Felix Miata wrote: > deloptes composed on 2016-03-17 0:05 (UTC+0100): > >> Felix Miata wrote: > >>> /etc/modules.d/ > >> Hi your post is interesting for me. > >> on the debian one it is /etc/modprobe.d/ - no? > > I screwed up, fingers badly out of sync with eyeballs. :-p modprobe.d/ it > is. >
No problem >> I have similar chip if not same > >> 00:03.0 Audio device: Intel Corporation Haswell-ULT HD Audio Controller >> (rev 0b) 00:1b.0 Audio device: Intel Corporation 8 Series HD Audio >> Controller (rev 04) > >> so there I put sound.conf in /etc/modprobe.d/ and it has > >> ## ALSA portion >> alias char-major-116 snd >> alias snd-card-0 snd-hda-intel >> alias snd-card-1 snd-usb-audio > >> ## module options should go here >> options snd-hda-intel index=0 model=ref enable_msi=1 enable=0,1 >> options snd-usb-audio index=1 > >> which means HDMI is disabled (enable=0,1) > >> But according your proposal it should be possible to invert the order of >> how it is initialized - correct? > > I probably would never have figured out on my own to swap 0 and 1. > https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=954824#c8 > is where it came from. Follow-up to that bug comment begins here: > https://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-factory/2015-12/msg00298.html > When I setup the machine I use I read a lot about the issue - the only proposed work around was to enable/disable. I played with alsa years ago to understand how it works, but last time I checked the kernel driver docs I did not find this option. Anyway it is worth trying. I just do not understand how this indexing works in the different contexts, but I'll figure out. >> Now for the setup above perhaps I should change to > >> options snd-hda-intel index=1,0 model=ref enable_msi=1 >> options snd-usb-audio index=2 > >> What do you think Mr Miata? > > Sound config makes me crazy, sometimes just working, other times > impossible to make work, and occasionally working via minimal effort. I > would have to try your proposal to begin to know what to think. As the > machine it applies to is this one rather than one of my many test > installations, and I have no current sound system complaints, I won't be > disturbing the sleeping dog. > As far as you have good driver it always works. I found out the key is to tell the machine which is your audio card and which model it has. Why being so frustrated? The problem I guess is the variety of audio chips out there, some of which are really cheep (and bad). I always check the kernel driver doc - but this also changed recently and got more confusing (at least the intel part) I am not afraid of the "sleeping dog" - we are friends. >> Why should it be related to TDE? I do not think your statement is >> rectified here. However I did not test anything else. > > I only mentioned TDE because I know Lisi uses it. Yes, but you are on a public list and your comment is of no favor to TDE, neither it is related to TDE in any way. regards