Etienne Imguimbert posted <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, excerpted below, on Tue, 24 Jan 2006 16:45:07 +0100:
> I confirm, I don't have any snd-ioctl32 module in the module tree of my > current kernel. Althought, sound works with doom3 (32 bits app) but is very > noisy. I've installed alsa with emerge, not directly in the kernel... > > I've searched in the alsa documentation, also in the kernel documentation. > Nothing found about that :-( > Has someone any information about this module? > Thank you in advance I did a check when the module first came up, and was going to post, but decided not to since I don't really know that much about it, and am not much of a gamer, either. I figured someone else more into games would have something more useful to say than I could offer. However, as that mysterious someone hasn't stepped forward... As best I can tell, the info on the module is for kernel 2.4 and probably early 2.6. I found a reference discussing removing the option, since it was already built-into something else (I think alsa, but was just quick scanning and may have gotten that wrong). IIRC the date on that was March or April of last year (2005). You should be able to google and get the same sort of information I was coming up with -- as I said, I don't have any real knowledge on the subject -- and googling isn't a talent exclusive to me. <g> In any case, I /think/ it's now built-into something else, but whether it's enabled there by default, or requires something to toggle it on, or whether the API has changed form and no longer exists in the form the game uses... I can't say. I /can/ say I was just googling the module name. It's possible there's more available on gaming forums or the like, that you'd know more about than I. I can /also/ confirm that I don't have such a kernel option here, that I could see, anyway, so it doesn't appear to be that you are simply overlooking whats there, because it's not. As I said, I was /hoping/ someone who could be rather more helpful would post, but that's what I know of the subject, FWIW. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman in http://www.linuxdevcenter.com/pub/a/linux/2004/12/22/rms_interview.html -- [email protected] mailing list
