Clemens Ladisch wrote:
Jeremy Henty wrote:
/bin/sh: ${xtmp:0:5}: bad substitution
I am using bash-1.14 . If I drop into bash-2.03 it accepts
${xtmp:0:5} without any complaint. Is building with bash-1 no
longer supported?
In theory, bash-1 is supported. This has been fixed in the
Hi Takashi,
I've tried all combinations such as pci=biosirq,bios
with and without acpi=noacpi.
Still no luck.
The card plays a very short portion of the wave file
(something in the range of half a second), then keeps
on looping that bit until aplay returns with an I/O
error.
Any idea what else
Ok, now:
Btw, what was the original problem with sound in Mandrake 9.1?
The original problem was that the sound go, but it is very noise and "slow" (with the system sound too).
So I think that the problem is the driver, and I download newest version from the site.
Now, I have uninstalled the
Hey!
I've got huge problems compiling alsa on debian 2.2.19
And i'm not finding anything in the archives (search broken)
./configure --with-isapnp=no --with-oss=no --with-cards=cs4232
--with-sequencer=yes
is not a problem (it was until i downloaded the kernelsources and copied
version.h to
I have a problem running q3-based games, because my ALSA sound card 0 does not
output in stereo (appearently because it prefers 10-channel, 32-bit). So I've
tried for hours to get ALSA to change the card numberings, so that my onboard
soundmodule becomes card #0.
From the documentation this
On Fri, 13 Jun 2003, lasse wrote:
Hey!
I've got huge problems compiling alsa on debian 2.2.19
And i'm not finding anything in the archives (search broken)
yadayada... sorry for replying my own mail.
Just figured it out.
i need the kernel HEADERS. to compile. check!
it worked like a
Hi,
I've installed Redhat 9.0 on my new Asus P4PE motherboard with Analog
Device's SoundMax AD1980 on-board sound. When the standard installation would not
give me any sound I downloaded and installed the current ALSA 0.9.4 version
(driver/libs/utils/oss), configuring the driver with
./configure
Do you have the devices themselves? They should be created under /dev/snd,
stuff like pcmC0D0c, controlC0, etc. And, if you modprobe as a regular
user, you should have rw access to /dev/snd and devices inside.
Note that /dev/snd used to be a symlink to /proc/asound/dev in earlier
versions of ALSA,
I think there is something else going on here. I can not get
sound to work with either the OSS drivers or ALSA, but it does work
under Windows (so I know the hardware is OK). As I mentioned before, I
can get both OSS and ALSA working with an extra sound card I have lying
around, so I