults to 8000 usec.</p>
+ </option>
+ <option>
+ <p><opt>deferred-volume-extra-delay-usec=</opt> The amount of time (in usec)
+ by which HW volume changes are delayed. Negative values are also allowed.
+ Defaults to 0.</p>
+ </option>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="Authors">
+ <p>The PulseAudio Developers &lt;@PACKAGE_BUGREPORT@&gt;; PulseAudio is available from <url href="@PACKAGE_URL@"/></p>
+ </section>
+
+ <section name="See also">
+ <p>
+ <manref name="pulse-client.conf" section="5"/>, <manref name="default.pa" section="5"/>, <manref name="pulseaudio" section="1"/>, <manref name="pacmd" section="1"/>
+ </p>
+ </section>
+
+</manpage>