Seeing as this behavior is intentional and there existing a workaround,
I'm marking this bug wontfix.
(The workaround in this case is not ignore_dB=1 but control=foo)
** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => Won't Fix
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Volume slider controls multiple hardware mixers
htt
Yes, I read it. I like the fact that my mixers are all merged into one
big mixer. But the result is that the one big mixer has an extremely
large dynamic range, larger than what it practically usable.
It is also possible that the dB values reported by the hardware driver
(Intel HDA) are not accura
Please read the PulseAudioStoleMyVolumes wiki page on pulseaudio.org.
On Feb 13, 2010 4:15 PM, "Ryan Thompson"
wrote:
Ok, using ignore_dB=1 restored the old behavior. And the cause turned
out to be more or less what I expected. Pulseaudio is merging the
hardware mixers into one big mixer. The 0%
Ok, using ignore_dB=1 restored the old behavior. And the cause turned
out to be more or less what I expected. Pulseaudio is merging the
hardware mixers into one big mixer. The 0% mark on my Master mixer also
says "-48.00 dB", and the 0% mark on my PCM mixer gives me "-51.00 dB",
which means that th
Hi Ryan,
Please try
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingSoundProblems/KarmicCaveats#Volume%20range%20anomalies
and see if that solves your problem.
** Changed in: pulseaudio (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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Volume slider controls multiple hardware mixers
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs
** Attachment added: "Video of weird volume slider behavior"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/39131485/mixer-bug.ogv
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Volume slider controls multiple hardware mixers
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/521237
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