Hi,

in tip # 2, i'd like to say to remove the drivers, like modprobe -r
<driver>, not phisically.
Did you ever try OSS or another sound server?

2007/9/20, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> On 9/20/07, Danilo Marcelo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I was reading your first message again and now i understood your real
> > problem.
> > Some tips:
> >
> > 1) Change your player to test;
>
> Again, I have tested audio with Aqualung & mplayer on the desktop and
> Flash in Firefox. They work correctly and go to the internal sound
> chip. I've tested DVD with gmplayer. DVD's play fine and the audio
> goes to the internal sound chip. I've tested DVDs and CDs with xine.
> In both cases xine sends it to the external USB sound card.
>
> > 2) Remove your internal sound card
>
> I cannot. It's a chip on the motherboard. On the other hand it might
> be interesting, at least for test purposes, to disconnect the external
> USB device and restart Alsa. Possibly xine will go internal in that
> case.
>
> > 3) Test alsaconf again
>
> Yeah, been down that road. I've been working with Alsa for almost 8
> years now. Unless there is something very subtle going on here my Alsa
> config is very generic & does specify which sound device is associated
> with which sound card number. And again, every other audio application
> works fine, and xine worked fine until maybe two weeks ago.
> Unfortunately my wife doesn't inform me at the first instant things
> stop working so there's no good way at this point to know what update
> broke it, or whether the update was xine itself, Alsa, or something
> else.
>
> All that said I'll run alsaconf and see what it would do although IIRC
> it doesn't actually set up dual sound cards. You have (or had) to do
> that by hand.
>
> >
> > I'm doing my best to help you.
> > Good luck!
>
> And I do appreciate it! I'll post back about the no-USB experiment
> later this morning if I get a chance to run it.
>
> Cheers,
> Mark
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