On Fri, 22 Jun 2007 the mental interface of Kingsley G. Morse Jr. told:
> kernel 2.6.18-4-k7 > > ii alsa-base 1.0.13-1 ALSA > driver configuration files > ii alsa-modules-2.4.19-aa1 0.9.0rc6+3+p0+10.00.Custom Advanced > Linux Sound Architecture (drivers) > ii alsa-modules-2.4.27-1-k7 1.0.6a+5 ALSA > driver modules > ii alsa-oss 1.0.12-1 ALSA > wrapper for OSS applications > ii alsa-source 0.9.0rc6-3 ALSA > driver source > ii alsa-utils 1.0.9a-4 ALSA > utilities > rc alsaconf 0.4.3b-4 ALSA > configurator [...] > ii linux-sound-base 1.0.9b-4 base > package for ALSA and OSS sound systems [...] Looks like you're running etch? Please install at least: apt-get install -t stable libasound2 alsa-utils alsa-base alsa-source Remove old alsaconf, which isn't really needed: apt-get remove --purge alsaconf If you're using Debian's kerneldrivers, your soundcard might be usable now. Otherwise build your soundcard with fresh intalled alsa-source package. On Fri, 22 Jun 2007 the mental interface of Kingsley G. Morse Jr. told: > On 06/22/07 19:17, Elimar Riesebieter wrote: > > Your installation seems to be a chaos which > > should be sorted by a clean update/upgrade > > first! > > Dear Elimar, > > You're not the first person to recommend an > upgrade, and I'm sure you won't be the last. > > Here's the big but. > > BUT, "apt-get check" reports no broken > dependencies, and an "apt-get upgrade" might Hey, Iam running sid (unstable) on servers. Very stable, man ;) Your installation is mixed up back from woody to some lenny packages. Maybe there are some Potato packages flowing around ? I am wondering whether this works anyway. You're done with an apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade. If you then have ALSA probs, you're welcome to help you ;) But your mixed up installation isn't supportable for a maintainer, though. Elimar -- .~. /V\ L I N U X /( )\ >Phear the Penguin< ^^-^^ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]