On Thu, Jan 24, 2008 at 14:08:12 -0800, Kyle Barbour wrote: [ snip: Kyle needed to upgrade ALSA to version 1.0.15 to support his Santa Rose chipset. He followed the instructions on this website: http://www.klabs.be/~fpiat/linux/debian/Lenny_on_Thinkpad_T61/#Sound ]
> lsmod | grep snd: > > snd_hda_intel 239160 1 [...] > cat /proc/asound/version: > > Advanced Linux Sound Architecture Driver Version 1.0.14 (Thu May 31 09:03:25 > 2007 UTC). > > cat /proc/asound/cards: > > 0 [Intel ]: HDA-Intel - HDA Intel > HDA Intel at 0xfe020000 irq 21 > > cat /dev/sndstat: > > Sound Driver:3.8.1a-980706 (ALSA v1.0.14 emulation code) > Kernel: Linux finnegan 2.6.22-3-686 #1 SMP Mon Nov 12 08:32:57 UTC 2007 i686 [...] > I notice that 'cat /proc/asound/version' is saying that I'm using ALSA > 1.0.14, while I remember getting the sources for 1.0.15. Maybe this > has something to do with the problem? Yes, that should be the root of the problem. AFAICT, you uninstalled the newer ALSA package again when you ran this command: apt-get remove --purge alsa-modules-$(uname -r) (The instructions on that website are generally very good, but in this point they are a bit confusing.) You can check the status of the new ALSA package with dpkg -l alsa-modules-$(uname -r) This command should show you "ii" as the status (the first two characters in the alsa-modules-* line). My guess is that you will see "pn" instead. The .deb package that you built with module-assistant should still be in /usr/src; just run "ls -l /usr/src/alsa-modules-$(uname -r)*.deb" to check. It will probably be sufficient if you reinstall this package with dpkg -i /usr/src/alsa-modules-$(uname -r)*.deb and reboot. -- Regards, | http://users.icfo.es/Florian.Kulzer Florian | -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]