On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 5:32 PM, Sylwester Nawrocki
s.nawro...@samsung.com wrote:
I could reproduce such behaviour on the U3 board, but only with u-boot
which sets the MPLL clock frequency (fout_mpll) to 880 MHz, rather
than 800 MHz, which was the case in my original environment.
All fout_mpll
Hello,
On 2014-06-24 10:35, Daniel Drake wrote:
On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 5:32 PM, Sylwester Nawrocki
s.nawro...@samsung.com wrote:
I could reproduce such behaviour on the U3 board, but only with u-boot
which sets the MPLL clock frequency (fout_mpll) to 880 MHz, rather
than 800 MHz, which was
On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 5:22 PM, Sylwester Nawrocki
s.nawro...@samsung.com wrote:
This series adds basic sound support for the Odroid X2/U3 boards.
It relies on specific Exynos Audio Subsystem clock parent and
frequencies being pre-configured.
My full testing git branch has been pushed to:
On 23/06/14 11:40, Daniel Drake wrote:
I tested ODROID-U2's 3.5mm analog headphone jack output with:
# speaker-test -c 2 -t wav -l 2
On my x86 laptop this command takes ~6 seconds and produces audible output:
Front left, front right, front left, front right
When those words are
On 23/06/14 18:32, Sylwester Nawrocki wrote:
On 23/06/14 11:40, Daniel Drake wrote:
I tested ODROID-U2's 3.5mm analog headphone jack output with:
# speaker-test -c 2 -t wav -l 2
On my x86 laptop this command takes ~6 seconds and produces audible output:
Front left, front right,
This series adds basic sound support for the Odroid X2/U3 boards.
It relies on specific Exynos Audio Subsystem clock parent and
frequencies being pre-configured.
My full testing git branch has been pushed to:
git://linuxtv.org/snawrocki/samsung.git v3.16-rc1-odroid-sound-clk
It can be browsed