On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 12:56 PM, Bruno Schneider wrote:
> It's a notebook, no plugs or wires to test. But I did check the
> hardware by booting into an old Mandriva partition and sound works
> there.
I'm bumping up the thread with new information: sound works on
headphones, only the speakers seem
On Tuesday 04 August 2015 16:29:08 Nicolas George wrote:
> Le septidi 17 thermidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > > I assume, of course, that you re-re-checked the speakers and tried to
> > > plug them in all sockets?
> >
> > Sorry, but... And checked that they are plugged in to a turned on
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 11:16 AM, Nicolas George wrote:
> You could try posting the output of amixer (with the correct -D option for
> your card), someone may spot something not correctly routed.
Output is at the bottom. Also included a screenshot of alsamixer here:
http://postimg.org/image/jf
Le septidi 17 thermidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > I assume, of course, that you re-re-checked the speakers and tried to plug
> > them in all sockets?
> Sorry, but... And checked that they are plugged in to a turned on wall
> socket
> and turned on themselves?
That is not even enough
On Tuesday 04 August 2015 15:16:39 Nicolas George wrote:
> I assume, of course, that you re-re-checked the speakers and tried to plug
> them in all sockets?
Sorry, but... And checked that they are plugged in to a turned on wall socket
and turned on themselves?
Lisi
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Le septidi 17 thermidor, an CCXXIII, Bruno Schneider a écrit :
> I can see my card in /proc/asound/cards:
Good.
> But I can't play sound on it:
The reason is in the error message. Unlike some other systems, Linux gives
useful error messages, reading them is a good habit to take.
> aplay: set_pa
On Mon, Aug 3, 2015 at 5:18 PM, Nicolas George wrote:
>
> I gave a few hints about the tools to use for that in this message:
>
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/07/msg00648.html
I can see my card in /proc/asound/cards:
$ cat /proc/asound/cards
0 [Generic]: HDA-Intel - HD-Audio
[Please don't top post, it makes it hard to follow and reply.]
On Mon, Aug 03, 2015 at 12:48:36PM -0700, Mike Izbicki wrote:
> The list of modules helped a bunch! I modprobed them one-by-one and
> after running `modprobe snd_hda_intel` a bunch of new devices showed
> up and sound started working
Le sextidi 16 thermidor, an CCXXIII, Bruno Schneider a écrit :
> Therefore, I'm starting to think it is an ALSA problem. But I don't
> know where to continue my search for errors.
I gave a few hints about the tools to use for that in this message:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/07/msg0
I have a problem that is similar to Mike's, but I'm using Debian
testing (stretch).
One day, sound stopped working and I just can't make it work again.
I'm been looking mostly into pulseaudio for any misconfigurations but
everything seems ok. Running "pacmd list-sinks" show my HDMI output
and fro
On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 12:48:36 -0700
Mike Izbicki wrote:
> The list of modules helped a bunch! I modprobed them one-by-one and
> after running `modprobe snd_hda_intel` a bunch of new devices showed
> up and sound started working.
>
> Thanks!
>
outstanding!
Very glad to have been able to help.
The list of modules helped a bunch! I modprobed them one-by-one and
after running `modprobe snd_hda_intel` a bunch of new devices showed
up and sound started working.
Thanks!
On Mon, Aug 3, 2015 at 12:00 PM, wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 09:16:16 -0700
> Mike Izbicki wrote:
>
>>
>> I also just
On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 09:16:16 -0700
Mike Izbicki wrote:
>
> I also just ran the `alsaloop` program, which gave the following
> output not related to /dev/dsp:
> ```
> ALSA lib pcm_hw.c:1401:(_snd_pcm_hw_open) Invalid value for card
> playback hw:0,0 open error: No such file or directory
> Loopback
On Sun, 2 Aug 2015 19:03:06 -0700
Mike Izbicki wrote:
> I *think* the fundamental problem is that /dev/dsp doesn't exist. For
> example, when I run mplayer, I get the following output:
My sound works and I do not have a /dev/dsp
>
> Running alsamixer shows a master channel and a capture chann
I run Debian Wheezy. About a month ago I updated some of my packages
and sound stopped working in all of my programs. I completely forget
the exact commands I ran or packages I upgraded. At the time I didn't
care that sounds didn't work, but now I want to get it working again.
I *think* the fun
Chris Dams wrote:
Dear Ye Fei and others,
I just ran 'alsaconf' but this does not help. Still no sound. :-(
Just a thought: perhaps your motherboard has integrated sound and you
want to use a PCI sound card? Make sure that the device you configure in
Alsaconf is the one you have your spe
Dear Ye Fei and others,
I just ran 'alsaconf' but this does not help. Still no sound. :-(
Best wishes,
Chris
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perhaps you should run 'alsaconf' to configure your sound system
again.
best regards,
Y.F.
On 2007-03-15, Chris Dams ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> Recently I did an apt-get update followed by apt-get upgrade. This
> included an upgrade to kernel 2.6.18-4-amd64. After rebooting soun
Dear all,
Recently I did an apt-get update followed by apt-get upgrade. This
included an upgrade to kernel 2.6.18-4-amd64. After rebooting sound
stopped working. lsmod still shows the right driver being loaded and I set
the volume to a nonzero value using kmix. When I play (say) a wav file
noat
On Tue, 3 Sep 2002 22:04:14 -0500
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Martin A. Hansen) wrote:
> i upgraded my kernel from 2.4.17 to 2.4.19.
>
> i used to have alsa working, but now it dont anymore.
>
> i compile my own alsa package with make-kpkg.
>
> the speakers click when i start alsa. alsamixer seems to b
On Tue, 03 Sep 2002, Martin A. Hansen wrote:
> hi there
>
> i upgraded my kernel from 2.4.17 to 2.4.19.
>
> i used to have alsa working, but now it dont anymore.
>
> i compile my own alsa package with make-kpkg.
Hi,
you have to compile your alsa-packages again every-time you upgrade or
compil
On Tue, 03 Sep 2002, Martin A. Hansen wrote:
> hi there
>
> i upgraded my kernel from 2.4.17 to 2.4.19.
> i compile my own alsa package with make-kpkg.
Hi,
you have to compile your alsa-packages again every-time you upgrade or
compile a new kernel.
As root, go to the the base of the kernel sour
i am aware of the permission trap, and no, sound does not work as root
either ...
there must be something else wrong.
martin
On Wed, Sep 04, 2002 at 01:19:23AM -0400, C. Schanck wrote:
> On Tuesday 03 September 2002 11:04 pm, Martin A. Hansen wrote:
> > hi there
> >
> > i upgraded my kernel
hi there
i upgraded my kernel from 2.4.17 to 2.4.19.
i used to have alsa working, but now it dont anymore.
i compile my own alsa package with make-kpkg.
the speakers click when i start alsa. alsamixer seems to be working, but i can get no
soundprograms to make any sound. mpg123, alsaplayer, x
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