Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
Some sound cards have two volume controls: one is for the specific source and the other is for the whole card. Both must be at 100% for maximum output. On 07/23/2015 06:55 AM, ropers wrote: I'm talking out my arse here, but: To me, your submission vaguely reminds me of the CD Loudness War < https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness_war>. It sounds to me as if your hardware may be inherently a bit too quiet, but to an extent it's possible to compensate for that by pre-processing the signal in a similar way "Loudness War" CD vendors did when producing their master – but this reduces dynamic range. It may well be that those Windows drivers are doing just that, to compensate for buggy, craptastic audio hardware. But again, I really don't know; I just thought I'd mention this since nobody else has. On 11 July 2015 at 17:30, tekk wrote: On 07/11/2015 08:24 AM, Jan Stary wrote: On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed out. I had a similar problem on Linux Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what? I'm pretty sure. I mainly see it when playing youtube videos via mpv, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3IidGmVLo4 was giving me trouble for example. I know for sure that the hardware is capable of being much louder since I'm able to play it at a good volume in Windows and Linux (both Pulseaudio and ALSA, after I add a boost device to ALSA.)
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
I'm talking out my arse here, but: To me, your submission vaguely reminds me of the CD Loudness War < https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness_war>. It sounds to me as if your hardware may be inherently a bit too quiet, but to an extent it's possible to compensate for that by pre-processing the signal in a similar way "Loudness War" CD vendors did when producing their master â but this reduces dynamic range. It may well be that those Windows drivers are doing just that, to compensate for buggy, craptastic audio hardware. But again, I really don't know; I just thought I'd mention this since nobody else has. On 11 July 2015 at 17:30, tekk wrote: > On 07/11/2015 08:24 AM, Jan Stary wrote: > >> On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: >> >>> On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: >>> I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed out. I had a similar problem on Linux >>> Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable >> of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what? >> >> I'm pretty sure. I mainly see it when playing youtube videos via mpv, > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3IidGmVLo4 was giving me trouble for > example. I know for sure that the hardware is capable of being much > louder since I'm able to play it at a good volume in Windows and Linux > (both Pulseaudio and ALSA, after I add a boost device to ALSA.)
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 11:11:20AM -0700, tekk wrote: > On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 07:47:16AM -0700, Артур Истомин wrote: > > > > On Fri, Jul 10, 2015 at 06:01:17AM -0700, tekk wrote: > > > I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) > > > Audio > > > is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything > > > maxed > > > out. I had a similar problem on Linux and I was able to create a boost > > > device to feed audio through before it went to the speakers, could I do > > > the > > > same in OpenBSD? I've thrown in dmesg as well as mixerctl and audioctl > > > output, not sure if anything else is needed. I remember reading that there > > > was already some boost by default as well, but it defaulted to being maxed > > > for me so it's not much help. > > > > I have the same troubles (with the same hardware). In most cases this is due > > to sound channels of movie clip - 6 or more channels. 2 channels' movies > > almost always playing perfect for me. Here is my solution for mplayer: > > > > mplayer -channels 6 -af pan=2:1:0:0:1:1:0:0:1:1.3:1.3:1:1 > > (see http://hddaudio.net/viewtopic.php?pid=105601#p105601 for more info) > > > > If it does not help, try to enable software mixer: > > > > mplayer -softvol -softvol-max 1000 > > (but it damage sound when player's volume is max) > > > > If you will find another solution for OpenBSD, please email me. > > > > I'm certain it's not an issue of sound channels since most of what I'm using > sound > for is stereo videos on youtube. I'll give the -softvol parameter a shot next > time > I'm on OpenBSD; hopefully mpv has it since it's an mplayer fork, but an > actual way > to fix this would be ideal; the fact that my mix device is capping out at 174 > rather > than 255 is very suspicious to me. Do you actually experience the same? When > you run > mixerctl it should say something like inputs.mix-0-2: 174,174 when you have > your > volume turned all the way up. I don't remember the device name exactly but > it's along > those lines. It is very strong correlation for me between 2 channel and 6 (better known as 5.1 channel, often for DVD-disk) or even more channels. Magic with my first example - it re-route 6 channels to 2. And yes, it was the same problem on Linux for me (and for many many users. And trouble is worse for laptop users. But you know this). I suspect that there is no problem on Windows platform because there is automatic sound normalization by players or Windows OS. And I don't see how to normilize sound with mplayer without re-encoding video clip with mencoder. My settings, but there are no difference as I can say: $ mixerctl -av inputs.dac-0:1=174,174 inputs.dac-2:3=174,174 record.adc-0:1_mute=off [ off on ] record.adc-0:1=248,248 record.adc-2:3_mute=off [ off on ] record.adc-2:3=248,248 inputs.mix_source=beep { mic beep } inputs.mix_mic=248,248 inputs.mix_beep=120,120 inputs.mix2_source=dac-0:1,mix { dac-0:1 mix } inputs.mix3_source=dac-2:3,mix { dac-2:3 mix } outputs.spkr_source=mix3 [ mix2 mix3 ] outputs.spkr_mute=off [ off on ] outputs.spkr_eapd=on [ off on ] inputs.mic=255,255 outputs.mic_dir=input [ none output input ] outputs.hp_source=mix2 [ mix2 mix3 ] outputs.hp_mute=off [ off on ] outputs.hp_boost=on [ off on ] record.adc-2:3_source=mix [ mic beep mix ] record.adc-0:1_source=mic,beep,mix { mic beep mix } outputs.hp_sense=unplugged [ unplugged plugged ] outputs.spkr_muters=hp { hp } outputs.master=255,255 outputs.master.mute=off [ off on ] outputs.master.slaves=dac-0:1,dac-2:3,spkr,hp { dac-0:1 dac-2:3 spkr mic hp } record.volume=255,255 record.volume.mute=off [ off on ] record.volume.slaves=adc-0:1,adc-2:3 { adc-0:1 adc-2:3 mic } $ cat /etc/mixerctl.conf outputs.master=255
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 07:47:16AM -0700, Артур Истомин wrote: > > On Fri, Jul 10, 2015 at 06:01:17AM -0700, tekk wrote: > > I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio > > is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed > > out. I had a similar problem on Linux and I was able to create a boost > > device to feed audio through before it went to the speakers, could I do the > > same in OpenBSD? I've thrown in dmesg as well as mixerctl and audioctl > > output, not sure if anything else is needed. I remember reading that there > > was already some boost by default as well, but it defaulted to being maxed > > for me so it's not much help. > > I have the same troubles (with the same hardware). In most cases this is due > to sound channels of movie clip - 6 or more channels. 2 channels' movies > almost always playing perfect for me. Here is my solution for mplayer: > > mplayer -channels 6 -af pan=2:1:0:0:1:1:0:0:1:1.3:1.3:1:1 > (see http://hddaudio.net/viewtopic.php?pid=105601#p105601 for more info) > > If it does not help, try to enable software mixer: > > mplayer -softvol -softvol-max 1000 > (but it damage sound when player's volume is max) > > If you will find another solution for OpenBSD, please email me. > I'm certain it's not an issue of sound channels since most of what I'm using sound for is stereo videos on youtube. I'll give the -softvol parameter a shot next time I'm on OpenBSD; hopefully mpv has it since it's an mplayer fork, but an actual way to fix this would be ideal; the fact that my mix device is capping out at 174 rather than 255 is very suspicious to me. Do you actually experience the same? When you run mixerctl it should say something like inputs.mix-0-2: 174,174 when you have your volume turned all the way up. I don't remember the device name exactly but it's along those lines.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Fri, Jul 10, 2015 at 06:01:17AM -0700, tekk wrote: > I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio > is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed > out. I had a similar problem on Linux and I was able to create a boost > device to feed audio through before it went to the speakers, could I do the > same in OpenBSD? I've thrown in dmesg as well as mixerctl and audioctl > output, not sure if anything else is needed. I remember reading that there > was already some boost by default as well, but it defaulted to being maxed > for me so it's not much help. I have the same troubles (with the same hardware). In most cases this is due to sound channels of movie clip - 6 or more channels. 2 channels' movies almost always playing perfect for me. Here is my solution for mplayer: mplayer -channels 6 -af pan=2:1:0:0:1:1:0:0:1:1.3:1.3:1:1 (see http://hddaudio.net/viewtopic.php?pid=105601#p105601 for more info) If it does not help, try to enable software mixer: mplayer -softvol -softvol-max 1000 (but it damage sound when player's volume is max) If you will find another solution for OpenBSD, please email me.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On 07/11/15 15:49, Jan Stary wrote: On Jul 11 08:30:37, t...@parlementum.net wrote: On 07/11/2015 08:24 AM, Jan Stary wrote: On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed out. I had a similar problem on Linux Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what? I'm pretty sure. I mainly see it when playing youtube videos ^^ Mainly. So not always? Do you experience this "low volume" when playing just regular audio? For example, if you have sox installed, try playing 'play -n synth 10 sin 220' (which is a saturated sin wave). If the source is loud enough I can hear it. When volume is maxed out the sine wave is certainly audible, but I wouldn't call it loud. Playing around with the value of outputs.master while the wave is actually running showed something odd though: levels above 175 don't matter. I guess this is related to the inputs stopping at 174 (inputs.dac-0:1=174,174) via mpv https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3IidGmVLo4 was giving me trouble for example. mpv (or any other player, for that matter) can have its own volume settings. If these are set low, maxing out outputs.master will not help you much. So how is mpv's volume set during this playback? mpv's volume is at 100% I know for sure that the hardware is capable of being much louder since I'm able to play it at a good volume in Windows and Linux (both Pulseaudio and ALSA, after I add a boost device to ALSA.) I don't know what an ALSA boost device is, but the name suggests some kind of amplification. Yes, it's meant to increase the volume of sounds before they actually reach the sound card. I need it when using ALSA but not when using Pulseaudio. The same issue may be underlying Linux ALSA though. Maybe some weird vendor thing where the sound card is too quiet when you're not using the manufacturer's special Windows driver? I've noticed that under Windows the laptop can get *really* loud if you set the volume high. Sorry it took so long, lots of large files over a slow network.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Jul 11 08:30:37, t...@parlementum.net wrote: > On 07/11/2015 08:24 AM, Jan Stary wrote: > >On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: > >>On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: > >>>I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio > >>>is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed > >>>out. I had a similar problem on Linux > >Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable > >of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what? > > > I'm pretty sure. I mainly see it when playing youtube videos ^^ Mainly. So not always? Do you experience this "low volume" when playing just regular audio? For example, if you have sox installed, try playing 'play -n synth 10 sin 220' (which is a saturated sin wave). > via mpv https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3IidGmVLo4 > was giving me trouble for example. mpv (or any other player, for that matter) can have its own volume settings. If these are set low, maxing out outputs.master will not help you much. So how is mpv's volume set during this playback? > I know for sure that the hardware is capable of being much > louder since I'm able to play it at a good volume in Windows and Linux > (both Pulseaudio and ALSA, after I add a boost device to ALSA.) I don't know what an ALSA boost device is, but the name suggests some kind of amplification.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On 07/11/2015 12:24 PM, Andy Bradford wrote: Thus said "tekk" on Sat, 11 Jul 2015 08:30:00 -0700: So e.g. "mixerctl -v inputs.dac-0:1=255" sets it to 174,174? Exactly. inputs.dac-{0:1,2:3}=$value_above_174 simply sets it to 174. It would be more helpful if instead of describing the problem that you would just copy/paste the result of running the command and report that in an email. For example: $ mixerctl -v record.adc-0:1=255 record.adc-0:1: 120,120 -> 248,248 Thanks, Andy I probably would've, but I'm in Linux right now with some backups running. I should be a bit more helpful once I'm able to reboot.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
Thus said "tekk" on Sat, 11 Jul 2015 08:30:00 -0700: > > So e.g. "mixerctl -v inputs.dac-0:1=255" sets it to 174,174? > > > Exactly. inputs.dac-{0:1,2:3}=$value_above_174 simply sets it to 174. It would be more helpful if instead of describing the problem that you would just copy/paste the result of running the command and report that in an email. For example: $ mixerctl -v record.adc-0:1=255 record.adc-0:1: 120,120 -> 248,248 Thanks, Andy -- TAI64 timestamp: 400055a14376
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On 07/11/2015 08:24 AM, Jan Stary wrote: On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed out. I had a similar problem on Linux Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what? I'm pretty sure. I mainly see it when playing youtube videos via mpv, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3IidGmVLo4 was giving me trouble for example. I know for sure that the hardware is capable of being much louder since I'm able to play it at a good volume in Windows and Linux (both Pulseaudio and ALSA, after I add a boost device to ALSA.)
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On 07/11/2015 08:23 AM, Jan Stary wrote: I've tried playing with inputs.dac-0:1 and other values since and the inputs.dac-* actually *do* max out at 174 for me. So e.g. "mixerctl -v inputs.dac-0:1=255" sets it to 174,174? Exactly. inputs.dac-{0:1,2:3}=$value_above_174 simply sets it to 174.
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Jul 10 11:12:31, t...@parlementum.net wrote: > On 07/10/15 13:15, Jan Stary wrote: > >Please show the output of mixerctl -av > >This is hardly 'maxed out'. > >Same for the other settings. > > > > > Sorry about that, I'd asked in IRC about it and was given a few devices to > try, and they didn't work. I know for sure that a couple got reset at least > (I remember setting hp_boost for example, since it was named like something > relevant.) The "hp" stands for "headphones". man azalia > I've tried playing with inputs.dac-0:1 and other values since and > the inputs.dac-* actually *do* max out at 174 for me. So e.g. "mixerctl -v inputs.dac-0:1=255" sets it to 174,174? > $ mixerctl -av > inputs.dac-0:1=174,174 > inputs.dac-2:3=174,174 > record.adc-2:3_mute=off [ off on ] > record.adc-2:3=124,124 > record.adc-0:1_mute=off [ off on ] > record.adc-0:1=124,124 > inputs.mix_source=mic2,beep { mic2 beep } > inputs.mix_mic2=120,120 > inputs.mix_beep=120,120 > inputs.mix2_source=dac-0:1,mix { dac-0:1 mix } > inputs.mix3_source=dac-2:3,mix { dac-2:3 mix } > inputs.mic=85,85 > outputs.spkr_source=mix3 [ mix2 mix3 ] > outputs.spkr_mute=off [ off on ] > outputs.spkr_eapd=on [ off on ] > outputs.hp_source=mix2 [ mix2 mix3 ] > outputs.hp_mute=off [ off on ] > outputs.hp_boost=on [ off on ] > outputs.hp_eapd=on [ off on ] > outputs.mic2_source=mix2 [ mix2 mix3 ] > outputs.mic2_mute=off [ off on ] > inputs.mic2=85,85 > outputs.mic2_dir=input-vr80 [ none output input input-vr0 input-vr50 > input-vr80 input-vr100 ] > record.adc-0:1_source=mic2,beep,mix,mic { mic2 beep mix mic } > record.adc-2:3_source=mic2,beep,mix { mic2 beep mix } > outputs.hp_sense=unplugged [ unplugged plugged ] > outputs.mic2_sense=unplugged [ unplugged plugged ] > outputs.spkr_muters=hp,mic2 { hp mic2 } > outputs.master=255,255 > outputs.master.mute=off [ off on ] > outputs.master.slaves=dac-0:1,dac-2:3,spkr,hp { dac-0:1 dac-2:3 spkr hp > mic2 } > record.volume=124,124 > record.volume.mute=off [ off on ] > record.volume.slaves=adc-2:3,adc-0:1 { adc-2:3 adc-0:1 mic mic2 } > > (after some playing around)
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Jul 10 19:15:31, h...@stare.cz wrote: > On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: > > I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio > > is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed > > out. I had a similar problem on Linux Are you sure the audio hardware is actually capable of playing louder than it does? How exactly are you playing what?
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On 07/10/15 13:15, Jan Stary wrote: Please show the output of mixerctl -av This is hardly 'maxed out'. Same for the other settings. Sorry about that, I'd asked in IRC about it and was given a few devices to try, and they didn't work. I know for sure that a couple got reset at least (I remember setting hp_boost for example, since it was named like something relevant.) I've tried playing with inputs.dac-0:1 and other values since and the inputs.dac-* actually *do* max out at 174 for me. $ mixerctl -av inputs.dac-0:1=174,174 inputs.dac-2:3=174,174 record.adc-2:3_mute=off [ off on ] record.adc-2:3=124,124 record.adc-0:1_mute=off [ off on ] record.adc-0:1=124,124 inputs.mix_source=mic2,beep { mic2 beep } inputs.mix_mic2=120,120 inputs.mix_beep=120,120 inputs.mix2_source=dac-0:1,mix { dac-0:1 mix } inputs.mix3_source=dac-2:3,mix { dac-2:3 mix } inputs.mic=85,85 outputs.spkr_source=mix3 [ mix2 mix3 ] outputs.spkr_mute=off [ off on ] outputs.spkr_eapd=on [ off on ] outputs.hp_source=mix2 [ mix2 mix3 ] outputs.hp_mute=off [ off on ] outputs.hp_boost=on [ off on ] outputs.hp_eapd=on [ off on ] outputs.mic2_source=mix2 [ mix2 mix3 ] outputs.mic2_mute=off [ off on ] inputs.mic2=85,85 outputs.mic2_dir=input-vr80 [ none output input input-vr0 input-vr50 input-vr80 input-vr100 ] record.adc-0:1_source=mic2,beep,mix,mic { mic2 beep mix mic } record.adc-2:3_source=mic2,beep,mix { mic2 beep mix } outputs.hp_sense=unplugged [ unplugged plugged ] outputs.mic2_sense=unplugged [ unplugged plugged ] outputs.spkr_muters=hp,mic2 { hp mic2 } outputs.master=255,255 outputs.master.mute=off [ off on ] outputs.master.slaves=dac-0:1,dac-2:3,spkr,hp { dac-0:1 dac-2:3 spkr hp mic2 } record.volume=124,124 record.volume.mute=off [ off on ] record.volume.slaves=adc-2:3,adc-0:1 { adc-2:3 adc-0:1 mic mic2 } (after some playing around)
Re: Audio Boost for Sndio
On Jul 10 06:01:17, t...@parlementum.net wrote: > I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio > is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed > out. I had a similar problem on Linux and I was able to create a boost > device to feed audio through before it went to the speakers, could I do the > same in OpenBSD? I've thrown in dmesg as well as mixerctl and audioctl > output, not sure if anything else is needed. I remember reading that there > was already some boost by default as well, but it defaulted to being maxed > for me so it's not much help. > azalia0 at pci0 dev 27 function 0 "Intel 7 Series HD Audio" rev 0x04: msi > azalia0: codecs: Realtek ALC269, Intel/0x2806, using Realtek ALC269 > audio0 at azalia0 Please show the output of mixerctl -av > inputs.dac-0:1=174,174 This is hardly 'maxed out'. Same for the other settings. > inputs.dac-2:3=174,174 > record.adc-2:3_mute=off > record.adc-2:3=124,124 > record.adc-0:1_mute=off > record.adc-0:1=124,124 > inputs.mix_source=mic2,beep > inputs.mix_mic2=120,120 > inputs.mix_beep=120,120 > inputs.mix2_source=dac-0:1,mix > inputs.mix3_source=dac-2:3,mix > inputs.mic=85,85 > outputs.spkr_source=mix3 > outputs.spkr_mute=off > outputs.spkr_eapd=on > outputs.hp_source=mix2 > outputs.hp_mute=off > outputs.hp_boost=off > outputs.hp_eapd=on > outputs.mic2_source=mix2 > outputs.mic2_mute=off > inputs.mic2=85,85 > outputs.mic2_dir=input-vr80 > record.adc-0:1_source=mic2,beep,mix,mic > record.adc-2:3_source=mic2,beep,mix > outputs.hp_sense=unplugged > outputs.mic2_sense=unplugged > outputs.spkr_muters=hp,mic2 > outputs.master=255,255 > outputs.master.mute=off > outputs.master.slaves=dac-0:1,dac-2:3,spkr,hp > record.volume=124,124 > record.volume.mute=off > record.volume.slaves=adc-2:3,adc-0:1
Audio Boost for Sndio
I'm having a bit of trouble with audio on my 5.7 box (Thinkpad T430.) Audio is just a bit too quiet to be comfortable even when I have everything maxed out. I had a similar problem on Linux and I was able to create a boost device to feed audio through before it went to the speakers, could I do the same in OpenBSD? I've thrown in dmesg as well as mixerctl and audioctl output, not sure if anything else is needed. I remember reading that there was already some boost by default as well, but it defaulted to being maxed for me so it's not much help. OpenBSD 5.7-stable (GENERIC) #0: Tue Jun 30 00:19:46 EDT 2015 r...@hetalia.tekk.in:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC real mem = 8237068288 (7855MB) avail mem = 8013918208 (7642MB) mpath0 at root scsibus0 at mpath0: 256 targets mainbus0 at root bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.7 @ 0xdae9c000 (69 entries) bios0: vendor LENOVO version "G1ETA2WW (2.62 )" date 01/10/2014 bios0: LENOVO 2344BZU acpi0 at bios0: rev 2 acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5 acpi0: tables DSDT FACP SLIC TCPA SSDT SSDT SSDT HPET APIC MCFG ECDT FPDT ASF! UEFI UEFI MSDM SSDT SSDT DMAR UEFI DBG2 acpi0: wakeup devices LID_(S4) SLPB(S3) IGBE(S4) EXP3(S4) XHCI(S3) EHC1(S3) EHC2(S3) HDEF(S4) acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor) cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3320M CPU @ 2.60GHz, 1197.52 MHz cpu0: FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,AES,XSAVE,AVX,F16C,RDRAND,NXE,LONG,LAHF,PERF,ITSC,FSGSBASE,SMEP,ERMS cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache cpu0: smt 0, core 0, package 0 mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support, 10 var ranges, 88 fixed ranges cpu0: apic clock running at 99MHz cpu at mainbus0: not configured cpu at mainbus0: not configured cpu at mainbus0: not configured ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xf800, bus 0-63 acpiec0 at acpi0 acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0) acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG_) acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 2 (EXP1) acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 3 (EXP2) acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (EXP3) acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3, C2, C1, PSS acpipwrres0 at acpi0: PUBS, resource for XHCI, EHC1, EHC2 acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature is 200 degC acpibtn0 at acpi0: LID_ acpibtn1 at acpi0: SLPB acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT0 model "45N1107" serial 24045 type LION oem "LGC" acpibat1 at acpi0: BAT1 not present acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit offline acpithinkpad0 at acpi0 cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 1197 MHz: speeds: 2601, 2600, 2500, 2400, 2300, 2200, 2100, 2000, 1900, 1800, 1700, 1600, 1500, 1400, 1300, 1200 MHz pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0 pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Core 3G Host" rev 0x09 vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 "Intel HD Graphics 4000" rev 0x09 intagp at vga1 not configured inteldrm0 at vga1 drm0 at inteldrm0 inteldrm0: 1600x900 wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (std, vt100 emulation) wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (std, vt100 emulation) xhci0 at pci0 dev 20 function 0 "Intel 7 Series xHCI" rev 0x04: msi usb0 at xhci0: USB revision 3.0 uhub0 at usb0 "Intel xHCI root hub" rev 3.00/1.00 addr 1 "Intel 7 Series MEI" rev 0x04 at pci0 dev 22 function 0 not configured puc0 at pci0 dev 22 function 3 "Intel 7 Series KT" rev 0x04: ports: 1 com com4 at puc0 port 0 apic 2 int 19: ns16550a, 16 byte fifo com4: probed fifo depth: 0 bytes em0 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 "Intel 82579LM" rev 0x04: msi, address 28:d2:44:1a:f1:25 ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 "Intel 7 Series USB" rev 0x04: apic 2 int 16 usb1 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0 uhub1 at usb1 "Intel EHCI root hub" rev 2.00/1.00 addr 1 azalia0 at pci0 dev 27 function 0 "Intel 7 Series HD Audio" rev 0x04: msi azalia0: codecs: Realtek ALC269, Intel/0x2806, using Realtek ALC269 audio0 at azalia0 ppb0 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 "Intel 7 Series PCIE" rev 0xc4: msi pci1 at ppb0 bus 2 sdhc0 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 "Ricoh 5U822 SD/MMC" rev 0x07: apic 2 int 16 sdmmc0 at sdhc0 ppb1 at pci0 dev 28 function 1 "Intel 7 Series PCIE" rev 0xc4: msi pci2 at ppb1 bus 3 iwn0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6205" rev 0x34: msi, MIMO 2T2R, MoW, address 6c:88:14:cd:ca:98 ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 "Intel 7 Series USB" rev 0x04: apic 2 int 23 usb2 at ehci1: USB revision 2.0 uhub2 at usb2 "Intel EHCI root hub" rev 2.00/1.00 addr 1 pcib0 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 "Intel QM77 LPC" rev 0x04 ahci0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 7 Series AHCI" rev 0x04: msi, AHCI 1.3 scsibus1 at ahci0: 32 targets sd0 at scsibus1 targ 0 lun 0: SCSI3 0/direct fixed naa.50014ee659a322a0 sd0: 953869MB, 512 bytes/sector, 1953525168 sectors cd0 at scsibus1 targ 1 lun 0: ATAPI 5/cdrom removable ichiic0 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 "Intel 7 Series SMBus" rev 0x04: apic 2 int 18 iic0 at ichiic0 spdmem0 at iic0 addr 0x50: 4GB DDR3