Hi all,
I'm trying to setup my Aspire One so I can record what's playing on the
sound card. I've got pretty far (compiled in snd-aloop, andit works), but
I'm looking for some help to tidy up the process for novices...
(At the moment I need to reboot every time I switch between the internal
s
Hi All,
I'm still puzzling over getting my Aspire One so I can record its audio
output to a file. I've got an .asoundrc file as below, and whay I'm trying
to do with this is:
1) Setup card0 as the internal sound card (this works)
2) Setup the loopback adapter so I can test the setup (th
OK, I have it sorted... I was misled by the copy plugin (which I had
misunderstood to be a duplicate plugin, which it isn't, though confusingly
it looks like some people are trying to use it like that in some forums). I
attached my .asoundrc file for reference, this allows sound to be recorded
I'm trying to get my M-Audio FastTrack Ultra USB audio interface to work
under GNU/Linux. JACK seems to recognize the card, however ALSA does not
want to work with it. JACK prints the device as "hw:1 Fast Track Ultra"
and `/proc/asound/cards` agrees with JACK:
0 [Intel ]: HDA-Intel - HDA
>Can you paste /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf ?
Sure thing, hmm: /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf: No such file or directory
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>Can you paste /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf ?
Sure thing, hmm: /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf: No such file or directory
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On Monday 03 August 2009 03:19:28 pm Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> Okay. Run this:
>
> grep -r alsa /etc/modprobe.d | cut -d : -f 1 | uniq | xargs cat
>
> Paste the output here.
# autoloader aliases
install sound-slot-0 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-0
On Tuesday 04 August 2009 02:50:08 am Clemens Ladisch wrote:
> Dar Austin Zaccaro wrote:
> > I'm trying to get my M-Audio FastTrack Ultra USB audio interface to work
> > under GNU/Linux. JACK seems to recognize the card, however ALSA
does not
> > want to work with it.
On Tuesday 04 August 2009 04:52:13 am Dominique Michel wrote:
> It can be somewhere else or have another name. I am on gentoo with
kernel
> 2.6.30 and don't know well the other distributions. It is a too long time
> ago than I shifted to gentoo.
>
> Take a look into /etc/modprobe.d or similar dire
On Monday 03 August 2009 03:19:28 pm Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> Okay. Run this:
>
> grep -r alsa /etc/modprobe.d | cut -d : -f 1 | uniq | xargs cat
>
> Paste the output here.
Output of `grep -r alsa /etc/modprobe.d | cut -d : -f 1 | uniq | xargs cat`:
# autoloader aliases
10 matches
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