Hello (quoting fixed, please go to <http://learn.to/quote>)
Noah Durell (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote: > Noah Durell (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote: >> Andreas Janssen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> Noah Durell (<[EMAIL PROTECTED] >) wrote: >>> >>>> I have the emu10k1x sound card and I can't find the drivers for >>>> this in the modconf list. Is there a way to add this driver to the >>>> list and if so where would i find it? :) >>> >>> What exactly is the name of that card? If the emu10k1 driver does >>> not work, try the ALSA drivers, and go to >>> <http://opensource.creative.com/soundcard.html>. >> >> The name of the card is emu10k1x. It's the dell version of the >> emu10k1. I should have mentioned that I recently updated my kernel. >> Since the update the emu10k1x is no longer listed on my modconf. I >> have the alsa drivers installed. > > Ok sorry to bother you guys. I guess the drivers weren't installed > after all. I had to download and install them from the website above. > For future reference how do I install these drivers using apt-get? > What does apt-get install alsa-base do? alsa-base has the basic alsa libraries. You should also install alsa-oss and alsa-utils. Apart from that you need the alsa modules. For some kernels there are precompiled packages with the drivers (I think), for some you have to install the alsa-source and kernel-headers-$(uname -r) packages, and you probably also want kernel-package and build-essential. That way you can create a deb with the modules for your kernel. If you use kernel 2.6, the drivers should be included in the kernel image package, as ALSA now is part of the official kernel. best regards Andreas Janssen -- Andreas Janssen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> PGP-Key-ID: 0xDC801674 ICQ #17079270 Registered Linux User #267976 http://www.andreas-janssen.de/debian-tipps.html -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]