Hi.
I have just compiled the latest (2.6.35.2) kernel on Arch.
I have patched it with desktop responsiveness patch -
http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-793263-start-50.html
(I suggest ALL desktop users try it as it works...)
Normally when I upgrade my kernel I have to re-install ALSA to enab
On 7/30/07, nikosapi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a Lenovo 3000 V200 which doesn't mute the built-in speakers when I plug
> in headphones. It uses the snd_hda_intel kernel module and alsamixer says it
> has a Conexant CX20549 (Venice) chipset.
>
> Looking through the bug reports I
Hello,
I have a Lenovo 3000 V200 which doesn't mute the built-in speakers when I plug
in headphones. It uses the snd_hda_intel kernel module and alsamixer says it
has a Conexant CX20549 (Venice) chipset.
Looking through the bug reports I found bug 2933 which seems to be similar to
mine and the
I have found what is causing the problems :
1)Udev does not create /dev/snd and /dev/dsp files, it does however
create /dev/pcmC0D0c and pcmC0D0p.
Why is that?
2)After I create the dev files manually all the sound channels are
muted by default.
How can I change that?
Thank you.
EyalC
On Th
Hello.
I have a board which has a CS5530 sound card.
I'm booting two different linuxes on it:
One fedora 6 and one which I have compiled based on buildroot
(http://buildroot.uclibc.org).
The system I have compiled is using uClibc.
Both systems use the exact same kernel and the exact same modules.
O
I believe that is my case too (Suse 10.2).
Let's see...
Lee Revell wrote:
> On 3/12/07, Takashi Iwai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> At Mon, 12 Mar 2007 20:05:03 -0300,
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> >
>> > Thank you, Takashi!
>> > I thought so, but I'm a bit insecure on all this.
>> > To build the
On 3/12/07, Takashi Iwai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At Mon, 12 Mar 2007 20:05:03 -0300,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> > Thank you, Takashi!
> > I thought so, but I'm a bit insecure on all this.
> > To build the 32 bits libs, I believe I have to use "-m32" in the CCFLAGS.
> > Would
> > that be
Thank you, Takashi!
I thought so, but I'm a bit insecure on all this.
To build the 32 bits libs, I believe I have to use "-m32" in the CCFLAGS. Would
that be all?
Regards,
Herbert
Citando Takashi Iwai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> At Fri, 09 Mar 2007 13:53:58 -0300,
> Herbert Georg wrote:
> >
> > Now u
At Mon, 12 Mar 2007 20:05:03 -0300,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Thank you, Takashi!
> I thought so, but I'm a bit insecure on all this.
> To build the 32 bits libs, I believe I have to use "-m32" in the CCFLAGS.
> Would
> that be all?
No, you'll need 32bit compiler, too.
Takashi
> Regards,
>
At Fri, 09 Mar 2007 13:53:58 -0300,
Herbert Georg wrote:
>
> Now unzip and install the alsa-lib package
>
> cd ..
> bunzip2 alsa-lib-xxx
> tar -xf alsa-lib-xxx
> cd alsa-lib-xxx
> ./configure;make;make install
To build 64bit lib on x86-64, you need --libdi
-Original Message-
From: "Lee Revell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Sergei Steshenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 9 Mar 2007 12:16:10 -0500
Subject: Re: [Alsa-user] compiling alsa-utils-1.0.14rc2 on suse 10.2 64 bits
>
> On 3/9/07, Sergei Steshe
On 3/9/07, Sergei Steshenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> are telling us all that 'configure' does not check the prerequisites ?
>
> Again and again, the whole idea of
>
> ./configure
> make
> make install
>
> is to make sure that if 'configure' passes, the rest should just work.
>
> If the rest do
-Original Message-
From: "Lee Revell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Herbert Georg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 9 Mar 2007 11:09:22 -0500
Subject: Re: [Alsa-user] compiling alsa-utils-1.0.14rc2 on suse 10.2 64 bits
> On 3/9/07, Herbert Georg <[EMAIL
> You have to install the new alsa-lib before compiling the new alsa-utils.
>
>Lee
Lee, I believe I did that. I followed exactly the steps in
http://www.alsa-project.org/alsa-doc/doc-php/template.php?company=Intel&card=ICH+southbridge+HD-audio+and+modem.&chip=ICH6%2C+ICH6M%2C+ICH7%2C+ESB2&module=
On 3/9/07, Herbert Georg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The alsa-driver and alsa-lib compile just fine, but trying to compile
> alsa-utils (whose last version is actually 1.0.14rc2) gives me the
> following error (last lines):
>
> Making install in aplay
> make[1]: Entrando no diretório
Hi there,
I decided to compile the newest version of alsa (1.0.14rc3) because it
is supposed to support the microphones of my HP dv2120us. Everything,
but the microphones, was working great with the installed
alsa-1.0.13-22 package (I have both the 32 and 64 bits packages).
I'm running Suse 10.2 6
>On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 17:51 -0700, Kasimir Gabert wrote:>> make -C /lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/source SUBDIRS=/home/>> kasimir/Desktop/ alsa-driver-1.0.10 O=/lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/build
>> modules
>> make: *** /lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/source: No such file or>> directory. Stop.>> make: *** [compile
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 17:51 -0700, Kasimir Gabert wrote:
> make -C /lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/source SUBDIRS=/home/
> kasimir/Desktop/ alsa-driver-1.0.10 O=/lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/build
> modules
> make: *** /lib/modules/2.6.8-2-386/source: No such file or
> directory. Stop.
> make: *** [compile] E
Hello,I am having troubles compiling ALSA Drivers. I am using Debian with a kernel of 2.6.8 (called 2.6.8-2-386), and I have the headers and the source (I installed source 2.6.8, which is the same thing). I am not, however, able to compile ALSA (
1.0.10).After running './configure', I ran 'make'
Does all Alsa stuff have to be compiled with the same version of gcc, and
does it have to be the same as was used for the kernel?
My kernel was compiled with 2.95, and when trying to add alsa I used 2.95
for alsa-driver, but I find that alsa-lib will not compile with this
version, though it works
At Mon, 03 Nov 2003 21:25:09 -0600,
Donn aka n5xwb Washburn wrote:
>
> Hello Group;
>
> This is my first entry on this list so here goes.
>
> I have downloaded the latest version of alsa and have tried to compile it on a SuSE
> 9.0 box.
>
> Result of ./configure apears correct in config.log bu
Hello Group;
This is my first entry on this list so here goes.
I have downloaded the latest version of alsa and have tried to compile it on a SuSE
9.0 box.
Result of ./configure apears correct in config.log but pcm_misc.c #2 fails on every
attempt to compile. It eve appears to be in a loop. a
When I attempt to compile the alsa sources on Red Hat
9.0 I get a message about a missing verion.h. I have
the linux kernel source code installed because I
recompiled my kernel. I am using a Sony VAIO
PCG-GRX550. It is currently using the i810 driver
from the kernel but it produces erratic sound
Kai Vehmanen wrote:
One thing I've noted that if you build (or just run make config) the
kernel in the /usr/src/linux-2.4 source-tree (i.e. the files from the
kernel-source rpm package), building alsa-lib will fail as it finds the
wrong kernel name (2.4.xx-yy-custom instead of the kernel that is ac
One thing I've noted that if you build (or just run make config) the
kernel in the /usr/src/linux-2.4 source-tree (i.e. the files from the
kernel-source rpm package), building alsa-lib will fail as it finds the
wrong kernel name (2.4.xx-yy-custom instead of the kernel that is actually
running). If
Don Raikes wrote:
Hello:
Last week I installed redhat advanced server on a compaq deskpro/en
computer. Now I want to compile the alsa 0.9.0 drivers. I know I need a
kernel source tree to do this, however, I have been trying for 3 days to
extract all the sources from the srpms.
What are the minim
Hello:
Last week I installed redhat advanced server on a
compaq deskpro/en computer. Now I want to compile the alsa 0.9.0 drivers.
I know I need a kernel source tree to do this,
however, I have been trying for 3 days to extract all the sources from the
srpms.
What are the minimum packag
thanks for the info but now i'm having an error regarding the
existence of "modversions.h" during the make process.
i've tried searching for it on debian 2.2.x but it doesn't exists
how do i fix this? is there a way on how can i make the system
generate a file named "modversions.h"
linux power
Compile the driver with these options.> --with-kernel=(your kernel source dir path)--with-moddir=/lib/modules/(your kernel version)/misc> --with-cards=(youur sound card chipset name)type ./configure --help to see the> rest of the options. And while you are in the driver> dir type ./snddevices Compi
how do i compile alsa on debian 2.2.x using the sources from
alsa-project.org?
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At 26 Sep 2002 09:56:06 +0200,
Arne Schmitz wrote:
>
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Hi.
>
> I was just trying to compile the latest CVS snapshot and it aborts with the
> following error in alsa-lib:
>
> control.c: In function `snd_ctl_elem_info_get_min64':
> control.c:16
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi.
I was just trying to compile the latest CVS snapshot and it aborts with the
following error in alsa-lib:
control.c: In function `snd_ctl_elem_info_get_min64':
control.c:1612: union has no member named `integer64'
control.c: In function `snd_ctl_
Hello,
I am trying to compile alsa-drivers-0.5.12 on Red Hat Linux 7.2.
The gcc is from RPM package gcc-2.96-98. I am trying to use an
Aztech 2320 sound card, and ALSA appears to be the only project
that has working drivers for it.
./configure appears to work fine (once I installed the kernel so
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