* Andoru [2016-02-18 02:54 +0200]:
[...]
> This can be now closed as it's no longer a bug. The message about missing
> files led me to think that the ALSA package I got was broken, thus the bug
> report.
Closed hereby.
Elimar
--
355/113: Not the famous irrational number pi,
but an
> > > Sometimes pulseaudio is the cause.
> >
> > $ apt-cache policy pulseaudio
> > pulseaudio:
> > Installed: (none)
> > Candidate: 7.1-2
> > Version table:
> > 7.1-2 500
> > 500 http://ftp.debian.org/debian unstable/main amd64 Packages
>
> What tells:
>
> dpkg -l | egrep "(a
* Andoru [2016-02-16 01:27 +0200]:
> > Sometimes pulseaudio is the cause.
>
> $ apt-cache policy pulseaudio
> pulseaudio:
> Installed: (none)
> Candidate: 7.1-2
> Version table:
> 7.1-2 500
> 500 http://ftp.debian.org/debian unstable/main amd64 Packages
What tells:
dpkg
> Sometimes pulseaudio is the cause.
$ apt-cache policy pulseaudio
pulseaudio:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 7.1-2
Version table:
7.1-2 500
500 http://ftp.debian.org/debian unstable/main amd64 Packages
> According to http://alsa.opensrc.org/DmixPlugin you don't need to setup
* Andoru [2016-02-15 07:09 +0200]:
> Package: alsa-base
> Version: 1.0.27+1
> Severity: normal
>
> So I've been trying to fix this problem for a while now, but I can't seem
> to set up ALSA in a way to enable multiple sound sources at once (2 or more
> apps/programs to use the soundcard simultan
Package: alsa-base
Version: 1.0.27+1
Severity: normal
So I've been trying to fix this problem for a while now, but I can't seem
to set up ALSA in a way to enable multiple sound sources at once (2 or more
apps/programs to use the soundcard simultaneously). Despite having a dmix
entry in /etc/asound
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