Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-15 Thread Tim via users
Allegedly, on or about 15 November 2018, Doug sent:
> I realize that this is off-topic, but it sounds like you are an
> expert on modern TV equipment, so I have this question:

I work in video production, and I occasionally service such equipment.

> I have a Samsung 24" HDTV (1920 x 1080) purchased around last May.
> It has no electrical audio output, and of course, the built-in
> speaker sound is terrible. The only audio output is via IR.

Expensive TVs, crap sound, so you buy yet another hideously expensive
sound system.  I really hate that.  In the past, even modest priced TVs
had decent sound and pictures.  And then you have the question of how
do you get audio out of them?  HDMI, converter boxes, the headphone
socket (ugh)?

What do you mean by IR, though?  The optical digital output using a
TOSlink cable?  (Which isn't infra-red, by the way, it's a visible
red.)  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOSLINK


> I have purchased three DAC units to feed a small audio amplifier and
> a couple of bookshelf-type speakers.  On voice peaks, sometimes there
> is a brief dropout of the audio. This happens with any of the DACs.I
> do not believe that this is caused by the amplifier, since I used the
> same amp on a previous TV that had a real electrical 
> audio output.

I'd either suspect the DACs or the TV creating the signal going to them
(optical outputs are likely to be from a processed audio signal, not
just piping the original data stream through).  Do you have another
device with an similar digital output, such as CD or DVD player, that
you can test against?

Or do you mean very loud audio (as in you're running the speakers hard,
not that the audio signal went loud but while you were listening at a
quiet level).  In that case, you may be running into thermal limiters
in your amplifiers or speakers.

-- 
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Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-15 Thread Doug


On 11/15/2018 03:00 PM, Doug wrote:


On 11/15/2018 11:05 AM, Tim via users wrote:

Allegedly, on or about 12 November 2018, Jiri Vanek sent:

Yes. I tried four cables. Each of them on both TVs. Each behaved same
for me. *however* factr that I had tried several different cables,
does not mean I used different type of cable.  they are very
likely  from same shop in my neighbourhood, likely same vendor and
price level, just bought in different times.

When it comes to cabling, with HDMI, one cable or another is not going
to affect sound (or no sound) going to the monitor.  They're all
supposed to carry sound and picture (the thing is aimed at consumers
plugging DVD players, and the like, into their television set, with one
cable carrying everything).

Generally speaking HDMI cables work, or they don't work.  Really crappy
ones that are too long for their own good will either give no sound and
picture, at all, or they'll continuously stutter between working and
not working.

There's a bunch of data lines in standard cables that carry sound and
picture, control, identification, etc.  There are some optional extras,
such as ethernet, and an audio return channel (ARC), but which won't be
a part of your issue.

ARC is to do with home theatre, such as a DVD player connected through
an audio amplifier to a television, with just one HDMI lead between
player and amplifier, and one HDMI lead between amplifier and TV.  So
far, playing a DVD on your TV and listening to it on your stereo is a
straight forward obviously easy thing to support, all the signals are
going in one direction (outward from the DVD player).  ARC allows your
TV to send sound back to the amplifier, so you can watch broadcast
television, and hear it through your stereo, without having to patch in
yet another cable.  That's why there's only one ARC socket on your TV,
you're only expected to connect one amplifier to the TV.  If you have a
multitude of players (DVD, video games, streaming boxes, etc), you
either connect each direct to multiple TV inputs, or to multiple inputs
on your amplifier in the middle.

I realize that this is off-topic, but it sounds like you are an expert 
on modern TV equipment, so I have this question:


I have a Samsung * HDTV (1920 x 1080) purchased around last May. 
It has no electrical audio output, and of


course, the built-in speaker sound is terrible. The only audio output 
is via IR. I have purchased three DAC units


to feed a small audio amplifier and a couple of bookshelf-type 
speakers. On voice peaks, sometimes there is


a brief dropout of the audio. This happens with any of the DACs.I do 
not believe that this is caused by the amplifier,


since I used the same amp on a previous TV that had a real electrical 
audio output. The question: The DACs were not


really expensive units, I don't remember what I paid for them, but 
probably around $20. Is this the problem, or is the


problem inherent in the TV?  (BTW, this is the second of this 
particular model--the first one I had had serious sound


problems and the store, PCRichard & Sons, finally exchanged it.)  If 
you think I need a more expensive DAC, what


sort  of specs do I need and where do I get such a device? I do not 
want one of those lay-on-the-floor all-in-one


speaker systems, whatever they are called--I have a perfectly good 
audio system as it stands. and the


floor units would block access to the cable box by the remote.

Thanx for your input--

Doug
___

Please make that 32 inch!  Now I hope it's right!

--Doug
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Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-15 Thread Doug


On 11/15/2018 03:00 PM, Doug wrote:


On 11/15/2018 11:05 AM, Tim via users wrote:

Allegedly, on or about 12 November 2018, Jiri Vanek sent:

Yes. I tried four cables. Each of them on both TVs. Each behaved same
for me. *however* factr that I had tried several different cables,
does not mean I used different type of cable.  they are very
likely  from same shop in my neighbourhood, likely same vendor and
price level, just bought in different times.

When it comes to cabling, with HDMI, one cable or another is not going
to affect sound (or no sound) going to the monitor.  They're all
supposed to carry sound and picture (the thing is aimed at consumers
plugging DVD players, and the like, into their television set, with one
cable carrying everything).

Generally speaking HDMI cables work, or they don't work.  Really crappy
ones that are too long for their own good will either give no sound and
picture, at all, or they'll continuously stutter between working and
not working.

There's a bunch of data lines in standard cables that carry sound and
picture, control, identification, etc.  There are some optional extras,
such as ethernet, and an audio return channel (ARC), but which won't be
a part of your issue.

ARC is to do with home theatre, such as a DVD player connected through
an audio amplifier to a television, with just one HDMI lead between
player and amplifier, and one HDMI lead between amplifier and TV.  So
far, playing a DVD on your TV and listening to it on your stereo is a
straight forward obviously easy thing to support, all the signals are
going in one direction (outward from the DVD player).  ARC allows your
TV to send sound back to the amplifier, so you can watch broadcast
television, and hear it through your stereo, without having to patch in
yet another cable.  That's why there's only one ARC socket on your TV,
you're only expected to connect one amplifier to the TV.  If you have a
multitude of players (DVD, video games, streaming boxes, etc), you
either connect each direct to multiple TV inputs, or to multiple inputs
on your amplifier in the middle.

I realize that this is off-topic, but it sounds like you are an expert 
on modern TV equipment, so I have this question:


I have a Samsung 24"

***
HDTV (1920 x 1080) purchased around last May. It has no electrical 
audio output, and of


course, the built-in speaker sound is terrible. The only audio output 
is via IR. I have purchased three DAC units


to feed a small audio amplifier and a couple of bookshelf-type 
speakers. On voice peaks, sometimes there is


a brief dropout of the audio. This happens with any of the DACs.I do 
not believe that this is caused by the amplifier,


since I used the same amp on a previous TV that had a real electrical 
audio output. The question: The DACs were not


really expensive units, I don't remember what I paid for them, but 
probably around $20. Is this the problem, or is the


problem inherent in the TV?  (BTW, this is the second of this 
particular model--the first one I had had serious sound


problems and the store, PCRichard & Sons, finally exchanged it.)  If 
you think I need a more expensive DAC, what


sort  of specs do I need and where do I get such a device? I do not 
want one of those lay-on-the-floor all-in-one


speaker systems, whatever they are called--I have a perfectly good 
audio system as it stands. and the


floor units would block access to the cable box by the remote.

Thanx for your input--


*** Should have said 30"


Doug

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Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-15 Thread Doug


On 11/15/2018 11:05 AM, Tim via users wrote:

Allegedly, on or about 12 November 2018, Jiri Vanek sent:

Yes. I tried four cables. Each of them on both TVs. Each behaved same
for me. *however* factr that I had tried several different cables,
does not mean I used different type of cable.  they are very
likely  from same shop in my neighbourhood, likely same vendor and
price level, just bought in different times.

When it comes to cabling, with HDMI, one cable or another is not going
to affect sound (or no sound) going to the monitor.  They're all
supposed to carry sound and picture (the thing is aimed at consumers
plugging DVD players, and the like, into their television set, with one
cable carrying everything).

Generally speaking HDMI cables work, or they don't work.  Really crappy
ones that are too long for their own good will either give no sound and
picture, at all, or they'll continuously stutter between working and
not working.

There's a bunch of data lines in standard cables that carry sound and
picture, control, identification, etc.  There are some optional extras,
such as ethernet, and an audio return channel (ARC), but which won't be
a part of your issue.

ARC is to do with home theatre, such as a DVD player connected through
an audio amplifier to a television, with just one HDMI lead between
player and amplifier, and one HDMI lead between amplifier and TV.  So
far, playing a DVD on your TV and listening to it on your stereo is a
straight forward obviously easy thing to support, all the signals are
going in one direction (outward from the DVD player).  ARC allows your
TV to send sound back to the amplifier, so you can watch broadcast
television, and hear it through your stereo, without having to patch in
yet another cable.  That's why there's only one ARC socket on your TV,
you're only expected to connect one amplifier to the TV.  If you have a
multitude of players (DVD, video games, streaming boxes, etc), you
either connect each direct to multiple TV inputs, or to multiple inputs
on your amplifier in the middle.

I realize that this is off-topic, but it sounds like you are an expert 
on modern TV equipment, so I have this question:


I have a Samsung 24" HDTV (1920 x 1080) purchased around last May. It 
has no electrical audio output, and of


course, the built-in speaker sound is terrible. The only audio output is 
via IR. I have purchased three DAC units


to feed a small audio amplifier and a couple of bookshelf-type speakers. 
On voice peaks, sometimes there is


a brief dropout of the audio. This happens with any of the DACs.I do not 
believe that this is caused by the amplifier,


since I used the same amp on a previous TV that had a real electrical 
audio output. The question: The DACs were not


really expensive units, I don't remember what I paid for them, but 
probably around $20. Is this the problem, or is the


problem inherent in the TV?  (BTW, this is the second of this particular 
model--the first one I had had serious sound


problems and the store, PCRichard & Sons, finally exchanged it.)  If you 
think I need a more expensive DAC, what


sort  of specs do I need and where do I get such a device? I do not want 
one of those lay-on-the-floor all-in-one


speaker systems, whatever they are called--I have a perfectly good audio 
system as it stands. and the


floor units would block access to the cable box by the remote.

Thanx for your input--

Doug
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Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-15 Thread Tim via users
Allegedly, on or about 12 November 2018, Jiri Vanek sent:
> Yes. I tried four cables. Each of them on both TVs. Each behaved same
> for me. *however* factr that I had tried several different cables,
> does not mean I used different type of cable.  they are very
> likely  from same shop in my neighbourhood, likely same vendor and
> price level, just bought in different times.

When it comes to cabling, with HDMI, one cable or another is not going
to affect sound (or no sound) going to the monitor.  They're all
supposed to carry sound and picture (the thing is aimed at consumers
plugging DVD players, and the like, into their television set, with one
cable carrying everything).

Generally speaking HDMI cables work, or they don't work.  Really crappy
ones that are too long for their own good will either give no sound and
picture, at all, or they'll continuously stutter between working and
not working.

There's a bunch of data lines in standard cables that carry sound and
picture, control, identification, etc.  There are some optional extras,
such as ethernet, and an audio return channel (ARC), but which won't be
a part of your issue.

ARC is to do with home theatre, such as a DVD player connected through
an audio amplifier to a television, with just one HDMI lead between
player and amplifier, and one HDMI lead between amplifier and TV.  So
far, playing a DVD on your TV and listening to it on your stereo is a
straight forward obviously easy thing to support, all the signals are
going in one direction (outward from the DVD player).  ARC allows your
TV to send sound back to the amplifier, so you can watch broadcast
television, and hear it through your stereo, without having to patch in
yet another cable.  That's why there's only one ARC socket on your TV,
you're only expected to connect one amplifier to the TV.  If you have a
multitude of players (DVD, video games, streaming boxes, etc), you
either connect each direct to multiple TV inputs, or to multiple inputs
on your amplifier in the middle.

-- 
[tim@localhost ~]$ uname -rsvp
Linux 4.16.11-100.fc26.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue May 22 20:02:12 UTC 2018 x86_64

Boilerplate:  All mail to my mailbox is automatically deleted.
There is no point trying to privately email me, I only get to see
the messages posted to the mailing list.

I'd just like to say that vinyl record crackles and pops are far
less annoying than digigigigital mu-u-u-u-usic hiccicicicups and
yooo-u tu-be ... pauses.
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Re: [fedora-arm] Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-12 Thread Jiri Vanek
On 11/9/18 11:50 AM, Peter Robinson wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 8:29 AM Jiri Vanek  wrote:
>>
>> So this is getting more and more funny.
>> None of your recommendations helped:(( bwd luck, bad thak you a lto anyway 
>> for brainstromign.
>>
>>
>> I borrowed one of the  hdmi->Vga+jack boxes (I think it isi this one:
>> https://iczc.cz/dkqm7qdad2hnra334bu7igbro5_7/obrazek) and
>>
>> Now fedora have audio, and raspbian no:D
>>
>> Considering how hdmi protocol works, I really think that fedroa simply tries 
>> newer communication
>> first (where to change this?) , but fallbeack do not work.  And raspbian is 
>> trying older
>> communication first, and fails to upgrade the communication.
>>
>>
>> Obviously there is some little green goblin in the middle of the way in HDMI 
>> :(
> 
> Have you tried a different HDMI cable? I've seen issues where people
> report problems and try a different cable and it's fine. There's

Yes. I tried four cables. Each of them on both TVs. Each behaved same for me. 
*however* factr that I
had tried several different cables, does not mean I used different type of 
cable.  they are very
likely  from same shop in my neighbourhood, likely same vendor and price level, 
just bought in
different times.

> completely different code paths between the upstream fully open stack
> that Fedora uses and Raspbian which uses the closed source proprietary
> driver where the firmware actually does quite a bit of the work.

I'm aware of this difference in view like "it exists". But do not know details 
of the difference
between proprietary and open implementation.
I was hoping for magical switch for HDMI, but looks lie there is none.

Thanx a lot!
  J.
> 
>>
>> On 11/1/18 8:02 PM, stan wrote:
>>> On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 13:55:53 +0100
>>> Jiri Vanek  wrote:
>>>
 sudo dnf downgrade kernel
 Last metadata expiration check: 2 days, 19:55:43 ago on Mon 29 Oct
 2018 05:55:23 PM CET. Package kernel of lowest version already
 installed, cannot downgrade it. same for alsa*

 I failed to updte kernel. at least Network stopped working:(
>>>
>>> Here is the last 4.17 kernel for f29,
>>>
>>> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1088633
>>>
>>> You can try a *newer* kernel, the latest 4.18 kernel, 4.18-16
>>>
>>> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1154877
>>>
>>> or the first 4.19 kernel for 4.30.  It should work just fine on f29, I
>>> think, since I have been compiling it and running it on f28.
>>
>> I was allready told that for rPI rawhide is bringing many positive changes. 
>> So this may be one of
>> those. Will try later in the development cycle.
>>>
>>> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1155120
>>>
>>> Is there a reason you are using the 4.18-12 kernel?
>> Nothing particular. It was in stablw when I preapred the baord, and next 
>> udpate break networking. So
>> I turned back.
>>>
>>> Have you tried updating your system from the repositories since install?
>>>
>>> Here is an older version of alsa you can try.  There were two updates
>>> of alsa only for f29 and f30 after this, so it is a possible difference
>>> from f28.
>>>
>>> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1106034
>>>
>>> Download the binary rpms for the packages you have installed, then from
>>> the directory where they are type, as root,
>>>
>>> dnf -C downgrade [list of rpms]
>>>
>>> If this doesn't solve your problem, I'm stumped.  You should have sound.
>>>
>>
>>
>> thanx a lot!
>>   J.
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-- 
Jiri Vanek
Senior QE engineer, OpenJDK QE lead, Mgr.
Red Hat Czech
jva...@redhat.comM: +420775390109
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-08 Thread Jiri Vanek
So this is getting more and more funny.
None of your recommendations helped:(( bwd luck, bad thak you a lto anyway for 
brainstromign.


I borrowed one of the  hdmi->Vga+jack boxes (I think it isi this one:
https://iczc.cz/dkqm7qdad2hnra334bu7igbro5_7/obrazek) and

Now fedora have audio, and raspbian no:D

Considering how hdmi protocol works, I really think that fedroa simply tries 
newer communication
first (where to change this?) , but fallbeack do not work.  And raspbian is 
trying older
communication first, and fails to upgrade the communication.


Obviously there is some little green goblin in the middle of the way in HDMI :(



On 11/1/18 8:02 PM, stan wrote:
> On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 13:55:53 +0100
> Jiri Vanek  wrote:
> 
>> sudo dnf downgrade kernel
>> Last metadata expiration check: 2 days, 19:55:43 ago on Mon 29 Oct
>> 2018 05:55:23 PM CET. Package kernel of lowest version already
>> installed, cannot downgrade it. same for alsa*
>>
>> I failed to updte kernel. at least Network stopped working:(
> 
> Here is the last 4.17 kernel for f29,
> 
> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1088633
> 
> You can try a *newer* kernel, the latest 4.18 kernel, 4.18-16
> 
> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1154877
> 
> or the first 4.19 kernel for 4.30.  It should work just fine on f29, I
> think, since I have been compiling it and running it on f28.

I was allready told that for rPI rawhide is bringing many positive changes. So 
this may be one of
those. Will try later in the development cycle.
> 
> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1155120
> 
> Is there a reason you are using the 4.18-12 kernel?
Nothing particular. It was in stablw when I preapred the baord, and next udpate 
break networking. So
I turned back.
> 
> Have you tried updating your system from the repositories since install?
> 
> Here is an older version of alsa you can try.  There were two updates
> of alsa only for f29 and f30 after this, so it is a possible difference
> from f28.
> 
> https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1106034
> 
> Download the binary rpms for the packages you have installed, then from
> the directory where they are type, as root,
> 
> dnf -C downgrade [list of rpms]
> 
> If this doesn't solve your problem, I'm stumped.  You should have sound.
> 


thanx a lot!
  J.
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-01 Thread Jiri Vanek
On 10/30/18 6:23 PM, stan wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Oct 2018 13:41:50 +0100
> Jiri Vanek  wrote:
> 
> I'm not familiar with hdmi, but I'll try to give you some ideas.
> 
>> I have f29 (ernel kernel-4.18.12-300.fc29  ) on  machine, which is
>> changing its place from time to time - between two TVs. Old, and
>> older:)
>>
>> Both are connected by HDMI. Video output is fine, even acceleration
>> is working,  but sound work only on newer of those two.
>>
>> I don't know if this is regression, because this machine replaced 32b
>> rapbery2 with kodi, which was working without issues on both TVs (but
>> was eaten by (not mine) dog)
> 
> Can you try an older version of the kernel?  Or alsa?  It sure sounds
> like a regression, but the audio information doesn't support that.  Just
> a check to be sure.

sudo dnf downgrade kernel
Last metadata expiration check: 2 days, 19:55:43 ago on Mon 29 Oct 2018 
05:55:23 PM CET.
Package kernel of lowest version already installed, cannot downgrade it.
same for alsa*

I failed to updte kernel. at least Network stopped working:(

> 
>>
>> I was following
>> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_debug_sound_problems but had
>> not found much:
>>  - with removed pulseaudio, the aplay -vv segfaults
>>  - I really on pulseaudio anyway, as I need to transfer sound to
>> this machine over network
>>
>>  - the diff of alsa-info.sh's is really minimal [1], only
>> [cite]
>> state.vc4hdmi {
>>  control.1 {
>>  iface PCM
>>  name ELD
>>  value '1700671200014c2d9d02
>> for non working and
>>  value '1700671200014c2d9b03
>> for working
>> [/cite]
> 
> If alsa didn't know about the interface for the failing device, it
> wouldn't be able to specify a control.  Are there any warnings or
> errors in the journal during boot, or when trying to play?  
>>
>>   - when alsamixer is opened, then the default looks like working,
>> and the job on old tv; but not do nothing older tv.
>>   - when alsamixer -c0 is opened, then the  vc4-hdmi reports no
>> control for selected device for *both* tvs (which is same as f6 and
>> selecting vc4-hdmi)
>>
>> Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> 
> Great troubleshooting report, very complete.
> 
> Is it possible that you changed a setting on the older TV that isn't
> working?  Because, like you said, it *should* be working.
> 
> What happens if you just use an audio player to send only audio to the
> older TV from the command line?  Maybe try such with debugging enabled.
> Or look in the logs to see if it complains about anything.
> 
> e.g. mplayer -vv [audio-file]
> or
> mplayer -vv -novideo [video-file]
> 
> Since the hdmi is the only device, it should route to the TV to play.
> I think.
> 
> If there are no errors and it acts like it is playing, that really
> points to the older TV having an issue.
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-11-01 Thread Jiri Vanek
On 10/30/18 6:23 PM, stan wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Oct 2018 13:41:50 +0100
> Jiri Vanek  wrote:
> 
> I'm not familiar with hdmi, but I'll try to give you some ideas.
> 
>> I have f29 (ernel kernel-4.18.12-300.fc29  ) on  machine, which is
>> changing its place from time to time - between two TVs. Old, and
>> older:)
>>
>> Both are connected by HDMI. Video output is fine, even acceleration
>> is working,  but sound work only on newer of those two.
>>
>> I don't know if this is regression, because this machine replaced 32b
>> rapbery2 with kodi, which was working without issues on both TVs (but
>> was eaten by (not mine) dog)
> 
> Can you try an older version of the kernel?  Or alsa?  It sure sounds
> like a regression, but the audio information doesn't support that.  Just
> a check to be sure.

sure. will do. Just will tak e abit longer.
> 
>>
>> I was following
>> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_debug_sound_problems but had
>> not found much:
>>  - with removed pulseaudio, the aplay -vv segfaults
>>  - I really on pulseaudio anyway, as I need to transfer sound to
>> this machine over network
>>
>>  - the diff of alsa-info.sh's is really minimal [1], only
>> [cite]
>> state.vc4hdmi {
>>  control.1 {
>>  iface PCM
>>  name ELD
>>  value '1700671200014c2d9d02
>> for non working and
>>  value '1700671200014c2d9b03
>> for working
>> [/cite]
> 
> If alsa didn't know about the interface for the failing device, it
> wouldn't be able to specify a control.  Are there any warnings or
> errors in the journal during boot, or when trying to play?  
>>
>>   - when alsamixer is opened, then the default looks like working,
>> and the job on old tv; but not do nothing older tv.
>>   - when alsamixer -c0 is opened, then the  vc4-hdmi reports no
>> control for selected device for *both* tvs (which is same as f6 and
>> selecting vc4-hdmi)
>>
>> Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> 
> Great troubleshooting report, very complete.
> 
> Is it possible that you changed a setting on the older TV that isn't
> working?  Because, like you said, it *should* be working.

nope. both raspbian and kodi still keeps playing.
> 
> What happens if you just use an audio player to send only audio to the
> older TV from the command line?  Maybe try such with debugging enabled.
> Or look in the logs to see if it complains about anything.
> 
> e.g. mplayer -vv [audio-file]
> or
> mplayer -vv -novideo [video-file]

I play only from commandline - aplay - and it prints no otput. it behaves 
corrctly as if it s been
playing.  Will try to get more debug output here.
> 
> Since the hdmi is the only device, it should route to the TV to play.
> I think.
> 
> If there are no errors and it acts like it is playing, that really
> points to the older TV having an issue.
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Ed Greshko
On 10/31/18 12:42 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> OK. I didn't get the memo. Was there anything on the Announce list (or
> this one)?

One the Announce List, yes.

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tell them,
then tell them what you told them."
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 16:42 +, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 22:07 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> > On 10/30/18 9:37 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 13:41 +0100, Jiri Vanek wrote:
> > > > Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> > > 
> > > F29 is unreleased. Try the Fedora Test list.
> > 
> > You can't say that any longer
> > 
> > https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-fedora-29/
> 
> OK. I didn't get the memo. Was there anything on the Announce list (or
> this one)?
> 
> poc
> 

Never mind, I just saw it on the Announce list. Doesn't seem to have
been copied to this one though, which is unusual.

poc
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread stan
On Tue, 30 Oct 2018 13:41:50 +0100
Jiri Vanek  wrote:

I'm not familiar with hdmi, but I'll try to give you some ideas.

> I have f29 (ernel kernel-4.18.12-300.fc29  ) on  machine, which is
> changing its place from time to time - between two TVs. Old, and
> older:)
> 
> Both are connected by HDMI. Video output is fine, even acceleration
> is working,  but sound work only on newer of those two.
> 
> I don't know if this is regression, because this machine replaced 32b
> rapbery2 with kodi, which was working without issues on both TVs (but
> was eaten by (not mine) dog)

Can you try an older version of the kernel?  Or alsa?  It sure sounds
like a regression, but the audio information doesn't support that.  Just
a check to be sure.

> 
> I was following
> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_debug_sound_problems but had
> not found much:
>  - with removed pulseaudio, the aplay -vv segfaults
>  - I really on pulseaudio anyway, as I need to transfer sound to
> this machine over network
> 
>  - the diff of alsa-info.sh's is really minimal [1], only
> [cite]
> state.vc4hdmi {
>   control.1 {
>   iface PCM
>   name ELD
>   value '1700671200014c2d9d02
> for non working and
>   value '1700671200014c2d9b03
> for working
> [/cite]

If alsa didn't know about the interface for the failing device, it
wouldn't be able to specify a control.  Are there any warnings or
errors in the journal during boot, or when trying to play?  
> 
>   - when alsamixer is opened, then the default looks like working,
> and the job on old tv; but not do nothing older tv.
>   - when alsamixer -c0 is opened, then the  vc4-hdmi reports no
> control for selected device for *both* tvs (which is same as f6 and
> selecting vc4-hdmi)
> 
> Does anybody have a clue what to try?

Great troubleshooting report, very complete.

Is it possible that you changed a setting on the older TV that isn't
working?  Because, like you said, it *should* be working.

What happens if you just use an audio player to send only audio to the
older TV from the command line?  Maybe try such with debugging enabled.
Or look in the logs to see if it complains about anything.

e.g. mplayer -vv [audio-file]
or
mplayer -vv -novideo [video-file]

Since the hdmi is the only device, it should route to the TV to play.
I think.

If there are no errors and it acts like it is playing, that really
points to the older TV having an issue.
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 22:07 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 10/30/18 9:37 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 13:41 +0100, Jiri Vanek wrote:
> > > Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> > 
> > F29 is unreleased. Try the Fedora Test list.
> 
> You can't say that any longer
> 
> https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-fedora-29/

OK. I didn't get the memo. Was there anything on the Announce list (or
this one)?

poc
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Ed Greshko
On 10/30/18 10:03 PM, Jiri Vanek wrote:
> Well I doubt a bit it is a regression from f28. And I doubt unrelease-ness 
> have nothing to do with
> it - as it is, will be released in a week:)

It was released today!

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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Ed Greshko
On 10/30/18 9:37 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 13:41 +0100, Jiri Vanek wrote:
>> Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> F29 is unreleased. Try the Fedora Test list.

You can't say that any longer

https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-fedora-29/

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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Jiri Vanek
On 10/30/18 2:37 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 13:41 +0100, Jiri Vanek wrote:
>> Does anybody have a clue what to try?
> 
> F29 is unreleased. Try the Fedora Test list.

Hi!
Thanx. Will repost.

Well I doubt a bit it is a regression from f28. And I doubt unrelease-ness have 
nothing to do with
it - as it is, will be released in a week:)

J.
> 
> poc
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Re: no hdmi audio on older tv

2018-10-30 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Tue, 2018-10-30 at 13:41 +0100, Jiri Vanek wrote:
> Does anybody have a clue what to try?

F29 is unreleased. Try the Fedora Test list.

poc
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