Hi Julien-
Thanks! Now it is working.
I went to the alsa-project.org and found a page that describes how to
setup alsa for this driver. Even though some of the information there is
old, this is what worked:
"In order to unmute the default speaker jacks do:
amixer set PCM 100 unmute"
Hmm... ma
Hello Keitho!
The Intel soundcards are known, to sometmes generate problems, because
they're not all supported yet. This architecture - if I remember correctly -
wraps up an assortment of chips. Were you able to get sound on your laptop
under Linux before? Are you able to get sound from a GUI
El 2010-10-30 a las 08:30 -0400, Rodney D. Myers escribió:
(resending to the list)
> On 10/30/10 7:19 AM, Camaleón wrote:
> > Hum... what happens if you stop ESD daemon?
> >
> > Another thing you can try is playing the file with an external app, like
> > totem from command line, i.e., "totem /u
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 08:22:50AM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> On 10/30/10 7:19 AM, Camaleón wrote:
> > On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 18:29:57 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> >
> >> > On 10/29/10 6:05 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> >>> >> Do you have ESD enabled? If so, try to disable.
> >>> >>
> >>> >> Also, r
On 10/30/10 7:19 AM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 18:29:57 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>
>> > On 10/29/10 6:05 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>>> >> Do you have ESD enabled? If so, try to disable.
>>> >>
>>> >> Also, recheck your sound device permissions:
>>> >>
>>> >> s...@stt008:~$ ls -l /dev/
On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 18:29:57 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> On 10/29/10 6:05 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>> Do you have ESD enabled? If so, try to disable.
>>
>> Also, recheck your sound device permissions:
>>
>> s...@stt008:~$ ls -l /dev/snd
>> total 0
>> crw-rw 1 root audio 116, 0 oct 29 07:42
On 10/29/10 6:05 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 17:20:30 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>
>> > On 10/29/10 4:38 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>>> >> Did you reboot?
>>> >>
>>> >> Yes... I know is not necessary, is just to be sure no other instance in
>>> >> background (flashplayer?) is monopolizi
Dne, 29. 10. 2010 23:55:45 je Camaleón napisal(a):
I suggested that.
You can read the explantion in my last post, should you didn't see.
Greetings,
--
Camaleón
I see now. Apparently, my capability of giving any sound advice -- or
"sound" advice -- is half sleeping already. I should wrap
On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 17:20:30 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> On 10/29/10 4:38 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>> Did you reboot?
>>
>> Yes... I know is not necessary, is just to be sure no other instance in
>> background (flashplayer?) is monopolizing the sound device.
>>
>> Greetings,
>
> Did a reboot, s
On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 23:36:16 +0200, Klistvud wrote:
> Dne, 29. 10. 2010 23:20:30 je Rodney D. Myers napisal(a):
>
>> Did a reboot, still getting this error;
>>
>> play /usr/share/sounds/purple/send.wav ALSA lib
>> pcm_dmix.c:996:(snd_pcm_dmix_open) unable to open slave play soxio:
>> Can't open
Dne, 29. 10. 2010 23:20:30 je Rodney D. Myers napisal(a):
Did a reboot, still getting this error;
play /usr/share/sounds/purple/send.wav
ALSA lib pcm_dmix.c:996:(snd_pcm_dmix_open) unable to open slave
play soxio: Can't open output file `default': cannot open audio device
alsamixer shows the s
On 10/29/10 4:38 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 16:29:39 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>
>> On 10/29/10 3:46 PM, Rob Owens wrote:
>>> On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 02:59:44PM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> Debian Lenny
>
> Sound plays as root, but not as user.
>
>>> Is your r
Dne, 29. 10. 2010 20:59:44 je Rodney D. Myers napisal(a):
Debian Lenny
Sound plays as root, but not as user.
I think on a stock Lenny installation, your plain users aren't members
of the "can play sounds" group by default -- or of any
"elevated-privilege" group, for that matter. Security
On 10/29/10 4:38 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 16:29:39 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>
>> > On 10/29/10 3:46 PM, Rob Owens wrote:
>>> >> On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 02:59:44PM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> >>> > Debian Lenny
> >>> >
> >>> > Sound plays as root, but not as u
On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 16:29:39 -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> On 10/29/10 3:46 PM, Rob Owens wrote:
>> On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 02:59:44PM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>>> > Debian Lenny
>>> >
>>> > Sound plays as root, but not as user.
>>> >
>> Is your regular user a member of the "audio" group?
On 10/29/10 3:46 PM, Rob Owens wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 02:59:44PM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
>> > Debian Lenny
>> >
>> > Sound plays as root, but not as user.
>> >
> Is your regular user a member of the "audio" group?
>
> -Rob
It is now. Forgot about that file.
Still getting this e
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 02:59:44PM -0400, Rodney D. Myers wrote:
> Debian Lenny
>
> Sound plays as root, but not as user.
>
Is your regular user a member of the "audio" group?
-Rob
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Cont
This was probably meant for the list, but I messed my muttrc and got a
wrong reply-to
On Sun, Feb 17, 2008 at 08:08:43PM +0900, Tomoki Taniguchi wrote:
> here are some more outputs
>
> results from hwinfo --sound
>
> 20: PCI 1f.5: 0401 Multimedia audio controller
> [Created at pci.281]
> UDI:
On Sun, Feb 17, 2008 at 02:14:41AM +0900, Tomoki Taniguchi wrote:
> i've checked alsamixer to make sure all the settings are unmuted.
On my laptop I have to *mute* the "Headphone Jack Sense" control to get
any sound.
Regards,
Andrei
--
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it w
On Sun, Feb 17, 2008 at 02:14:41AM +0900, Tomoki Taniguchi wrote:
> I need help getting my sound card working on my laptop.
> the sound card was working under windows prior to installing etch,
> so i know the hardware works.
>
> "aplay -l" gives me
> List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
>
On Sun, 17 Feb 2008, Tomoki Taniguchi shared this with us all:
>--} I need help getting my sound card working on my laptop.
>--} the sound card was working under windows prior to installing etch,
>--} so i know the hardware works.
>--}
>--} "aplay -l" gives me
>--} List of PLAYBACK Hardware De
On Saturday 16 February 2008 18:14, Tomoki Taniguchi wrote:
> I need help getting my sound card working on my laptop.
> the sound card was working under windows prior to installing etch,
> so i know the hardware works.
>
> "aplay -l" gives me
> List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
> card 0:
Florian Kulzer wrote:
On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 20:43:44 +0200, Matthias Brennwald wrote:
Dear all
sound output is not working on my PowerBook G4 with Debian Etch. During
boot I can see a message flashing by, saying something along the lines that
snd_powermac encountered an error -12. Any hints
Hi
On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 08:43:44PM +0200, Matthias Brennwald wrote:
> Dear all
>
> sound output is not working on my PowerBook G4 with Debian Etch. During boot
> I can see a message flashing by, saying something along the lines
> that snd_powermac encountered an error -12. Any hints or ideas
On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 20:43:44 +0200, Matthias Brennwald wrote:
> Dear all
>
> sound output is not working on my PowerBook G4 with Debian Etch. During
> boot I can see a message flashing by, saying something along the lines that
> snd_powermac encountered an error -12. Any hints or ideas?
Hi a
Cam wrote:
Hi,
is there an error regarding sound when you start the game? I would
think it's probably more likely that the sound daemon is tied up by
esd or something. look for errors like '/dev/dsp: resource busy'...
if that's the problem you could try installing the libsdl-esd package.
good
Hi,
is there an error regarding sound when you start the game? I would
think it's probably more likely that the sound daemon is tied up by
esd or something. look for errors like '/dev/dsp: resource busy'...
if that's the problem you could try installing the libsdl-esd package.
good luck,
Camero
On Mon, 22 Mar 2004 19:03:00 +0100
Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thanks for the pointer
> Problem is that I have gnome sounds enabled. They do not recommend
> setting auto_spawn to 1 in that case. Because esd then will be fired up
> every time you hit a button or so.
That's only tr
Chris Metzler wrote:
On Sun, 21 Mar 2004 18:53:23 +0100
Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Remaining problem that I have is that if I enable the Gnome Sound Server
to get sound working under gnome that Rhythmbox is refusing to play
because /dev/dsp is busy. If I disable the Gnome Sound serve
On Sun, 21 Mar 2004 18:53:23 +0100
Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Remaining problem that I have is that if I enable the Gnome Sound Server
>
> to get sound working under gnome that Rhythmbox is refusing to play
> because /dev/dsp is busy. If I disable the Gnome Sound server, Rhythmbo
On Sun, 21 Mar 2004 12:02:55 -0800
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > OK my way is definetly not the right way. If I enable the gnome sound
> > server I get sounds when I open a window or such but then players like
> > rhytmbox complain that
Remaining problem that I have is that if I enable the Gnome Sound
Server to get sound working under gnome that Rhythmbox is refusing to
play because /dev/dsp is busy. If I disable the Gnome Sound server,
Rhythmbox plays fine. However if I start up xmms and also play a file
there it doesn't work
Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 1) Your sound chip is not properly supported by whatever kernel
> you're using,
>or
> 2) You don't have the correct modules installed
>or
> 3) You're running a desktop environment like KDE or Gnome which
> expects a sound daemon like artsd or esd,
Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> OK my way is definetly not the right way. If I enable the gnome sound
> server I get sounds when I open a window or such but then players like
> rhytmbox complain that /dev/dsp is temporarily unavailable :(
That's normal. You need to set other players t
Jaap Haitsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have the feeling that what I did is not the official way to set
> things up. For example in Fedora both /dev/dsp and /dev/mixer have as
> permission crw--- and are owned by root:root
So far, so good, except for the permissions. Permissions on audi
Jaap Haitsma wrote:
I now listed my soundcard driver (maestro3) in /etc/modules
Strange thing is that previously I'm pretty sure that it got loaded
automatically by the Debian boot process. Does debian have something
like redhat's kudzu that recognizes hardware changes or do I always
need to li
> Nope; not what you want to do. Instead, add your user to the audio
> group, like so:
>adduser jaap audio
>>
>> What I first tried is adding the audio group to my group but that
>> didn't work.
>
> After adding your user to the audio group, you'll need to logout and
> back in.
Thanks, forgot t
Jaap Haitsma wrote:
Hi,
Yesterday I installed Debian Unstable (hoping to become a very happy
Debian user) by running the netinstaller and then selecting "desktop"
in tasksel.
I had the problem that sound and volume control weren't working.
When I wanted to play an audio file it was complainin
Jaap Haitsma wrote:
Hi,
Yesterday I installed Debian Unstable (hoping to become a very happy
Debian user) by running the netinstaller and then selecting "desktop" in
tasksel.
I had the problem that sound and volume control weren't working.
When I wanted to play an audio file it was complaining
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wednesday 11 September 2002 07:57 am, David Pastern wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> I am not able to get sound working via sndconfig on my debian system. I'm
> running woody, 2.4.18 kernel, i've compiled a kernel with modules for my
> sound card ((via82cxx
Hi David,
On Thu, 12 Sep 2002 the mental interface of
David Pastern told:
> Hi again,
[...]
What are you doing there? I thought you install a debian box!
Do you want to build your system from scratch? Bahh. Try GenTo or
something else. BTW there exists a project "linux from scratch". Use
goo
On Tue, Oct 16, 2001 at 08:25:02AM +0200, Morbo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > I didn't realize that there was anyone else running a shuttle
> > mainboard. Cool. On an unrelated topic, do you get some garbage on the
> side of
> > your screen that seems to be caused by interence from something? My board
> > ha
Hi,
> I didn't realize that there was anyone else running a shuttle
> mainboard. Cool. On an unrelated topic, do you get some garbage on the
side of
> your screen that seems to be caused by interence from something? My board
> has a Savage S3 chip on board and I'm assuming that this is the cause o
On Mon, Oct 15, 2001 at 07:15:34PM +0200, Morbo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I still have some problems.
> I get sound if I cat some wav files to /dev/audio or /dev/dsp, allthough
> very silently.
> (Somebody mentioned in a previous post installing a mixer. How I do that?)
>
O.K. I don't have the sou
Oh, and the volume is so low because your mixer settings are set that way.
Get a mixer program (Gnome has one of its own in the multimedia package I
think) and up the volume.
On Thursday 30 August 2001 07:09 pm, David Nusinow wrote:
> Hi Eric,
> My guess is that your soundcard isn't config
Hi Eric,
My guess is that your soundcard isn't configured as a module, but is
instead
compiled right in to the kernel, hence the lack of anything with lsmod.
I don't know exactly why your sound will play when you cat it, but not
in
gnome, but the most common cause of audio probl
Jon Pennington wrote:
Sorry I can't help with your sound issue, but where did you get IDE patches
for 2.2.18? The patch I have for 2.2.17 doesn't apply cleanly...
Right here:
http://www.linux-ide.org/
Hope this helps!
Kelly
--
-- Kelly Corbin
Hmm, well I compiled it as a module and now my sound works again. It
seems that maybe the 2.2.18 kernel only likes the emu10k1 as a module?
I've had numerous instances of things not working as modules, but this
is the first time I've had something /only/ work as a module.
Kelly
Kelly Corbin w
>I have compiled pnp, sound, awe32 and 100% SB Compatible
>support into my kernel (monolithic, no modules). Sound
>works, sort of. chmod 666 /dev/dsp and /dev/mixer
Bad idea for security reasons. Simply add yourself to the "audio" group via
"adduser ". Then logout and back in and you have ac
Hi Jeffrey,
I really don't know if this helps you, but since I've
recently battled (and won) with my soundcard I think I
understand your plight. I had a prob in which I was
able to play sound though the volume was very low and
if I used something like the -v option of play to
increase the volume,
Chan Min Wai wrote:
>
> Hai, Me again
>
> I have a SB32 pnp that work fine in Win98 and Dos when I change to
> linux I first use isapnp to config the card and its ok...
>
> Then I don't know What to do next although I follow the HOWTO sound
> and
> setup the Sound but it did
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