On Dec 18 10:27:19, maillists.rul...@mailbox.org wrote:
> /etc/rc.conf.local:
> sndiod_flags=-f rsnd/0 -F rsnd/1
> ...
>
> /etc/hotplug/{attach,detach}:
> ...
> DEVCLASS=$1
> DEVNAME=$2
> case $DEVCLASS in
> 0)
> case $DEVNAME in
>
On Mon, Dec 20, 2021 at 09:59:29AM +0100, Richard Ulmer wrote:
> Hi Alexandre, Hi Christian,
> thanks for you responses! In the meantime Ralf Horstmann had also
> contacted me and helped me find a workaround.
>
> Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> > Keyboard volume keys control volume of first audio devi
On Sat, Dec 18, 2021 at 10:27:19AM +0100, Richard Ulmer wrote:
> Hi all,
> with the help of https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html I have set up a
> USB sound card for my laptop. I use when it is attached and the internal
> one when it is not (just like the example in FAQ #13).
>
> This works nice
On 2021-12-18, "Richard Ulmer" wrote:
> This works nicely, but one thing is missing: The volume keys on my
> Laptop (ThinkPad T450) don't change the volume when the USB sound card
> is used. They work when the internal sound card is used, but I don't
> recall ever configuring this. There has to b
Apple machines tend to need gpio pin related quirks.
If you include the output of 'pcidump -v' for the audio device it will
help figure out which set of quirks your machine needs.
On Sun, Apr 13, 2014 at 07:22:12PM -0400, Allan Streib wrote:
> For what it's worth, I get the same low volume when I use the "speaker"
> jack on the back of the computer. I've also verified that the speakers
> themselves are working properly, using another audio source.
OK. It was just the first
Josh Grosse writes:
> I noticed this in your mixerctl results. It may be the root of the
> problem.
>
>> outputs.spkr_mute=on [ off on ]
>
> All other "mute" settings in your mixerctl results show as *off*.
I think what's going on here is that when I ran mixerctl I had my
speakers plugged in t
On Sun, Apr 13, 2014 at 06:05:02PM -0400, Allan Streib wrote:
> I'm running OpenBSD 5.5-current on a MacPro1,1. dmesg (complete below)
> shows azalia Intel 6321ESB HD Audio with Realtek ALC885 codec. After
> working through the FAQ I have managed to get a very low level of audio...
I noticed this
I'm running OpenBSD 5.5-current on a MacPro1,1. dmesg (complete below)
shows azalia Intel 6321ESB HD Audio with Realtek ALC885 codec. After
working through the FAQ I have managed to get a very low level of audio
but even using mixerctl to set outputs.master to the maximum level I get
barely audible
On 09/03/12 10:19, Robert Connolly wrote:
> Hello.
>
> Is there any way I can increase the volume output of my headphones and
> speakers. Doubling the volume would be nice. Maybe a kernel modification?
>
> Thanks
>
>
you could try mixerctl.
man mixerctl
--
Udo
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html
Hello.
Is there any way I can increase the volume output of my headphones and
speakers. Doubling the volume would be nice. Maybe a kernel modification?
Thanks
Hi all, Jacob,
I have noticed this problem off and on, where the audio volume is
stuck at max (or close to it) and I am unable to adjust the volume
until I reboot. This doesn't happen often, and with the current
snapshot I've been running, for a month now, it is the first time it
has h
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