William Pitcock a écrit : > Julien BLACHE <jblache <at> debian.org> writes: > >> I think you need at least an Intel HDA card to reproduce that problem, >> as it's probably the driver that presents something weird to the >> lib. Might even need a MacBook with the same setup :| >> >> I'll see on another machine if the ALSA plugin behaves better. >> > > Yes, we have received reports about problems with the intel HDA driver in ALSA > and audacious. I think it's because per Takashi Iwai, we removed the "mmap > mode" > from our plugin, but as I do not use ALSA anymore I can't honestly say what > the > problem is, as I do not know for certain.
Not reproductible on my recent Apple iMac : │ Card: HDA Intel │ Chip: SigmaTel STAC9221 A1 >> Still using OSS ? :) >> > > If by OSS you mean that crappy OSS/Free, then no. > > I use the recently open sourced OSS4, created by the guys who ironically > sponsored XMMS development. The reason being is that ALSA has never really > worked well for my hardware (in any application, including XMMS), and OSS4 > supports my current hardware while ALSA's support is still unimplemented > (Soundblaster XFi). > > If you're having issues with ALSA, I strongly recommend giving OSS4 a go, it > works very well (although some people with political interests over technical > ones are probably likely to disagree). > > You can find out more information at http://developer.opensound.com if you're > interested in it. > >> I'll try to take a closer look at the problem if I can find some time >> to do so. > > Ok, I'm sure they would indeed be happy to look into your problem. Reviewing > IRC > logs it looks like at least Chainsaw is interested in it. > >> Can't be worse than -devel ;) >> > > If you say so. Well, actually, it's very similar. Probably because everyone > feels that they are doing what is best for Audacious, even if it's perhaps > not. > > William > >