Feature changed by: Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) Feature #310668, revision 5 Title: run pulseaudio server with 'flat-volumes=no' - openSUSE-11.4: Unconfirmed + openSUSE-11.4: New Priority Requester: Important Requested by: robert spitzenpfeil (robert_spitzenpfeil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: I listen to music while writing... and every single time I change songs - a - hilariously loud POP is almost killing my ears. This is annoying and painful. - What's also annoying is that with 'flat-volumes = yes' the master - volume is - changed to the loudest individual stream. If a rogue application should - choose - to up the volume, my ears get fried (headphones !) - Personally I think the purpose of having a master volume slider is to - limit the - max volume to avoid this kind of crap, which is totally nullified by - 'flat-volumes = yes' ! - Proposal: use 'flat-volumes = no' as the default in '/etc/pulse/daemon. - conf'. I - think the user is clever enough to handle the volume sliders himself. - And only - because Vista or W7 fiddles with the master volume in this _sick_ way, - we don't - need that as well. - Reproducible: Always - Steps to Reproduce: - 1. play a song - 2. increase the volume for the app. using pavucontrol or with the app. - itself - 3. master volume is pushed up as well - Expected Results: - The user should be the _only_ one messing with MASTER VOLUME. + a hilariously loud POP is almost killing my ears. This is annoying and + painful. What's also annoying is that with 'flat-volumes = yes' the + master volume is changed to the loudest individual stream. If a rogue + application should choose to up the volume, my ears get fried + (headphones !) Personally I think the purpose of having a master volume + slider is to limit the max volume to avoid this kind of crap, which is + totally nullified by 'flat-volumes = yes' ! Proposal: use 'flat-volumes + = no' as the default in '/etc/pulse/daemon.conf'. I think the user is + clever enough to handle the volume sliders himself. And only because + Vista or W7 fiddles with the master volume in this _sick_ way, we don't + need that as well. Reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: 1. play a + song 2. increase the volume for the app. using pavucontrol or with the + app. itself 3. master volume is pushed up as well Expected Results: The + user should be the _only_ one messing with MASTER VOLUME. Business case (Partner benefit): openSUSE.org: With 'flat-volumes=yes' it is possible to get permanent hearing damage if unexpected volume surges are forced into the user's ears! Again with this feature enabled _any_ application that uses pulseaudio can set the master volume to 100%. That might be tolerable with a stereo system with a manual volume knob, but on a laptop + headphones this is close to a criminal assault. Discussion: #1: Roger Luedecke (shadowolf7) (2011-09-16 03:33:48) Never had this problem myself, but it is an easy fix and should be included. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310668