bajongo [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
opensuse 10.2 detected my onboard soundcard which is not the the one I
want to use. Yast didn't find my Gina24.
Hmm, the kernel module snd-gina24 is there.
However I could not find it in the Yast sound configuration module.
Please try (as root)
modprobe
Ulrich Lauther [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
the Alsa-sound-mini-HOWTO says:
7.10 Tip: use the ALSA devices
If you had sound support in your Linux before, then your
applications will probably all point to /dev/pcm0, /dev/audio and
/dev/mixer. This is fine, if you use OSS compatibility with the
Lee Revell [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Seems like if he was able to figure out the undocumented alsa-lib -
kernel interface he could have figured out how to use alsa-lib. There
are tons of examples available.
The sox ALSA interface has recently changed to use alsa-lib
sox FILE -t alsa -w -s
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andrew K. Bressen) writes:
Unfortunately, the magic -P default:0 incantation did not do it;
jackd still fails five of six tests I tried.
AFAIK, jack option -P sets the realtime priority, it should be
jackd -d alsa -d default:0
The first -d denotes the driver, the second -d
MNO [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Now, the 4x4 is on the hardware list, and there it says that it is
supported, but in a discussion on the another list I came to the
conclusion that the 4x4 needs to load firmware.
Yes, the Midisport 4x4 needs firmware. You can get the complete
package with
V. Ananda Krishnan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Have you ever had a look at descriptions of CD-audio plugins ?
Well, I installed the xmms-1.2.10-9 from the RedHat distro CD
(RHEL4.0-U3). I went thru the options/preferences and configured:
Input Plugins as CD Audio Player 1.2.10 (libcdaudio.so)
Gianluca Cecchi [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
BTW (for developers): are there particular reasons why final 2.6.17 contains
yet the rc4 release and not the 1.0.11 final, released about two months ago?
2.6.17 merge window ended 02/04.
1.0.11 final has been released 19/04.
AFAIK the Kernel release
Peter Ho [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
My current situation is this. I have an older version of alsa, which I
obtained using apt-get and then modconf to select the modules for
snd-hda-intel.
The drivers are part of the kernel. So they are part of your
linux-image-* package.
You shouldn't need
Peter Ho [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Do you know what the latest version is? I have installed alsa-base
1.0.11-2 using apt-get. The latest drivers are suppose to be 1.0.11. I
am not sure if the debian version is the latest, as I could not find out
if the release version was the final 1.0.11.
Peter Ho [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Is there a way of trying to include the missing devices in /dev/snd?? I
guess that this has got to do with creating the sound devices. Can this
be done simply with debian using ./snddevices. Would that solve the
problem?
No, the devices are created
Vladimír Volčko [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I see. So if I understand well, amixer can change volume only for both
channel with various values at one time .
Setting only one channel is not supported. Is another way how to set
only one channel volume from command line?
You can use the simple
Lee Revell [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Fri, 2006-06-02 at 16:14 +0200, Matthias Koenig wrote:
You can try the debian 2.6.16 Kernel from unstable, this one has
ALSA driver 1.0.11rc2.
That's still really old - many HDA intel bugs have been fixed since that
release.
Ok
Adam Bogacki [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Tux:~# apt-cache policy libasound2
libasound2:
Installed: 1.0.11-6
Candidate: 1.0.11-6
Ok, Debian libasound2 1.0.11-6 and 1.0.11-5 seem to be broken.
The problem should be fixed in the -7 revision, which is in
Sid (unstable) today. Please try an
Adam Bogacki [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi, following the last two apt-upgrades of libasound2, libasound2-dev,
libasound2-plugins I have no sound with aplay, mplayer or ekiga,
and keep getting the following ..
Which release?
This might be related to Debian Bug #369040
Can you post the
Terry North [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Is there any support for a forum as an alternative to
the user list, which is such a clumsy, fragmented and
disorganised format?
Well, the format depends on your mail client ;-)
I consider most webforums as broken. Have you ever tried
to follow subthreads
Hi Rolf,
Rolf Gassner [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Unfortunately, this config-file doesn't work at all, the device hw:1
doesn't seem to exist.
Can anyone help me with the use of multiple soundcards for playback?
Well, I don't know much about the fancy things in the .asoundrc, but just
for
Allan Klinbail [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I don't know why this works but I thought I better share it.
Up until today I haven't been able to get my MOTU MTP-AV to work
correctly in 64-bit linux. The entire PC would lock up as soon as it was
accessed... .
Is this the mtpav driver?
Maybe this
David Bell [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
From: Nigel Henry [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi David. asound.state is in /var/lib/alsa/ on Debian Sarge. Nigel.
# find / -name asound.state
Returns that the file does not exist on the system.
is asound.state important?
Not essentially. It just stores the state of
Joel Roth [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Thanks. Worked first time.
Great :-)
But the changes in modutils--/etc/modprobe.d and not needing
update-modules--I never would have guessed. That was one
part of the process I was absolutely certain I was informed
about!
Yes, things have changed since
Joel Roth [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am running a 2.6.15 kernel using udev
to populate the /dev directory. I have two sound cards,
corresponding to the snd-ice1712 and snd-via82xx drivers.
The drivers are compiled as modules, and load
automagically. My system is Debian-based, most packages
Bill Unruh [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Fri, 7 Apr 2006, Lee Revell wrote:
On Fri, 2006-04-07 at 18:27 +0200, Matthias Koenig wrote:
The correct Debian location for configuration files for new kernels
is /etc/modprobe.d/.
If you append the 2 option lines above to e.g. alsa-base it should
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