Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> Hello, Gentoo.
>
> I've finally got around to buying a pair of new loadspeakers for my new
> (as of 2024-08) PC.  The experience has not been relaxed and obvious.
>
> I have connected the speakers up physically.  I have made the necessary
> settings in the kernel configuration, rebuilt and rebooted into it.  So
> far, so good.
>
> Then I attempt to use alsamixer to unmute the speakers and, hopefully get
> some sound out of them.  This is where my problems start.
>
> alsamixer displays just one object, labelled S/PDIF in the middle of the
> screen.  I don't have an S/PDIF connection, just an ordinary audio cable
> with a green 3.5 mm jack plug at each end.
>
> How do I configure alsamixer to show me appropriate things, such as
> volume settings and so on.
>
> I've tried following https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/ALSA, but it is most
> unhelpful.  It describes in detail a few complicated setups, presumably
> for those who understand the basics and want such a setup.  It doesn't
> say how to get a simple configuration, such as my own, working.
>
> I have a /etc/asound.conf file set up, as suggested in the above doc, as:
>
>     defaults.pcm.!card Generic
>     defaults.pcm.!device 0
>     defaults.pcm.!ctl Generic
>
> ..
>
> Before I spend hours reading documentation, could some kind person
> familiar with these things perhaps give me a tip to getting my speakers
> working.
>
> Setting up loudspeakers shouldn't be this difficult.
>
> Thanks in advance for any help!
>

I have a similar setup.  I made my speakers from a spare set that didn't
fit my car and wasn't worth sending back.  Made a nice little box for
them.  My monitor sits on it.  :-D  Anyway, I use KDE and the new
pipewire thingy.  To be fair, pipewire does work better, mostly.  Still,
you have to unmute in alsa, kmix and all that before using pipewire. 

If the devices are not showing up, either you didn't load the modules if
you use those or didn't enable the right drivers in the kernel. 
Otherwise, they should show up.  I don't think there is any magic to
this.  It never has been for me anyway. 

Even if you don't use KDE and pipewire, it should still show up if the
right drivers are being used.  I'd double or triple check my drivers
first thing.  Using the command lspci -k might help.  Make sure
something is loaded then make sure it is the correct drivers.  If
unsure, booting media from CD/DVD/USB stick and doing a lspci -k there
should help, if sound works.  I find Knoppix works well with this. 
Every system that can have sound, has it with Knoppix. 

Hope that helps. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 

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