10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
Hai all,
I'm rameez rahman working as a Technical assistant.
I configured NIS Server in RHEL 6.5 with 40 client PC's.All the clients are using the same os ie RHEL 6.5 64 bit.All the features are working fine except sound ie from client machine if a NIS user logged in he cant access sound.But if... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rameez rahman k
2 Replies
2. OS X (Apple)
Ok guys, gals and geeks...
As from today I am starting to learn awk in earnest doing something totally different.
I am going to create a pseudo-Audio_Function Generator centred around OSX 10.11.x minimum. The code below is a tester to see what the possibilities are.
All waveforms will be... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
11 Replies
3. Slackware
I'm trying to record audio using Audacity 2.0.5 installed from SlackBuilds. My system is 64-bit Slackware 14.1 and a sound card is Intel HD Audio. I didn't change my sound system to OSS. (Default sound system in Slackware 14.1 is ALSA, isn't it?) First, I set Internal Microphone slider in KMix... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: qzxcvbnm
2 Replies
4. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
Hello,
i have Debian 6.x and Gnome desktop.
Looking for some lightweight app to trim and crop mp3, wma or similar files. I already have ffmpeg installed.
I tried to load 29Mb file to Audacitty and it was frozing whole day untill i turned off PC.
Some simple tool, even command line,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: postcd
1 Replies
5. UNIX and Linux Applications
hello to all , i have a problem , actually i download realplayer and play a song ,
my problem is that, when i start my speaker , and play a song , i m not getting any sound , and song goes on without any sound
i have fedora 9 ,
if any one can solve my problem then
thanx very... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: alert_every1
0 Replies
6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello all,
Could anyone help to me :as to how can i record an audio file in unix and convert it into a text . Or anything with audio recording to get started would help .
thanks, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: phantom308
3 Replies
7. Linux
The Network Audio System (NAS)
Anybody have any luck with nasd or xmms-nas with any 2.6 distribution?
Works fine under FreeBSD (6.0/7.0). (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramen_noodle
0 Replies
8. Programming
Hi Folks,
I have just joined, and have a problem...
I am doing my thesis and need to transfer a file from server to the client, while doing that I want to stream the file ( the files being video/audio files).
I am unable to figure out abt the streaming part...if there exist any libraries... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: pappu
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
I play audio through the web browser and it plays ok on windows. When i try the same thing on unix i get the error message "sh: /usr/local/bin/sox: not found. I've tried 'locate sox' and can't seem to find it. Is there some way I can change the browser settings so they play the audio... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: molli_81
3 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I know about next to nothing, and I am trying to play an audio file on HP-UX 10.2 (743i) every time I try to use the ‘/opt/audio/bin/AudioCP &' command I get an error message that says “Unable to access audio hardware.” I checked the man page on audio, and both Aserver and rpcd are running. Am I... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Matt
4 Replies
AUSCOPE(1) General Commands Manual AUSCOPE(1)
NAME
auscope - Network Audio System Protocol Filter
SYNOPSIS
auscope [ option ] ...
DESCRIPTION
auscope is an audio protocol filter that can be used to view the network packets being sent between an audio application and an audio
server.
auscope is written in Perl, so you must have Perl installed on your machine in order to run auscope. If your Perl executable is not
installed as /usr/local/bin/perl, you should modify the first line of the auscope script to reflect the Perl executable's location. Or,
you can invoke auscope as
perl auscope [ option ] ...
assuming the Perl executable is in your path.
To operate, auscope must know the port on which it should listen for audio clients, the name of the desktop machine on which the audio
server is running and the port to use to connect to the audio server. Both the output port (server) and input port (client) are automati-
cally biased by 8000. The output port defaults to 0 and the input port defaults to 1.
ARGUMENTS
-i<input-port>
Specify the port that auscope will use to take requests from clients.
-o<output-port>
Determines the port that auscope will use to connect to the audio server.
-h<audio server name>
Determines the desktop machine name that auscope will use to find the audio server.
-v<print-level>
Determines the level of printing which auscope will provide. The print-level can be 0 or 1. The larger numbers provide greater
output detail.
EXAMPLES
In the following example, mcxterm is the name of the desktop machine running the audio server, which is connected to the TCP/IP network
host tcphost. auscope uses the desktop machine with the -h command line option, will listen for client requests on port 8001 and connect
to the audio server on port 8000.
Ports (file descriptors) on the network host are used to read and write the audio protocol. The audio client auplay will connect to the
audio server via the TCP/IP network host tcphost and port 8001:
auscope -i1 -o0 -hmcxterm
auplay -audio tcp/tcphost:8001 dial.snd
In the following example, the auscope verbosity is increased to 1, and the audio client autool will connect to the audio server via the
network host tcphost, while displaying its graphical interface on another server labmcx:
auscope -i1 -o0 -hmcxterm -v1
autool -audio tcp/tcphost:8001 -display labmcx:0.0
SEE ALSO
nas(1), perl(1)
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1994 Network Computing Devices, Inc.
AUTHOR
Greg Renda, Network Computing Devices, Inc.
1.9.3 AUSCOPE(1)