Maurizio Dall'Acqua wrote:
> numid=22,iface=MIXER,name='PCM Playback Volume'
> numid=23,iface=MIXER,name='hdmi_volume'
These look suspicious. Did you at any time try the softvol plugin?
Regards,
Clemens
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> These look suspicious. Did you at any time try the softvol plugin?
No, I haven't tried softvol plugin.
Maurizio
On Fri, March 3, 2017 20:26, Clemens Ladisch wrote:
> Maurizio Dall'Acqua wrote:
>> numid=22,iface=MIXER,name='PCM Playback Volume'
>> numid=23,iface=MIXER,name='hdmi_volume'
>
> Is it possible that the "equal" device goes through a different device?
Maybe it's true, but I can't determine. In any case here is the output for
"amixer -c 1 contents":
numid=1,iface=CARD,name='HDMI/DP,pcm=3 Jack'
; type=BOOLEAN,access=r---,values=1
: values=off
Maurizio Dall'Acqua wrote:
> I cannot set the volume anymore after I've successfully installed alsaequal.
> [...]
> The result is that I can use the equalizer with the command
>
> alsamixer -D equal
>
> and it works, but the volume in alsamixer doesn't work
Doesn't the original "alsamixer"
Hello,
I cannot set the volume anymore after I've successfully installed alsaequal.
I use Linux Mint 18.1 and NVidia card (hw:1,7) with default PulseAudio.
I've disabled PulseAudio to use Alsa like so:
$ sudo nano /etc/pulse/client.conf
(...)
autospawn = no
(...)
I then installed alsaequal
Maurizio Dall'Acqua wrote:
> When I use "alsamixer" it appears the volume meter in the shell but if I
> raise or lower the volume, the audio settings do not change accordingly.
> Instead the volume remains loud and, I suppose, 100%.
Is it possible that the "equal" device goes through a different