On Tue, 6 Jan 2004 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> On Mon, 5 Jan 2004, James Miller wrote:
> 
> > Ok.  It turns out the system speaker is enabled in the .config file:
> >
> > # Input Device Drivers
> > #
> > CONFIG_INPUT_KEYBOARD=y
> > CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ATKBD=y
> > # CONFIG_KEYBOARD_SUNKBD is not set
> > # CONFIG_KEYBOARD_XTKBD is not set
> > # CONFIG_KEYBOARD_NEWTON is not set
> > CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE=y
> > CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2=y
> > CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_SYNAPTICS=y
> > # CONFIG_MOUSE_SERIAL is not set
> > # CONFIG_INPUT_JOYSTICK is not set
> > # CONFIG_INPUT_TOUCHSCREEN is not set
> > CONFIG_INPUT_MISC=y
> > CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y
> 
> this ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ makes the speeker beep :-)
> works for me :-)
> 
> maybe you forgot to reinstall kernel.
> Or maybe the kernel build system got confused ?
> 
> do a make clean and then a make bzImage to regenerate the kernel
> 
Just to be clear, this *is* the config for the running kernel.  I didn't
try any recompiling yet, not being sure if it would help since the speaker
seems already to be enabled in the kernel.  In which case doing "make
clean" and "make bzImage" don't seem like they would make much difference,
as I understand it.  So, you're saying that the console beep/system
speaker works fine on your system with the 2.6 kernel?  If so, I'll 
presume the problem lies in some peculiarity in my system (dang thing 
worked fine under the 2.4.21 Gentoo used for the install!).

Thanks, James
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