What does the +d option in the sequencer do for you?
I haven't seen anything different, but have tried both -d and +d.
What I was hoping for was a way to tell what channels connected, in
order to determine what ones didn't make a connection.
Also, according to the docs, to stop a Unix sequencer program you do
'kill -TERM', but the only way I've been able to kill the things is to
do a 'kill -KILL'. Is this something wrong, or just a documentation
oversight?
Finally, sequencer 2.0.12 programs, under both Linux and NetBSD, seem
to have problems with re-connecting to a channel when the channel
disappears, and comes back on. The first time, it works most of the
time, but the second, it will almost always crash.
David Dudley
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