[SCM] jackd2 packaging branch, master, updated. debian/1.9.5.dfsg-13-23-gf46fc5b

adiknoth-guest at users.alioth.debian.org adiknoth-guest at users.alioth.debian.org
Thu Jun 17 13:43:32 UTC 2010


The following commit has been merged in the master branch:
commit f46fc5b78867f114b0e77535e2659fe0abcf84e5
Author: Adrian Knoth <adi at drcomp.erfurt.thur.de>
Date:   Thu Jun 17 15:14:00 2010 +0200

    Drop manpage patch.
    
    This fix has been added upstream.

diff --git a/debian/patches/0002_manpages.patch b/debian/patches/0002_manpages.patch
deleted file mode 100644
index 4dba448..0000000
--- a/debian/patches/0002_manpages.patch
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1196 +0,0 @@
-From: Adrian Knoth <adi at drcomp.erfurt.thur.de>
-Bug: http://trac.jackaudio.org/ticket/166
-Description: Add manpages to jackd2
-Last-Update: 2010-04-03
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/alsa_in.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
-+.TH ALSA_IO "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+\fBalsa_in\fR, \fBalsa_out\fR \- Jack clients that perform I/O with an alternate audio interface
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBalsa_in\fR [\fIoptions\fR]
-+.br
-+\fBalsa_out\fR [\fIoptions\fR]
-+
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+A JACK client that opens a specified audio interface (different to the
-+one used by the JACK server, if any) and moves audio data between its
-+JACK ports and the interface. alsa_in will provide data from the
-+interface (potentially for capture); alsa_out will deliver data to it
-+(for playback).
-+
-+The audio interface used by alsa_in/alsa_out does not need to be
-+synchronized with JACK backend (or the hardware it might be using).
-+alsa_in/alsa_out tries to resample the output stream in an attempt to
-+compensate for drift between the two clocks.
-+
-+As of jack-0.116.3 this works almost perfectly. It takes some time, to reach
-+absolute resample-rate stability. So give it some minutes (its intended to be
-+running permanently anyways)
-+
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-j \fI jack_client_name\fR
-+.br
-+Set Client Name.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-d \fI alsa_device\fR  
-+.br
-+Use this Soundcard.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-v\fR  
-+.br
-+Verbose, prints out resample coefficient and other parameters useful for debugging, every 500ms.
-+also reports soft xruns. 
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i\fR  
-+.br
-+Instrumentation. This logs the 4 important parameters of the samplerate control algorithm every 1ms.
-+You can pipe this into a file, and plot it. Should only be necessary, if it does not work as
-+expected, and we need to adjust some of the obscure parameters, to make it work. 
-+Find me on irc.freenode.org #jack in order to set this up correctly.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-c \fI channels\fR  
-+.br
-+Set Number of channels.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r \fI sample_rate\fR  
-+.br
-+Set sample_rate. The program resamples as necessary.
-+So you can connect a 44k1 jackd to a soundcard only supporting
-+48k. (default is jack sample_rate)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p \fI period_size\fR  
-+.br
-+Set the period size. It is not related to the jackd period_size.
-+Sometimes it affects the quality of the delay measurements.
-+Setting this lower than the jackd period_size will only work, if you
-+use a higher number of periods. 
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n \fI num_period\fR  
-+.br
-+Set number of periods. See note for period_size.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-q \fI quality\fR  
-+.br
-+Set the quality of the resampler from 0 to 4. can significanly reduce cpu usage.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-m \fI max_diff\fR  
-+.br
-+The value when a soft xrun occurs. Basically the window, in which
-+the dma pointer may jitter. I don't think its necessary to play with this anymore. 
-+.TP
-+\fB\-t \fI target_delay\fR  
-+.br
-+The delay alsa_io should try to approach. Same as for max_diff. It will be setup based on \-p and \-n
-+which is generally sufficient.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-s \fI smooth_array_size\fR  
-+.br
-+This parameter controls the size of the array used for smoothing the delay measurement. Its default is 256.
-+If you use a pretty low period size, you can lower the CPU usage a bit by decreasing this parameter.
-+However most CPU time is spent in the resampling so this will not be much.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C \fI P Control Clamp\fR  
-+.br
-+If you have a PCI card, then the default value (15) of this parameter is too high for \-p64 \-n2... Setting it to 5 should fix that.
-+Be aware that setting this parameter too low, lets the hf noise on the delay measurement come through onto the resamplerate, so this
-+might degrade the quality of the output. (but its a threshold value, and it has been chosen, to mask the noise of a USB card,
-+which has an amplitude which is 50 times higher than that of a PCI card, so 5 wont loose you any quality on a PCI card)
-+
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Torben Hohn
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/alsa_out.0
-@@ -0,0 +1 @@
-+.so man1/alsa_in.1
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/fill_template
-@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
-+#!/bin/sh
-+
-+for i in *.0 ; do
-+   sed -e "s/!VERSION!/${1}/g" -e "s/!DATE!/`date '+%B %Y'`/g" < ${i} > ${i%%0}1
-+done
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_bufsize.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
-+.TH JACK_BUFSIZE "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_bufsize \- JACK toolkit client to change the JACK buffer size
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_bufsize bufsize
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_bufsize
-+jack_bufsize sets the size of the buffer (frames per period) used in JACK. 
-+This change happens on-line (the JACK server and its clients do not need to be 
-+restarted).
-+.br
-+When invoked without arguments, it prints the current bufsize, and exits.
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_connect.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
-+.TH JACK_CONNECT "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+\fBjack_connect\fR, \fBjack_disconnect\fR \- JACK toolkit clients for connecting & disconnecting ports
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fB jack_connect\fR [ \fI-s\fR | \fI--server servername\fR ] [\fI-h\fR | \fI--help\fR ] port1 port2
-+\fB jack_disconnect\fR [ \fI-s\fR | \fI--server servername\fR ] [\fI-h\fR | \fI--help\fR ] port1 port2
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_connect\fR connects the two named ports. \fBjack_connect\fR disconnects the two named ports.
-+.SH RETURNS
-+The exit status is zero if successful, 1 otherwise
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_disconnect.0
-@@ -0,0 +1 @@
-+.so man1/jack_connect.1
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_freewheel.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
-+.TH JACK_FREEWHEEL "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_freewheel \- JACK toolkit client to control freewheeling mode
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_freewheel [y|n]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_freewheel
-+Turns freewheeling mode on (y) or off (n). While in freewheeling mode,
-+the JACK server does not wait in between process() calls, and does not
-+read or write data from/to any audio interface. That results in the JACK graph
-+processing data as fast as possible. Freewheeling makes fast exports to 
-+files possible.
-+.PP
-+There is no useful reason to use this tool other than testing. JACK
-+clients that use freewheeling will turn it on and off themselves.
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_impulse_grabber.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
-+.TH JACK_IMPULSE_GRABBER "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_impulse_grabber \- JACK toolkit client to grab an impulse (response)
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_impulse_grabber\fR \fB-d\fR \fIduration\fR [\fI-f\fR (C|gnuplot)]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_impulse_grabber\fR is a JACK example client for collecting
-+impulses recordings from JACK ports.
-+
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_load.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
-+.TH JACK_LOAD "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_load \- JACK toolkit client for loading in-process clients
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_load\fR [ \fI-i\fR initstring ] [ \fI-s\fR servername ] [\fI-w\fR ] client-name so-name [ initstring ]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_load\fR is a JACK toolkit client. It loads the specified plugin and creates an in-process client.
-+.SH ARGUMENTS
-+.PP
-+The client-name must be a currently unused client name.
-+.PP
-+The so-name is the name of file that client code is stored in (typically, \fIclientname.so\fR)
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB-i\fR, \fB--init\fR init-string
-+.br
-+initialization string passed to the in-process client. Note that this can also be specified as the last argument on the command line.
-+.TP
-+\fB-s\fR, \fB--server\fR servername
-+.br
-+Name of JACK server to connect to
-+.TP
-+\fB-w\fR, \fB--wait\fR
-+Wait for a signal (eg. from Ctrl-c) and then unload the client.
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Jeremy Hall
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_lsp.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
-+.TH JACK_LSP "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_lsp \- JACK toolkit client to list informtion on ports
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_lsp\fR [ \fI-s\fR | \fI--server\fR servername ] [ \fI-AclLptvh\fR ]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_lsp\fR lists all known ports associated with a JACK
-+server. It can also optionally list various kinds of information about each port.
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB-s\fR, \fB--server\fR \fIservername\fR
-+.br
-+Connect to the jack server named \fIservername\fR
-+.TP
-+\fB-A\fR, \fB--aliases\fR
-+.br
-+List aliases for each port
-+.TP
-+\fB-c\fR, \fB--connections\fR
-+.br
-+List connections to/from each port
-+.TP
-+\fB-l\fR, \fB--latency\fR
-+.br
-+Display per-port latency in frames at each port
-+.TP
-+\fB-L\fR, \fI--latency\fR
-+.br
-+Display total latency in frames at each port
-+.TP
-+\fB-p\fR, \fB--properties\fR
-+.br
-+Display port properties. Output may include input|output, can-monitor, physical, terminal
-+.TP
-+\fB-t\fR, \fB--type\fR
-+.br
-+Display port type
-+.TP
-+\fB-h\fR, \fB--help\fR
-+.br
-+Display help/usage message
-+.TP
-+\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
-+.br
-+Output version information and exit
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_metro.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
-+.TH JACK_METRO "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_metro \- JACK toolkit metronome
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_metro\fR [ \fI-n\fR name ] [ \fI-f\fR hz ] [ \fI-D\fR msecs ] [\fI-a\fR % ] [ \fI-d\fR % ] \fI-b\fR bpm 
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_metro\fR is a simple metronome for JACK. It generates a
-+synthetic "tick" sound for every beat. Note that is does \fBnot\fR
-+connect its output port by default - to hear the sound it makes you must
-+connect them using some other tool.
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB-n\fR, \fB--name\fR
-+.br
-+Specify a name for this instance of the metronome.
-+.TP
-+\fB-f\fR, \fB--frequency\fR Hz
-+.br
-+Define the frequency of the "tick" in Hz.
-+.TP
-+\fB-D\fR, \fB--duration\fR msecs
-+.br
-+Define the duration of the "tick" in milliseconds.
-+.TP
-+\fB-a\fR, \fB--attack\fR %-age
-+.br
-+Define the duration of the attack phase of the "tick" as a percentage
-+of the duration.
-+.TP
-+\fB-d\fR, \fB--decay\fR %-age
-+.br
-+Define the duration of the decay phase of the "tick" as a percentage
-+of the duration.
-+.TP
-+\fB--b\fR, \fB--bpm\fR bpm
-+.br
-+Define the number of beats per minute.
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Anthony Van Groningen
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_monitor_client.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
-+.TH JACK_CONNECT "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_monitor_client \- The JACK Audio Connection Kit example client
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_monitor_client
-+client-name
-+.PP
-+The client-name must be the name of a existing client that monitoring is 
-+to be enabled for.
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_monitor_client
-+is an example client for the JACK Audio Connection Kit. It enables
-+monitoring for the specified client.
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Jeremy Hall
-+.PP
-+This manpage was written by Robert Jordens <jordens at debian.org> for Debian.
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_netsource.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
-+.TH JACK_NETSOURCE "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_netsource \- Netjack Master client for one slave
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_netsource\fR [ \fI-H\fR hostname ] [ \fIoptions\fR ]
-+
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_netsource\fR The Master side of a netjack connection. Represents the slave jackd -dnet in the master jack graph.
-+Most connection parameters are configured via the netsource, and the slave will set itself up according to the commandline
-+option given to jack_netsource.
-+.br
-+Netjack allows low latency audio connections over general IP networks. When using celt for compression, it is even possible
-+to establish transatlantic links, with latencies not much over the actual ping time. 
-+.br
-+But the main usecase is of course a LAN, where it can achieve one jack period of latency.
-+
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB-h\fR this help text
-+.TP
-+\fB-H\fR \fIslave host\fR
-+.br
-+Host name of the slave JACK
-+.TP
-+\fB-o\fR \fInum channels\fR
-+.br
-+Number of audio playback channels
-+.TP
-+\fB-i\fR \fInum channels\fR
-+.br
-+Number of audio capture channels
-+.TP
-+\fB-O\fR \fInum channels\fR
-+.br
-+Number of midi playback channels
-+.TP
-+\fB-I\fR \fInum channels\fR
-+.br
-+Number of midi capture channels
-+.TP
-+\fB-n\fR \fIperiods\fR
-+.br
-+Network latency in JACK periods
-+.TP
-+\fB-p\fR \fIport\fR
-+.br
-+UDP port that the slave is listening on
-+.TP
-+\fB-r\fR \fIreply port\fR
-+.br
-+UDP port that we are listening on
-+.TP
-+\fB-B\fR \fIbind port\fR
-+.br
-+reply port, for use in NAT environments
-+.TP
-+\fB-b\fR \fIbitdepth\fR
-+.br
-+Set transport to use 16bit or 8bit
-+.TP
-+\fB-c\fR \fIbytes\fR
-+.br
-+Use CELT encoding with <bytes> per period and channel
-+.TP
-+\fB-m\fR \fImtu\fR
-+.br
-+Assume this mtu for the link
-+.TP
-+\fB-R\fR \fIN\fR
-+.br
-+Redundancy: send out packets N times.
-+.TP
-+\fB-e\fR
-+.br
-+skip host-to-network endianness conversion
-+.TP
-+\fB-N\fR \fIjack name\fR
-+.br
-+Reports a different client name to jack
-+.TP
-+.TP
-+\fB-s\fR, \fB--server\fR \fIservername\fR
-+.br
-+Connect to the jack server named \fIservername\fR
-+.TP
-+\fB-h\fR, \fB--help\fR
-+.br
-+Display help/usage message
-+.TP
-+\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
-+.br
-+Output version information and exit
-+
-+
-+.SH EXAMPLES
-+
-+.PP
-+run a 4 audio channel bidirectional link with one period of latency and no midi channels. Audio data is flowing uncompressed over the wire:
-+.br
-+On \fIhostA\fR:
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d alsa \fR
-+.br
-+\fBjack_netsource \-H hostB -n1 -i4 -o4 -I0 -O0 \fR
-+.PP
-+On \fIhostB\fR:
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d net \fR
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_samplerate.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
-+.TH JACK_SAMPLERATE "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_samplerate \- JACK toolkit client to print current samplerate
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_samplerate
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_samplerate prints the current samplerate, and exits.
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_showtime.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
-+.TH JACK_SHOWTIME "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_showtime \- The JACK Audio Connection Kit example client
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_showtime
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_showtime
-+prints the current timebase information to stdout
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Paul Davis
-+.PP
-+This manpage was written by Stefan Schwandter <swan at debian.org>
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_simple_client.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
-+.TH JACK_CONNECT "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_simple_client \- The JACK Audio Connection Kit example client
-+.SH SYNOPSYS
-+.B jack_simple_client
-+client-name
-+.PP
-+The client-name must be a yet unused client name.
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_simple_client
-+is an example client for the JACK Audio Connection Kit. It creates two
-+ports (client-name:input and client-name:output) that pass the data
-+unmodified.
-+.SH EXAMPLE
-+jack_simple_client in_process_test
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Jeremy Hall
-+.PP
-+This manpage was written by Robert Jordens <jordens at debian.org> for Debian.
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_transport.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
-+.TH JACK_TRANSPORT "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_transport \- JACK toolkit client for transport control
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_transport
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_transport
-+is a toolkit client for the JACK Audio Connection Kit. It provides command-line
-+control over the JACK transport system. Type help at jack_transport's
-+command prompt to see the available commands.
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Jeremy Hall
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_unload.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
-+.TH JACK_UNLOAD "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_unload \- The JACK Audio Connection Kit example client
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jack_unload 
-+client-name
-+.PP
-+The client-name must be the name of a loaded client that can be unloaded.
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jack_unload
-+is the counterpart to 
-+.B jack_load
-+and unloads the specified client.
-+.SH EXAMPLE
-+.B jack_unload in_process_test
-+.SH AUTHOR
-+Jeremy Hall
-+.PP
-+This manpage was written by Robert Jordens <jordens at debian.org> for Debian.
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jack_wait.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
-+.TH JACK_WAIT "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jack_wait \- JACK toolkit client to check and wait for existence/exit of jackd.  
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+\fBjack_wait\fR [ \fI-s\fR | \fI--server\fR servername ] [ \fI-t\fR | \fI--timeout\fR timeout_seconds [ \fI-cqwhv\fR ]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+\fBjack_wait\fR When invoked with \fI-c\fR it only checks for the existence of a jack server. When invoked with \fI-w\fR the
-+program will wait for a jackd to be available.
-+The \fI-q\fR makes it wait for the jackd to exit.
-+
-+.SH OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB-w\fR, \fB--wait\fR
-+.br
-+Wait for jackd to be available.
-+.TP
-+\fB-q\fR, \fB--quit\fR
-+.br
-+Wait for jackd quit.
-+.TP
-+\fB-c\fR, \fB--check\fR
-+.br
-+Only check for existence of jackd, and exit.
-+.TP
-+\fB-s\fR, \fB--server\fR \fIservername\fR
-+.br
-+Connect to the jack server named \fIservername\fR
-+.TP
-+\fB-t\fR, \fB--timeout\fR \fItimeout_seconds\fR
-+.br
-+Only wait \fItimeout_seconds\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB-h\fR, \fB--help\fR
-+.br
-+Display help/usage message
-+.TP
-+\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
-+.br
-+Output version information and exit
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jackd.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,547 @@
-+.TH "JACKD" "1" "!VERSION!" "!DATE!" ""
-+.SH "NAME"
-+jackd \- JACK Audio Connection Kit sound server
-+.SH "SYNOPSIS"
-+\fBjackd\fR [\fIoptions\fR] \fB\-d\fI backend \fR 
-+[\fIbackend\-parameters\fR]
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-\-help\fR
-+.SH "DESCRIPTION"
-+\fBjackd\fR is the JACK audio server daemon, a low\-latency audio
-+server.  Originally written for the
-+GNU/Linux operating system, it also supports Mac OS X and various Unix
-+platforms.  JACK can connect a number of different client applications
-+to an audio device and also to each other.  Most clients are external,
-+running in their own processes as normal applications.  JACK also
-+supports internal clients, which run within the \fBjackd\fR process
-+using a loadable "plugin" interface.
-+
-+JACK differs from other audio servers in being designed from the
-+ground up for professional audio work.  It focuses on two key areas:
-+synchronous execution of all clients, and low latency operation.
-+
-+For the latest JACK information, please consult the web site,
-+<\fBhttp://www.jackaudio.org\fR>.
-+.SH "OPTIONS"
-+.TP
-+\fB\-d, \-\-driver \fIbackend\fR [\fIbackend\-parameters\fR ]
-+.br
-+Select the audio interface backend.  The current list of supported
-+backends is: \fBalsa\fR, \fBcoreaudio\fR, \fBdummy\fR, \fBfreebob\fR,
-+\fBoss\fR \fBsun\fR and \fBportaudio\fR.  They are not all available
-+on all platforms.  All \fIbackend\-parameters\fR are optional.
-+
-+.TP
-+\fB\-h, \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+Print a brief usage message describing the main \fBjackd\fR options.
-+These do not include \fIbackend\-parameters\fR, which are listed using
-+the \fB\-\-help\fR option for each specific backend.  Examples below
-+show how to list them.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-m, \-\-no\-mlock\fR
-+Do not attempt to lock memory, even if \fB\-\-realtime\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n, \-\-name\fR \fIserver\-name\fR
-+Name this \fBjackd\fR instance \fIserver\-name\fR.  If unspecified,
-+this name comes from the \fB$JACK_DEFAULT_SERVER\fR environment
-+variable.  It will be "default" if that is not defined.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p, \-\-port\-max \fI n\fR
-+Set the maximum number of ports the JACK server can manage.  
-+The default value is 256.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-\-replace-registry\fR 
-+.br
-+Remove the shared memory registry used by all JACK server instances
-+before startup. This should rarely be used, and is intended only
-+for occasions when the structure of this registry changes in ways
-+that are incompatible across JACK versions (which is rare).
-+.TP
-+\fB\-R, \-\-realtime\fR 
-+.br
-+Use realtime scheduling (default = true). This is needed for reliable low\-latency
-+performance.  On many systems, it requires \fBjackd\fR to run with
-+special scheduler and memory allocation privileges, which may be
-+obtained in several ways. 
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r, \-\-no-realtime\fR
-+.br
-+Do not use realtime scheduling. 
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P, \-\-realtime\-priority \fIint\fR
-+When running \fB\-\-realtime\fR, set the scheduler priority to
-+\fIint\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-\-silent\fR
-+Silence any output during operation.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-T, \-\-temporary\fR
-+Exit once all clients have closed their connections.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-t, \-\-timeout \fIint\fR
-+.br
-+Set client timeout limit in milliseconds.  The default is 500 msec.
-+In realtime mode the client timeout must be smaller than the watchdog timeout (5000 msec).
-+.TP
-+\fB\-Z, \-\-nozombies\fR
-+.br
-+Prevent JACK from ever kicking out clients because they were too slow.
-+This cancels the effect any specified timeout value, but JACK and its clients are
-+still subject to the supervision of the watchdog thread or its equivalent.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-u, \-\-unlock\fR
-+.br
-+Unlock libraries GTK+, QT, FLTK, Wine.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-v, \-\-verbose\fR
-+Give verbose output.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-c, \-\-clocksource\fR (\fI c(ycle)\fR | \fI h(pet) \fR | \fI s(ystem) \fR)
-+Select a specific wall clock (Cycle Counter, HPET timer, System timer).
-+.TP
-+\fB\-V, \-\-version\fR
-+Print the current JACK version number and exit.
-+.SS ALSA BACKEND OPTIONS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C, \-\-capture\fR [ \fIname\fR ]
-+Provide only capture ports, unless combined with \-D or \-P.  Parameterally set 
-+capture device name.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-d, \-\-device \fIname\fR
-+.br
-+The ALSA pcm device \fIname\fR to use.  If none is specified, JACK will
-+use "hw:0", the first hardware card defined in \fB/etc/modules.conf\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-z, \-\-dither [rectangular,triangular,shaped,none]
-+Set dithering mode.  If \fBnone\fR or unspecified, dithering is off.
-+Only the first letter of the mode name is required.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-D, \-\-duplex\fR
-+Provide both capture and playback ports.  Defaults to on unless only one 
-+of \-P or \-C is specified.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-h, \-\-help\fR Print a brief usage message describing only the
-+\fBalsa\fR backend parameters.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-M, \-\-hwmeter\fR
-+.br
-+Enable hardware metering for devices that support it.  Otherwise, use
-+software metering.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-H, \-\-hwmon\fR
-+.br
-+Enable hardware monitoring of capture ports.  This is a method for
-+obtaining "zero latency" monitoring of audio input.  It requires
-+support in hardware and from the underlying ALSA device driver.
-+
-+When enabled, requests to monitor capture ports will be satisfied by
-+creating a direct signal path between audio interface input and output
-+connectors, with no processing by the host computer at all.  This
-+offers the lowest possible latency for the monitored signal.
-+
-+Presently (March 2003), only the RME Hammerfall series and cards based
-+on the ICE1712 chipset (M\-Audio Delta series, Terratec, and others)
-+support \fB\-\-hwmon\fR.  In the future, some consumer cards may also
-+be supported by modifying their mixer settings.
-+
-+Without \fB\-\-hwmon\fR, port monitoring requires JACK to read audio
-+into system memory, then copy it back out to the hardware again,
-+imposing the basic JACK system latency determined by the
-+\fB\-\-period\fR and \fB\-\-nperiods\fR parameters.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i, \-\-inchannels \fIint\fR
-+.br
-+Number of capture channels.  Default is maximum supported by hardware.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n, \-\-nperiods \fIint\fR
-+.br
-+Specify the number of periods of playback latency.  In seconds, this
-+corresponds to \fB\-\-nperiods\fR times \fB\-\-period\fR divided by
-+\fB\-\-rate\fR.  The default is 2, the minimum allowable.  For most
-+devices, there is no need for any other value with the
-+\fB\-\-realtime\fR option.  Without realtime privileges or with boards
-+providing unreliable interrupts (like ymfpci), a larger value may
-+yield fewer xruns.  This can also help if the system is not tuned for
-+reliable realtime scheduling.
-+
-+For most ALSA devices, the hardware buffer has exactly
-+\fB\-\-period\fR times \fB\-\-nperiods\fR frames.  Some devices demand
-+a larger buffer.  If so, JACK will use the smallest possible buffer
-+containing at least \fB\-\-nperiods\fR, but the playback latency does
-+not increase.
-+
-+For USB audio devices it is recommended to use \fB\-n 3\fR. Firewire
-+devices supported by FFADO (formerly Freebob) are configured with
-+\fB\-n 3\fR by default.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-o, \-\-outchannels \fIint\fR
-+.br
-+Number of playback channels.  Default is maximum supported by hardware.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P, \-\-playback\fR [ \fIname\fR ]
-+Provide only playback ports, unless combined with \-D or \-C.  Optionally set 
-+playback device name.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p, \-\-period \fIint\fR
-+.br
-+Specify the number of frames between JACK \fBprocess()\fR calls.  This
-+value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024.  If you need low 
-+latency, set \fB\-p\fR as low as you can go without seeing xruns.  A larger 
-+period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely.  The JACK 
-+capture latency in seconds is \fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r, \-\-rate \fIint\fR
-+Specify the sample rate.  The default is 48000.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-S, \-\-shorts
-+.br
-+Try to configure card for 16\-bit samples first, only trying 32\-bits if
-+unsuccessful.  Default is to prefer 32\-bit samples.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-s, \-\-softmode\fR 
-+.br
-+Ignore xruns reported by the ALSA driver.  This makes JACK less likely
-+to disconnect unresponsive ports when running without \fB\-\-realtime\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-X, \-\-midi \fR[\fIseq\fR|\fIraw\fR]
-+.br
-+Specify which ALSA MIDI system to provide access to. Using \fBraw\fR
-+will provide a set of JACK MIDI ports that correspond to each raw ALSA
-+device on the machine. Using \fBseq\fR will provide a set of JACK MIDI
-+ports that correspond to each ALSA "sequencer" client (which includes
-+each hardware MIDI port on the machine). \fBraw\fR provides slightly
-+better performance but does not permit JACK MIDI communication with
-+software written to use the ALSA "sequencer" API.
-+.SS COREAUDIO BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-c \-\-channel\fR
-+Maximum number of channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i \-\-channelin\fR
-+Maximum number of input channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-o \-\-channelout\fR
-+Maximum number of output channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C \-\-capture\fR
-+Whether or not to capture (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P \-\-playback\fR
-+Whether or not to playback (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-D \-\-duplex\fR
-+Capture and playback (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r \-\-rate\fR
-+Sample rate (default: 44100)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p \-\-period\fR
-+Frames per period (default: 128). Must be a power of 2.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n \-\-name\fR
-+Driver name (default: none)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-I \-\-id\fR
-+Audio Device ID (default: 0)
-+.SS DUMMY BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C, \-\-capture \fIint\fR
-+Specify number of capture ports. The default value is 2.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P, \-\-playback \fIint\fR
-+Specify number of playback ports. The default value is 2.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r, \-\-rate \fIint\fR
-+Specify sample rate. The default value is 48000.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p, \-\-period \fIint\fR
-+Specify the number of frames between JACK \fBprocess()\fR calls.  This
-+value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024.  If you need low 
-+latency, set \fB\-p\fR as low as you can go without seeing xruns.  A larger 
-+period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely.  The JACK 
-+capture latency in seconds is \fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-w, \-\-wait \fIint\fR 
-+Specify number of usecs to wait between engine processes. 
-+The default value is 21333.
-+
-+
-+.SS NET BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+
-+.TP
-+ \fB\-i, \-\-audio\-ins \fIint\fR
-+Number of capture channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+ \fB\-o, \-\-audio\-outs \fIint\fR
-+Number of playback channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+ \fB\-I, \-\-midi\-ins \fIint\fR
-+Number of midi capture channels (default: 1)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-O, \-\-midi\-outs \fIint\fR
-+Number of midi playback channels (default: 1)
-+.TP
-+ \fB\-r, \-\-rate \fIint\fR
-+Sample rate (default: 48000)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-p, \-\-period \fIint\fR
-+Frames per period (default: 1024)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-n, \-\-num\-periods \fIint\fR
-+Network latency setting in no. of periods (default: 5)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-l, \-\-listen\-port \fIint\fR
-+The socket port we are listening on for sync packets (default: 3000)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-f, \-\-factor \fIint\fR
-+Factor for sample rate reduction (default: 1)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-u, \-\-upstream\-factor \fIint\fR
-+Factor for sample rate reduction on the upstream (default: 0)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-c, \-\-celt \fIint\fR
-+sets celt encoding and number of kbits per channel (default: 0)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-b, \-\-bit\-depth \fIint\fR
-+Sample bit\-depth (0 for float, 8 for 8bit and 16 for 16bit) (default: 0)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-t, \-\-transport\-sync \fIint\fR
-+Whether to slave the transport to the master transport (default: true)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-a, \-\-autoconf \fIint\fR
-+Whether to use Autoconfig, or just start. (default: true)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-R, \-\-redundancy \fIint\fR
-+Send packets N times (default: 1)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-e, \-\-native\-endian \fIint\fR
-+Dont convert samples to network byte order. (default: false)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-J, \-\-jitterval \fIint\fR
-+attempted jitterbuffer microseconds on master (default: 0)
-+.TP 
-+\fB\-D, \-\-always\-deadline \fIint\fR
-+always use deadline (default: false)
-+
-+
-+.SS OSS BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r, \-\-rate \fIint\fR
-+Specify the sample rate.  The default is 48000.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p, \-\-period \fIint\fR
-+Specify the number of frames between JACK \fBprocess()\fR calls.  This
-+value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024.  If you need low 
-+latency, set \fB\-p\fR as low as you can go without seeing xruns.  A larger 
-+period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely.  The JACK 
-+capture latency in seconds is \fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n, \-\-nperiods \fIint\fR
-+Specify the number of periods in the hardware buffer.  The default is
-+2.  The period size (\fB\-p\fR) times \fB\-\-nperiods\fR times four is
-+the JACK buffer size in bytes.  The JACK output latency in seconds is
-+\fB\-\-nperiods\fR times \fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-w, \-\-wordlength \fIint\fR
-+Specify the sample size in bits. The default is 16.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i, \-\-inchannels \fIint\fR
-+Specify how many channels to capture (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-o, \-\-outchannels \fIint\fR
-+Specify number of playback channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C, \-\-capture \fIdevice_file\fR
-+Specify input device for capture (default: /dev/dsp)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P, \-\-playback \fIdevice_file\fR
-+Specify output device for playback (default: /dev/dsp)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-b, \-\-ignorehwbuf \fIboolean\fR
-+Specify, whether to ignore hardware period size (default: false)
-+.SS SUN BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r, \-\-rate \fIint\fR
-+Specify the sample rate.  The default is 48000.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p, \-\-period \fIint\fR
-+Specify the number of frames between JACK \fBprocess()\fR calls.  This
-+value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024.  If you need low 
-+latency, set \fB\-p\fR as low as you can go without seeing xruns.  A larger 
-+period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely.  The JACK 
-+capture latency in seconds is \fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n, \-\-nperiods \fIint\fR
-+Specify the number of periods in the hardware buffer.  The default is
-+2.  The period size (\fB\-p\fR) times \fB\-\-nperiods\fR times four
-+(assuming 2 channels 16-bit samples) is the JACK buffer size in bytes.
-+The JACK output latency in seconds is \fB\-\-nperiods\fR times
-+\fB\-\-period\fR divided by \fB\-\-rate\fR.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-w, \-\-wordlength \fIint\fR
-+Specify the sample size in bits. The default is 16.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i, \-\-inchannels \fIint\fR
-+Specify how many channels to capture (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-o, \-\-outchannels \fIint\fR
-+Specify number of playback channels (default: 2)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C, \-\-capture \fIdevice_file\fR
-+Specify input device for capture (default: /dev/audio)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P, \-\-playback \fIdevice_file\fR
-+Specify output device for playback (default: /dev/audio)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-b, \-\-ignorehwbuf \fIboolean\fR
-+Specify, whether to ignore hardware period size (default: false)
-+.SS PORTAUDIO BACKEND PARAMETERS
-+.TP
-+\fB\-c \-\-channel\fR
-+Maximum number of channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-i \-\-channelin\fR
-+Maximum number of input channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-o \-\-channelout\fR
-+Maximum number of output channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-C \-\-capture\fR
-+Whether or not to capture (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-P \-\-playback\fR
-+Whether or not to playback (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-D \-\-duplex\fR
-+Capture and playback (default: true)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-r \-\-rate\fR
-+Sample rate (default: 48000)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-p \-\-period\fR
-+Frames per period (default: 1024). Must be a power of 2.
-+.TP
-+\fB\-n \-\-name\fR
-+Driver name (default: none)
-+.TP
-+\fB\-z \-\-dither\fR
-+Dithering mode (default: none)
-+.SH "EXAMPLES"
-+.PP
-+Print usage message for the parameters specific to each backend.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d alsa \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d coreaudio \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d net \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d dummy \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d firewire \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d freebob \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d oss \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d sun \-\-help\fR
-+.br
-+\fBjackd \-d portaudio \-\-help\fR
-+.PP
-+Run the JACK daemon with realtime priority using the first ALSA
-+hardware card defined in \fB/etc/modules.conf\fR.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackstart \-\-realtime \-\-driver=alsa\fR
-+.PP
-+Run the JACK daemon with low latency giving verbose output, which can
-+be helpful for trouble\-shooting system latency problems.  A
-+reasonably well\-tuned system with a good sound card and a
-+low\-latency kernel can handle these values reliably.  Some can do
-+better.  If you get xrun messages, try a larger buffer.  Tuning a
-+system for low latency can be challenging.  The JACK FAQ,
-+.I http://jackit.sourceforge.net/docs/faq.php\fR
-+has some useful suggestions.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackstart \-Rv \-d alsa \-p 128 \-n 2 \-r 44100\fR
-+.PP
-+Run \fBjackd\fR with realtime priority using the "sblive" ALSA device
-+defined in ~/.asoundrc.  Apply shaped dithering to playback audio.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-R \-d alsa \-d sblive \-\-dither=shaped\fR
-+.PP
-+Run \fBjackd\fR with no special privileges using the second ALSA
-+hardware card defined in \fB/etc/modules.conf\fR.  Any xruns reported
-+by the ALSA backend will be ignored.  The larger buffer helps reduce
-+data loss.  Rectangular dithering will be used for playback.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d alsa \-d hw:1 \-p2048 \-n3 \-\-softmode \-zr\fR
-+.PP
-+Run \fBjackd\fR in full\-duplex mode using the ALSA hw:0,0 device for 
-+playback and the hw:0,2 device for capture.
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d alsa \-P hw:0,0 \-C hw:0,2\fR
-+.PP
-+Run \fBjackd\fR in playback\-only mode using the ALSA hw:0,0 device. 
-+.IP
-+\fBjackd \-d alsa \-P hw:0,0\fR
-+.SH "ENVIRONMENT"
-+.br
-+JACK is evolving a mechanism for automatically starting the server
-+when needed.  Any client started without a running JACK server will
-+attempt to start one itself using the command line found in the first
-+line of \fB$HOME/.jackdrc\fR if it exists, or \fB/etc/jackdrc\fR if it
-+does not.  If neither file exists, a built\-in default command will be
-+used, including the \fB\-T\fR flag, which causes the server to shut
-+down when all clients have exited.
-+
-+As a transition, this only happens when \fB$JACK_START_SERVER\fR is
-+defined in the environment of the calling process.  In the future this
-+will become normal behavior.  In either case, defining
-+\fB$JACK_NO_START_SERVER\fR disables this feature.
-+
-+To change where JACK looks for the backend drivers, set
-+\fB$JACK_DRIVER_DIR\fR.
-+
-+\fB$JACK_DEFAULT_SERVER\fR specifies the default server name.  If not
-+defined, the string "default" is used.  If set in their respective
-+environments, this affects \fBjackd\fR unless its \fB\-\-name\fR
-+parameter is set, and all JACK clients unless they pass an explicit
-+name to \fBjack_client_open()\fR.
-+
-+.SH "SEE ALSO:"
-+.PP
-+.I http://www.jackaudio.org
-+.br
-+The official JACK website with news, docs and a list of JACK clients.
-+.PP
-+.I http://jackaudio.org/email
-+.br
-+The JACK developers' mailing list.  Subscribe, to take part in
-+development of JACK or JACK clients.  User questions are also welcome,
-+there is no user-specific mailing list.
-+.PP
-+.I http://www.jackosx.com/
-+.br
-+Tools specific to the Mac OS X version of JACK.
-+.PP
-+.I http://www.alsa\-project.org
-+.br
-+The Advanced Linux Sound Architecture.
-+.SH "BUGS"
-+Please report bugs to
-+.br
-+.I http://trac.jackaudio.org/
-+.SH "AUTHORS"
-+Architect and original implementor: Paul Davis
-+.PP
-+Original design Group: Paul Davis, David Olofson, Kai Vehmanen, Benno Sennoner,
-+Richard Guenther, and other members of the Linux Audio Developers group.
-+.PP
-+Programming: Paul Davis, Jack O'Quin, Taybin Rutkin, Stephane Letz, Fernando
-+Pablo Lopez-Lezcano, Steve Harris, Jeremy Hall, Andy Wingo, Kai
-+Vehmanen, Melanie Thielker, Jussi Laako, Tilman Linneweh, Johnny
-+Petrantoni, Torben Hohn.
-+.PP
-+Manpage written by Stefan Schwandter, Jack O'Quin and Alexandre
-+Prokoudine.
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/jackrec.0
-@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
-+.TH JACKREC "1" "!DATE!" "!VERSION!"
-+.SH NAME
-+jackrec \- JACK toolkit client for recording audio
-+.SH SYNOPSIS
-+.B jackrec
-+\-f filename \-d seconds [ \-b bitdepth ] port1 [ port2 ... ]
-+.SH DESCRIPTION
-+.B jackrec is a basic, but useful, audio recorder that will record
-+audio from 1 or more JACK ports to a file on disk. The file format is
-+always RIFF/WAV, with samples stored as signed integers. The sample
-+bit depth can be selected using the \fI-b\fR option. The file will
-+have as many channels as there are ports specified on the command line
-+- each channel will contain the data recorded from one port. The user
-+should generally specify the duration (in seconds) using the \fI-d\fR
-+option. If not specified, jackrec will record until terminated by a
-+signal (eg. from Ctrl-c).
-+.PP
-+This application is not intended to be a heavy duty audio recorder,
-+and originated as an example client to show how to handle threading
-+and disk I/O in a JACK client. However, it is a useful, simple
-+recorder and is included in the JACK toolkit as a result.
-+
-+
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/man/wscript
-@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
-+#! /usr/bin/env python
-+# encoding: utf-8
-+
-+import Build
-+import re
-+import os
-+import misc
-+
-+
-+def build(bld):
-+    bld.exec_command("cd man ; sh fill_template %s" % bld.env['JACK_VERSION'])
-+    bld.install_files(bld.env['MANDIR'], '*.1')
-+
---- a/wscript
-+++ b/wscript
-@@ -62,6 +62,7 @@
- 
-     opt.add_option('--libdir', type='string', help="Library directory [Default: <prefix>/lib]")
-     opt.add_option('--libdir32', type='string', help="32bit Library directory [Default: <prefix>/lib32]")
-+    opt.add_option('--mandir', type='string', help="Manpage directory [Default: <prefix>/share/man/man1]")
-     opt.add_option('--dbus', action='store_true', default=False, help='Enable D-Bus JACK (jackdbus)')
-     opt.add_option('--classic', action='store_true', default=False, help='Force enable standard JACK (jackd) even if D-Bus JACK (jackdbus) is enabled too')
-     opt.add_option('--doxygen', action='store_true', default=False, help='Enable build of doxygen documentation')
-@@ -163,6 +164,11 @@
-     else:
-         conf.env['LIBDIR'] = conf.env['PREFIX'] + '/lib'
- 
-+    if Options.options.libdir:
-+        conf.env['MANDIR'] = conf.env['PREFIX'] + Options.options.mandir
-+    else:
-+        conf.env['MANDIR'] = conf.env['PREFIX'] + '/share/man/man1'
-+
-     if conf.env['BUILD_DEBUG']:
-         conf.env.append_unique('CXXFLAGS', '-g')
-         conf.env.append_unique('CCFLAGS', '-g')
-@@ -267,6 +273,7 @@
-         bld.add_subdirs('linux')
-         bld.add_subdirs('example-clients')
-         bld.add_subdirs('tests')
-+        bld.add_subdirs('man')
-         if bld.env['BUILD_JACKDBUS'] == True:
-            bld.add_subdirs('dbus')
-   
diff --git a/debian/patches/series b/debian/patches/series
index 08d51e3..42e5abc 100644
--- a/debian/patches/series
+++ b/debian/patches/series
@@ -3,6 +3,5 @@ hppa-parallel.patch
 kfreebsd-fix
 alpha_ia64-sigsegv
 0001_jackrec-rename.patch
-0002_manpages.patch
 1001_connect.patch
 hurd.patch

-- 
jackd2 packaging



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