Chuck, You could be running alsa. Check status by: systemctl status alsa-state.service<cr>
Another check: systemctl status alsa-restore.service<cr> Ken On Sun, Apr 7, 2019 at 10:10 PM Chuck Hast <wch...@gmail.com> wrote: > Folks, I thought I had a bad component on the mobo, but testing seems to be > sending me > in the direction of some software issue. I am running Mate 18.04 I check > for updates auto- > magically, though I do not let the machine do auto-updates so I can make > sure all is good. > > At some point the machine started loosing the audio, A reboot would bring > it back for the > rest of the day but sometime during the night it would go away again. I > thought I had a bad > component but the other day I ran Ubuntu 18.04 off of a stick on this > machine and the audio > was just fine. I let it go over night, still good audio. so it looks like > something is going on > software wise but I am not sure where to go after it, one thing I noticed > is there is poping > and crackling in the audio output, like something is trying to do something > but no joy. > > If I reboot the machine I get the audio back until the next day, so > something is happening > with the audio app. > > I am trying to figure out how to troubleshoot this one. Any ideas? > > > -- > > Chuck Hast -- KP4DJT -- > I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. > Ph 4:13 KJV > Todo lo puedo en Cristo que me fortalece. > Fil 4:13 RVR1960 > _______________________________________________ > PLUG mailing list > PLUG@pdxlinux.org > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug > _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list PLUG@pdxlinux.org http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug