On 2023-07-25, Bruce Byfield wrote:
> Last week, I installed Debian 12. Since then I've had no sound. I've
> consulted
> various pages on the Debian wiki, and found no solution, either with
> pulseaudio or pipewire. Built-in speakers, and external features (including
&
On Tue, 25 Jul 2023 14:54:26 -0700,
Bruce Byfield wrote:
>Last week, I installed Debian 12. Since then I've had no sound. I've consulted
>various pages on the Debian wiki, and found no solution, either with
>pulseaudio or pipewire. Built-in speakers, and external
Last week, I installed Debian 12. Since then I've had no sound. I've consulted
various pages on the Debian wiki, and found no solution, either with
pulseaudio or pipewire. Built-in speakers, and external features (including
bluetooth ones, which are definitely connected) don
Hi!
I have a problem where sound volume doesn't stick between reboots - I
have an external USB sound "card", a Behringer UMC204HD, which is
detected just fine by the alsa tools and everything, but, as said, it
doesn't get volume stuck between reboots.
I need to go into alsam
to install grub. More
> than once.
>
> As a test, you might try a Fedora Live ISO. F37 currently provides the
> 6.1.18-200 kernel. Fedora is about as recent as you can get, short of
> compiling your own kernel.
>
Debian Bookworm has the 6.1.15 kernel currently.
If you find soun
is about as recent as you can get, short of
compiling your own kernel.
If you find sound works with Fedora 37, then you may need to look for
a distro that provides a 6.x kernel.
Jeff
On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 11:06 AM Timothy M Butterworth <
timothy.m.butterwo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 10:57 AM Jeffrey Walton
> wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Feb 9, 2023 at 7:55 PM Default User
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > I just got a brand new Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series 3511 laptop. C
On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 10:57 AM Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 9, 2023 at 7:55 PM Default User
> wrote:
> >
> > I just got a brand new Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series 3511 laptop. Came
> with Windows (ugh!) preinstalled.
> > My old Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series 3542 laptop (made in 2014) just
On Thu, Feb 9, 2023 at 7:55 PM Default User wrote:
>
> I just got a brand new Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series 3511 laptop. Came with
> Windows (ugh!) preinstalled.
> My old Dell Inspiron 15 3000 Series 3542 laptop (made in 2014) just died. So
> this one should work, right?
>
> No.
Also see https
> It's also not a Linux kernel and not relevant to your sound HW. Just
> some video support for ancient video hardware. I don't think Cirrus
> Logic has done video HW since the 90s.
>
> > I hate to sound stupid, but could someone please tell me how to add that
> t
wiki forgets that the filename
needs the .conf; the actual filename can be anything reasonable)
contains options for loading a /kernel module/, like the example:
options snd_hda_intel index=1,0
I just added that exact line to my Lenovo laptop. Before I added it,
alsamixer would come up with the HDMI
re/alsa/, for what it's worth.
This isn't the first time I've tackled this problem, and it's
really just a convenience thing, not a desperate need. When I
switch my TV from my cable box to the computer, I have to walk
over to the sound system to change its input selector fro
Default User writes:
> xserver-xorg-video-cirrus_1.5.3-1+b3_amd64.deb for Debian Stable (Bullseye)
> does seem to be at
> deb http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian bullseye main
> but that is not a backport.
It's also not a Linux kernel and not relevant to your sound HW. Just
s
On Sun 12 Feb 2023 at 15:48:51 (-0800), Charlie Gibbs wrote:
> This is going a bit off topic, but since there are probably
> a number of sound gurus following the original thread, I
> thought I'd throw out another sound question.
>
> I have a desktop machine running Debian
This is going a bit off topic, but since there are probably
a number of sound gurus following the original thread, I
thought I'd throw out another sound question.
I have a desktop machine running Debian 11. It contains an
nVidia card which I've hooked to my TV via HDMI. Currentl
Logic CS8409".
> >
> > So it looks like this is the actual sound hardware that's in use, not
> > the Tiger Lake stuff. A quick search found
> > https://www.phoronix.com/news/Cirrus-Dolphin-Linux-Audio which says
> > shows support was added in Linux kernel 5
On Sun, Feb 12, 2023 at 7:58 AM Anssi Saari wrote:
> Default User writes:
>
> > The dumbed-down make-believe BIOS on the new computer lists the Audio
> Controller as:
> > "Cirrus Logic CS8409".
>
> So it looks like this is the actual sound hardware that
Default User writes:
> The dumbed-down make-believe BIOS on the new computer lists the Audio
> Controller as:
> "Cirrus Logic CS8409".
So it looks like this is the actual sound hardware that's in use, not
the Tiger Lake stuff. A quick search found
https://www.
eaker.)
> did nothing. The "PCM" control was set to 100. The "PCM" control scale did
> not have a "block" to show either "OO" or "MM" (muted). Also visible were
> entries for "S/PDIF, then "S/PDIF 1", "S/PDIF 2" and s
On 12/02/2023 05:46, Default User wrote:
[14777.998904] Modules linked in: ctr ccm nls_ascii nls_cp437 vfat fat
ext4 mbcache jbd2 ses enclosure scsi_transport_sas rfcomm cmac
algif_hash algif_skcipher af_alg bnep x86_pkg_temp_thermal
intel_powerclamp coretemp rtw88_8821ce btusb kvm_intel rtw88_
: mono_out=0x0
> [7.673396] snd_hda_codec_generic hdaudioC0D0:inputs:
The kernel is happy with the sound card.
> And here is the output of aplay -l:
>
> List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
> card 0: PCH [HDA Intel PCH], device 0: Generic Analog [Generic Analog]
>
;
> sudo dmesg | grep -i audio
>
> in a terminal to see if there's any problem loading the driver or
> firmware and what other messages there might be. And run aplay -l, does
> that list any sound device?
>
>
Here is the output of sudo dmesg | grep -i audio:
[0.1
r or
firmware and what other messages there might be. And run aplay -l, does
that list any sound device?
On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 08:56:11PM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > And of course recommendations for a current laptop (preferably
> > reasonably priced) that actual experience shows does work well with
> > Debian would be welcome.
>
> If your main concerns are a good price and well supported by D
2014) just died.
So this one should work, right?
No.
Unfortunately the new 3511 is quite different from the old 3542. It mostly
"sort of" works.
But the sound will not work at all on Debian.
How did you come to this conclusion?
Did you do something, take some action, expecting the re
> And of course recommendations for a current laptop (preferably
> reasonably priced) that actual experience shows does work well with
> Debian would be welcome.
If your main concerns are a good price and well supported by Debian,
then you're spelling "refurbished, or second hand".
The planet will
On Fri, 10 Feb 2023 21:49:58 +
Default User wrote:
> And of course recommendations for a current laptop (preferably
> reasonably priced)
> that actual experience shows does work well with Debian would be
> welcome.
I recommend against the latest and greatest. Recent computers may use
hardwar
On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 12:37 PM Anssi Saari wrote:
> Default User writes:
>
> > In Debian 11 "Live", lspci -nn reports:
> > "00:1f.3 Audio device [0403]: Intel Tiger Lake-LP Smart Sound Technology
> Audio Controller [8086:a0c8] (rev
> > 20)".
>
Default User writes:
> In Debian 11 "Live", lspci -nn reports:
> "00:1f.3 Audio device [0403]: Intel Tiger Lake-LP Smart Sound Technology
> Audio Controller [8086:a0c8] (rev
> 20)".
This isn't new sound hardware so should work in Debian 11.
With a quick
ork, right?
>
> No.
>
> Unfortunately the new 3511 is quite different from the old 3542. It
> mostly "sort of" works.
> But the sound will not work at all on Debian.
>
> Not wanting to immediately remove Windows and thus make it unreturnable, I
> have been trying
. It mostly
"sort of" works.
But the sound will not work at all on Debian.
Not wanting to immediately remove Windows and thus make it unreturnable, I
have been trying to run it using a
Debian 11 "Live" install USB thumb drive (Cinnamon desktop). No sound at
all.
But . . . it DO
What worked for me was running alsamixer from the terminal and unmuteing the
main control and turning the volume all the way up. rebooted then tested with
pavucontrol..
Hope this helps
> On Dec 23, 2022, at 5:42 AM, lou wrote:
>
> Christoph, your "pactl list" command didn't work because i di
I'm living on the command line most of the time. If sound doesn't work
over here for me since I need to use a screen reader, the computer becomes
a paperweight. I'm glad that fix worked for you and I should have told
you to do that command as root. If that command ever fails, als
Christoph, your "pactl list" command didn't work because i didn't reboot
buster after installing pulseaudio, Thanks anyway!
Thank Jude!
i try your command anyway though i have said i give up
i install pulseaudio again and have to reboot to get it to work
then i run your command, it solves my problem, Thanks!
12:28AM +0800 schrieb lou:
>
> Hello Lou,
>
> > i am running buster and install pulseaudio
> > to let pulseaudio take effect i have to reboot
> > but there's no sound though pavucontrol seems ok
> > (pavucontrol shows sound is playing properly)
> > to get so
Thank Christoph and Andrew!
i can use stretch if i need pulseaudio
my problem is so strange that i give up
ps: Andrew, my experience shows that new isn't always better than old.
many wifi adapter makers on Chinese market today support Windows XP for
their new products
Am Fri, Dec 23, 2022 at 06:08:01PM +0800 schrieb lou:
> Thank Jude and Christoph!
Hi Lou.
> i run "pactl list":
>
> Connection failure: Connection refused
> pa_context_connect() failed: Connection refused
I have no idea why the message comes from but also how pulseaudio
communicates with the r
On Fri, Dec 23, 2022 at 06:08:01PM +0800, lou wrote:
> Thank Jude and Christoph!
>
> i run "pactl list":
>
> Connection failure: Connection refused
> pa_context_connect() failed: Connection refused
>
> but in stretch, pulseaudio works after i install it
>
>
Hi Lou,
As always, you may be bette
Thank Jude and Christoph!
i run "pactl list":
Connection failure: Connection refused
pa_context_connect() failed: Connection refused
but in stretch, pulseaudio works after i install it
Am Fri, Dec 23, 2022 at 09:12:28AM +0800 schrieb lou:
Hello Lou,
> i am running buster and install pulseaudio
> to let pulseaudio take effect i have to reboot
> but there's no sound though pavucontrol seems ok
> (pavucontrol shows sound is playing properly)
> to get sound ba
s to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
.
On Fri, 23 Dec 2022, lou wrote:
> i am running buster and install pulseaudio
>
> to let pulseaudio take effect i have to reboot
>
> but there
i am running buster and install pulseaudio
to let pulseaudio take effect i have to reboot
but there's no sound though pavucontrol seems ok
(pavucontrol shows sound is playing properly)
to get sound back, i have to remove pulseaudio and reboot
Thanks!
An audio screen reader user would have noticed this problem as soon as it
happened. If others are on sid, and haven't got to the same upgrade
level, running speaker-test after each upgrade may narrow down the likely
culprits.
Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty:
soap,
On Sat, 2022-11-12 at 19:01 +1000, David wrote:
> What are you running?
> Stable, Testing, Unstable?
The subject line if prefixed with 'sid'. So Unstable I presume.
--
Tixy
2, 2022 at 13:42, Kamil Jo?ca wrote:
David mailto:curmudg...@telaman.net.au>> writes:
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 09:31, Kamil Jo?ca mailto:kjo...@o2.pl>> wrote:
Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers. There is
no problem with usb headphone, or headphone via
; >
> > David mailto:curmudg...@telaman.net.au>> writes:
> >
> >> On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 09:31, Kamil Jo?ca >> <mailto:kjo...@o2.pl>> wrote:
> >>
> >> Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers. There is
> >> no problem
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 13:42, Kamil Jońca wrote:
David mailto:curmudg...@telaman.net.au>>
writes:
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 09:31, Kamil Jońca <mailto:kjo...@o2.pl>> wrote:
Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers.
There is no problem with us
David writes:
> On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 09:31, Kamil Jońca wrote:
>
> Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers. There is no
> problem with usb headphone, or headphone via jack but speakers are silent. As
> I almost exclusively use usb headphones I ha
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 09:31, Kamil Jońca wrote:
Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers. There is
no
problem with usb headphone, or headphone via jack but speakers are
silent.
As I almost exclusively use usb headphones I have no idea when this
problem started.
In
Recently I found strange thing: I have no sound on speakers. There is no
problem with usb headphone, or headphone via jack but speakers are
silent.
As I almost exclusively use usb headphones I have no idea when this
problem started.
In theory is possible that speakers are broken but the same
> On 9 Nov 2022, at 15:12, Charles Curley
> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 9 Nov 2022 09:52:15 +
> Peter von Kaehne wrote:
>
>> My laptop (Thinkpad Yoga11e first gen) on Debian Sid is showing for
>> last few months diverse and variable sound problems.l, partic
On Wed, 9 Nov 2022 09:52:15 +
Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> My laptop (Thinkpad Yoga11e first gen) on Debian Sid is showing for
> last few months diverse and variable sound problems.l, particularly
> with using Bluetooth speakers, but also with Airplay.
You might see what tips or t
My laptop (Thinkpad Yoga11e first gen) on Debian Sid is showing for last few
months diverse and variable sound problems.l, particularly with using Bluetooth
speakers, but also with Airplay.
Current system uses pulse audio and pipe wire. I do not fully understand the
connection between the two
hen use it.
> > >
> > > die() { printf >&2 '%s\n' "$*"; exit 1; }
> > >
> > > Or variants thereof. There are almost as many variations as there are
> > > shell programmers.
> >
> > But if I have that, and:
>
it 1; }
> >
> > Or variants thereof. There are almost as many variations as there are
> > shell programmers.
>
> But if I have that, and:
>
> soxy is a function
> soxy ()
> {
> [ -z "$1" ] && die "Usage:${FUNCNAME[0]}
> pat
But if I have that, and:
soxy is a function
soxy ()
{
[ -z "$1" ] && die "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} path-to/sound-file-of-any-type
[trim 20 2]
runs sox to play the file with any arguments given.
The example above reminds you to put the full argument.";
> > > [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage:${FUNCNAME[0]}
> > > path-to/sound-file-of-any-type [trim 20 2]
> > > runs sox to play the file with any arguments given.
> > > The example above reminds you to put the full argume
On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:13:11PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> The attraction of a one-liner is partly because of screens
> being around four times wider than high (characterwise).
> Wouldn't it be nice if bash had Perl's die ….
Some people put a die() function in their scripts, and then use it.
appear am complaining.
No sweat. I put a smiley on there, I was half-in-jest...
> Mention of teenage Guru was attempted humour.
...as you were, it seems :-D
> There were 2 question marks but really one question.
> "Is there a numpty's explanation what are these PulseAudio, Alsa,
On 2022-08-18 08:39, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:47:40PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
In the 70s friends went t
On Thu 18 Aug 2022 at 06:58:20 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:58:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > $ type soxy
> > soxy is a function
> > soxy ()
> > {
> > [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage
On Thu, Aug 18 2022 at 09:39:23 AM, wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:47:40PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
>> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
>> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> > Hash: SHA256
>> >
>> > Anybody have anything to say about e
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:58:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> $ type soxy
> soxy is a function
> soxy ()
> {
> [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]}
> path-to/sound-file-of-any-type [trim 20 2]
> runs sox
On Wed, 17 Aug 2022 20:00 +, ghe2001 wrote:
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their
> infinite wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from
> the upcoming release
On 2022-08-17, mick.crane wrote:
> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA256
>>
>> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> In the 70s friends went to this house where there was a 14 year old
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:47:40PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> > Hash: SHA256
> >
> > Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> In the 70s friends went to this house whe
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 08:00:17PM +, ghe2001 wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
> wisdom, the Deb
On Wed 17 Aug 2022 at 20:00:17 (+), ghe2001 wrote:
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
> wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from the upcoming
&g
On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
In the 70s friends went to this house where there was a 14 year old
Indian mystic.
You were all supposed to wait downstairs until you were called to
the bits of audio.
> >> I'm wanting now to edit .wav files.
> >> Can't find Audacity in the repository for Bookworm.
> >> There is Ardour6.
> >> It's a bit complex.
> >> By selecting PulseAudio as the wotsit it seemed to be working but I
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from the upcoming
release, Bookworm.
Bad idea,
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 08:10:37PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> I'm just requesting some comprehensible, simple to understand, overview of
> how the sound softwares are working.
Too many layers and possibilities to give a comprehensive listing.
Let's pick ONE. Plain ALSA, witho
.
I sort of understand permissions for files but I'm not understanding
permissions for streams whatever that is.
I'm just requesting some comprehensible, simple to understand, overview
of how the sound softwares are working.
mick
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:27:25AM -0700, Bob McGowan wrote:
> The command to add a user to a group is: useradd -G
> groupname[,groupname...] username
>
> For example: useradd -G audio,pulsaudio bob
Debian also allows "adduser username groupname".
and
> >> save the bits of audio.
> >> I'm wanting now to edit .wav files.
> >> Can't find Audacity in the repository for Bookworm.
> >> There is Ardour6.
> >> It's a bit complex.
> >> By selecting PulseAudio as the wotsit it seemed
ple of minutes to install Audacity, figure out the GUI thing and
save the bits of audio.
I'm wanting now to edit .wav files.
Can't find Audacity in the repository for Bookworm.
There is Ardour6.
It's a bit complex.
By selecting PulseAudio as the wotsit it seemed to be working but I try ag
x27;t find Audacity in the repository for Bookworm.
> There is Ardour6.
> It's a bit complex.
> By selecting PulseAudio as the wotsit it seemed to be working but I try again
> and there is no sound output to hear.
> There is message like " don't have permission to acc
s of audio.
I'm wanting now to edit .wav files.
Can't find Audacity in the repository for Bookworm.
There is Ardour6.
It's a bit complex.
By selecting PulseAudio as the wotsit it seemed to be working but I try
again and there is no sound output to hear.
There is message like &
v: kernel bus ID: 03:00.1
Device-3: C-Media CMI8738/CMI8768 PCI Audio driver: snd_cmipci v:
kernel bus ID: 23:00.0
Device-4: Logitech Portable Webcam C905 type: USB driver:
snd-usb-audio,uvcvideo bus ID: 2-1.2:4
Sound
Roger Price writes:
> On Mon, 18 Jul 2022, Dekks Herton wrote:
>> What kernel is 11 running? are you using a Haswell or Broadwell CPU?
>
> Command inxi reports:
> System:Host: titan Kernel: 5.10.0-15-amd64 x86_64 bits: 64
> Desktop: Xfce 4.16.0 Distro: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullse
On Mon, 18 Jul 2022, Dekks Herton wrote:
What kernel is 11 running? are you using a Haswell or Broadwell CPU?
Command inxi reports:
System:Host: titan Kernel: 5.10.0-15-amd64 x86_64 bits: 64
Desktop: Xfce 4.16.0 Distro: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
Machine: Type: Desktop S
Roger Price writes:
> This ran for years with Debian 9. I upgrade to Debian 11 and hear
> nothing. The usual advice is
> (a) in /etc/crontab export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/run/user/1000
> (b) play the sound from a script.
>
> But that doesn't work with Debian 11. Does any rea
On Sun, 17 Jul 2022, 16 Jul 2022, Lee wrote:
Nope. Audio has always just worked; I never had to do anything
special or extra to get it working
Following https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PulseAudio/Examples ,
I installed file ~/.config/pulse/default.pa
.include /etc/pulse/default.pa
set-
On Sun, 17 Jul 2022, Lee wrote:
On 7/17/22, The Wanderer wrote:
I don't use cron to play sounds, so I can't speak to this directly,
but...
While this may turn out in the end to be pure FUD, when I hear about
things which work properly when run by hand but not when run
automatically on a modern
Roger Price wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Jul 2022, Lee wrote:
>
> > I don't have play, so I tried aplay .. and it works, even if I'm
> > logged out, even if someone else is logged in.
> >
> > ## run the script every minute
> >
> > $ crontab -l | tail -3
> > # m h dom mon dow command
> > * * * *
On 7/17/22, The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2022-07-16 at 04:47, Roger Price wrote:
>
>> People occasionally have a cron job emit some sound each hour. On my
>> Debian 9
>> machine I hear Biff [1] barking. In /etc/crontab I have an entry to call a
>>
>> script bark.
On 2022-07-16 at 04:47, Roger Price wrote:
> People occasionally have a cron job emit some sound each hour. On my Debian
> 9
> machine I hear Biff [1] barking. In /etc/crontab I have an entry to call a
> script bark.sh which does the barking. Typically
>
> 0,1 0,12 * *
On 7/16/22, Roger Price wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Jul 2022, Lee wrote:
>
>> I don't have play, so I tried aplay .. and it works, even if I'm
>> logged out, even if someone else is logged in.
>>
>> ## run the script every minute
>>
>> $ crontab -l | tail -3
>> # m h dom mon dow command
>> * * * *
On Sat, 16 Jul 2022, Lee wrote:
I don't have play, so I tried aplay .. and it works, even if I'm
logged out, even if someone else is logged in.
## run the script every minute
$ crontab -l | tail -3
# m h dom mon dow command
* * * * */home/lee/bin/neener.sh
## which plays a .wav
On 7/16/22, Roger Price wrote:
> People occasionally have a cron job emit some sound each hour. On my Debian
> 9
> machine I hear Biff [1] barking. In /etc/crontab I have an entry to call a
> script bark.sh which does the barking. Typically
>
> 0,1 0,12 * * * rprice full-pa
People occasionally have a cron job emit some sound each hour. On my Debian 9
machine I hear Biff [1] barking. In /etc/crontab I have an entry to call a
script bark.sh which does the barking. Typically
0,1 0,12 * * * rprice full-path-to/bark.sh 12 2>>&1
where bark.sh is a Bash sc
time until 5.17.x or 5.18.x will
appear in bullseye-backports.
Regards,
Christian
Exactly as Christian said. Will like to learn about sound card
configuration in general as well, so any suggestion is appreciated.
OpenPGP_signature
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 4/13/22 00:28, Yvan Masson wrote:
Le 12/04/2022 à 03:48, manp...@gmail.com a écrit :
Hi,
I have been trying to set up a Minisforum HX90[1] with Debian stable
with backports. Most of the stuff works out of the box except sound,
bluetooth, and Wi-Fi.
Hi,
I have no idea of what you
On 2022-04-13 09:28 UTC+0200, Yvan Masson wrote:
> I have no idea of what you could do to make it work on stable, sorry.
> But did you try running testing? It would be probably simpler, and
> testing generally runs great.
It seems to be more or less consent that you are not advised to run
De
Le 12/04/2022 à 03:48, manp...@gmail.com a écrit :
Hi,
I have been trying to set up a Minisforum HX90[1] with Debian stable
with backports. Most of the stuff works out of the box except sound,
bluetooth, and Wi-Fi.
Hi,
I have no idea of what you could do to make it work on stable, sorry
Hi,
I have been trying to set up a Minisforum HX90[1] with Debian stable
with backports. Most of the stuff works out of the box except sound,
bluetooth, and Wi-Fi. I'll focus on the sound card issue here and use a
new thread for the latter 2 items (which are related to the same
Med
Nicholas Geovanis writes:
>> I am trying to make it work; so here is the update.
>>
>> I tried to experiment with my machine and found that if I plug-out and
>> plug-in the USB sound card again, it is not shown by "aplay -l" command
>> as normal user. Bu
(suspended), it doesn’t
> > show the devices.
> >
> > However, ‘lsusb’ shows it and ‘/proc/asound/cards’ has an entry. But
> > these devices (mic and speaker) are not taking any input or producing
> > sound. Because they are not visible to Gnome and ‘alsamixer’.
> &
On Sunday, February 6, 2022 7:15:55 AM EST A_Man_Without_Clue wrote:
> On 2/6/22 01:23, c. marlow wrote:
> > On Saturday 05 February 2022 06:23:47 am gene heskett wrote:
> >> That, in the case of firefox is not a flatpack issue, debians latest
> >> is the same, every v
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