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Kapil Hari Paranjape edited this page Nov 8, 2020
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In your home directory, open a terminal and type mkdir .pulse. Then, cd .pulse and create a single file called client.conf, which looks like this:
autospawn = no
That's all folks! Exit your chroot, crank it back up, and pulseaudio will be "dead".
Afterwards, you can control pulseaudio with pulseaudio --start and pulseaudio --kill.
Conversely, if you need pulseaudio to work (for example for Firefox), you may need to create file $HOME/.config/pulse/client.conf with the single line:
autospawn = yes
This will ensure that the pulseaudio daemon gets started when you need it for any program that depends on it!