The sound system has now taken on a new personality of its own. The internal speakers appear in the "Play sound through" list of Output pane of System Settings > Sound along with Headphones, built-in audio (even though there are no headphones connected. The Test Sound button works on both these items but produces the same test through the internal speakers.
The Rhythm Box Music player produces sound out of the built-in speakers as expected. Connection of a set of Bluetooth Headphones results in them being listed in the Play sound through list. The Test Sound button works through these headphones as does the output of the Rhythm Box Music Player. If a pair of wired headphones are plugged into the headphone socket, they are not deteted and the Test Sound button sends its test signal via the internal speakers. However, if the Bluetooth headphones are selected in the Play sound through list, the Test Sound button tests are directed through the Bluetooth headphones as one might expect. I am inclined to think that the original HDMI output was a red herring. I have, in the past, got sound to play through the speakers built-in to an HDMI monitor by connecting the monitor through the video output using an HDMI adapter. It seems that the sound output system is not very good at detecting which output devices are connected at any one time. This might be due to shortcomings in the kernel or for other reasons. Who knows? One thing that I can be sure of is that, after restarting the laptop, the sound system might well be in a new state and not necessarily in the one that it was in before restarting. There does not appear to be any consistent behaviour as yet. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to alsa-driver in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1402194 Title: PCI/internal sound card not detected Status in alsa-driver package in Ubuntu: Incomplete Bug description: This bug relates to the internal sound hardware in a Dell XPS 13 laptop. Since accepting an upgrade to the latest Ubuntu Extra software today, the Systems Settings > Sound > Output no longer show the internal speakers, despite numerous attempts to shut down and restart. Before accepting the upgrade, the sound played normally through the speakers. Having upgraded the system from the Ubuntu 12.10 originally installed with the laptop and finding comments relating to the software drivers for the Intel WiFi and Bluetooth chip (Intel AC 7520) and touch screen, I tried out an installation straight from a Ubuntu 14.04 bootable USB stick. The system worked well enough without these drivers so I went ahead and replaced the whole installation from the USB stick and subsequently accepted the upgrade to 14.10. I tried plugging in a headset and this produced a screen allowing me to select the type of headset (mono, with or without mic or stereo). An extra entry appeared in the System Settings > Sound > Output pane allowing me to choose between the headset or the speakers and to test the audio on each one. However, unplugging the headset seemed to produce intermittent behaviour, the system being uncertain as to whether the headset was in use. This was solved by re-booting and the system and speakers behaved as expected. Now I have the situation that the speakers are not shown in the Sound > Output pane and the Output Volume slider stays at zero and is unable to be moved with the pointer. The volume control slider in the dropdown panel from the speaker symbol in the system tray appears to respond to movement from the pointer and the Fn-F11 & F12 keys. However, with no output device shown, there is no sound output to the speakers. Several attempts to restart the system have failed to restore the speaker functionality. ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 14.10 Package: alsa-base 1.0.25+dfsg-0ubuntu4 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 3.16.0-28.38-generic 3.16.7-ckt1 Uname: Linux 3.16.0-28-generic x86_64 ApportVersion: 2.14.7-0ubuntu8 Architecture: amd64 AudioDevicesInUse: USER PID ACCESS COMMAND /dev/snd/controlC0: david 2172 F.... pulseaudio CurrentDesktop: Unity Date: Sat Dec 13 13:28:32 2014 InstallationDate: Installed on 2014-12-11 (1 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS "Trusty Tahr" - Release amd64 (20140722.2) PackageArchitecture: all ProcEnviron: LANGUAGE=en_GB:en PATH=(custom, no user) XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=<set> LANG=en_GB.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash SourcePackage: alsa-driver Symptom: audio Title: PCI/internal sound card not detected UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to utopic on 2014-12-11 (1 days ago) dmi.bios.date: 09/11/2014 dmi.bios.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.bios.version: A05 dmi.board.name: 0D13CR dmi.board.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.board.version: A00 dmi.chassis.type: 8 dmi.chassis.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.chassis.version: 0.1 dmi.modalias: dmi:bvnDellInc.:bvrA05:bd09/11/2014:svnDellInc.:pnXPS139333:pvr:rvnDellInc.:rn0D13CR:rvrA00:cvnDellInc.:ct8:cvr0.1: dmi.product.name: XPS13 9333 dmi.sys.vendor: Dell Inc. To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/alsa-driver/+bug/1402194/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp