I got it working for the most part. See below. On Tue, Dec 06, 2011 at 10:52:48PM +0100, Camaleón wrote: > El 2011-12-03 a las 20:51 -0500, Rob Owens escribió: > > (resending to the list) > Sorry about replying just to you. That was a mistake.
> > On Sat, Dec 03, 2011 at 11:45:23AM +0000, Camaleón wrote: > > > On Fri, 02 Dec 2011 20:58:40 -0500, Rob Owens wrote: > > > > > > > On Fri, Dec 02, 2011 at 05:21:39PM -0500, Rob Owens wrote: > > > >> I've got an nVidia Corporation G98 [GeForce 8400GS] and I'm trying to > > > >> get audio working over HDMI. I'm running Squeeze and the proprietary > > > >> nVidia driver from non-free. > > > >> > > > > I upgraded to Wheezy and am having some success. I have sound in > > > > MythTV, by specifying the audio device to use. How can I get > > > > applications such as Rhythmbox to use HDMI audio? Pulseaudio is > > > > installed on my system, but I don't have any desktop environment (so no > > > > gnome sound properties dialogs). I'm running Openbox. > > > > > > In the past, the usual way for doing this was by setting the choosen > > > audio card as the deafult device for ALSA, to redirect all of the output > > > sound there. > > > > > OK, I've created /etc/asound.conf as follows: > > > > pcm.!default { > > type hw > > card 1 > > device 7 > > } > > ctl.!default { > > type hw > > card 1 > > device 7 > > } > > > > (I got the card and device numbers by running "aplay -l"). > > > > This gives me sound for mplayer, for instance. Rhythmbox and VLC do not > > play any sound, however. I can get VLC to play by changing the output > > module from "default" to "alsa". My current /etc/asound.conf is as follows. It works, but I can't swear that it's 100% by-the-book. pcm.pulse { type pulse } ctl.pulse { type pulse } pcm.!default { type hw card 1 device 7 } ctl.!default { type hw card 1 device 7 } > > Hum... I also have tried with a custom "~/.asoundrc" file and it seems > it does not make any difference here (running GNOME + gnome-shell + > pulseaudio). > > What it works like a charm is selecting the sound device to use from > gnome-shell audio applet but, to be sincere, I don't know from where s > this volume indicator coming from nor its name :-? > > > I think that any application that attempts to use PulseAudio (which is > > the default, I think) will not play. Can anyone suggest a change to > > asound.conf to correct this? Or maybe the fix has nothing to do with > > asound.conf? > > You can try with PA default/suggested applications to control the sound > server, like "pavucontrol", "padevchooser" (I think this is now somehow > deprecated), "gnome-pulse-applet" or whatever applet that integrates > with PA and openbox and allows you to select the output device. > I used gstreamer-properties and set the default output plugin to "PulseAudio Sound Server" and the default output device to "High Definition Audio Controller", which is my HDMI output. In gconf-editor, I set /system/gstreamer/0.10/default/audiosink to "pulsesink device="alsa_output.hw_1_7" and I did the same for /system/gstreamer/0.10/default/musicaudiosink, which I think is what rhythmbox references. Basically this seems like a big workaround. I have not made a single default setting, rather I've fixed every audio application individually (MythTV required me to specify my HDMI device -- I could not simply accept ALSA-Default). The only thing I didn't try yet is blacklisting modules for my onboard audio. Maybe that would simplify things by eliminating one audio device. -Rob -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20111207235325.gb27...@aurora.owens.net