![]() #Mozilla still up in volumemixer mp4#In other words, the mp4 vid's volume control now seems decoupled from the Firefox tab's, in the sound settings. (All this time the mp4 video's HTML5 volume control in the Firefox tab might stay at 100%. So when the Firefox slider reaches 100%, master will also. In the sound settings, as long as I move the Firefox slider to softer than the master, the volume levels can be de-coupled but if I move the Firefox tab's volume louder, as soon as it reaches the level the master is on, it starts to pull the master volume level with it. If the master volume is set to half, then in the gnome-control-center's Sound settings, the Firefox tab's volume will be displayed accordingly, also at half. In this case the application's volume level gets tied to the master system volume level. Trying out Firefox, I did not seem to notice any difference to the previous behaviour.Īfter a reboot, there was a difference indeed, but an unwelcome one. In /etc/pulse/nf I have found the following line, as is: Overall this can get a little frustrating sometimes, so I was eager to try out the new info. And then sometimes I get freshly opened tabs with the volume a little bit tuned down by default, or even, sometimes, muted completely. When I watch an mp4 video in Firefox, let it be embedded in a webpage, or opened from the disk via file:// protocol, and I use this video's HTML5 video controls to lower the volume, then I get something similar what you have on your screenshot: the Firefox tab's volume slider will "follow" what I did on the mp4 video's volume control. I would like just elaborate more on what's written in the accepted answer.īefore I have changed anything, this was the behavior I have observed: This is why Arch defaults to the classic (ALSA) behavior by setting this to no. Note: The default behavior upstream can sometimes be confusing and some applications, unaware of this feature, can set their volume to 100% at startup, potentially blowing your speakers or your ears. Defaults to yes upstream, but to no within Arch. ![]() For example, raising the VoIP call volume will raise the hardware volume and adjust the music-player volume so it stays where it was, without having to lower the volume of the music-player manually. Takes a boolean argument, defaults to yes.įlat-volumes scales the device-volume with the volume of the "loudest" application. where possible let the sink volume equal the maximum of the volumes of the inputs connected to it. System definitions: /etc/pulse/nfįlat-volumes Enable 'flat' volumes, i.e. The "nf" can be found in the following paths: ![]() Try adding or changing flat-volumes=no setting in pulseaudio's nf: ![]()
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