well, problem not solved.
how do I make a new alsa.conf? I think my old one was generated when I just
had one card. But know I have three. It doesn't have any reference to the
other cards, so, how can I change the order of the cards?
I moved alsa.conf form modprob.d to ~, and runned alsaconf, but
Problem solved! Thanks.
I've just put "options snd cards_limit=3". And everything is working pretty
fine. :)
2011/9/21 Dominique Michel
> Le Tue, 20 Sep 2011 21:43:48 -0300,
> João Matos a écrit :
>
> > Hi List.
> >
> > I'm a Gentoo Linux user and I'm using the alsa available at the
> > versio
Le Tue, 20 Sep 2011 21:43:48 -0300,
João Matos a écrit :
> Hi List.
>
> I'm a Gentoo Linux user and I'm using the alsa available at the
> version 3.0 of linux kernel.
Hi,
You need a /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf file with something like
# ALSA portion
alias char-major-116 snd
# OSS/Free portion
a
Hi List.
I'm a Gentoo Linux user and I'm using the alsa available at the version 3.0
of linux kernel.
I've been using linux for more than six years and I've never had big
problems with alsa. However, a few weeks ago I bought a webcam that has a
mic. This mic is recognized as usb audio device.
Si