Long story short, my USB DAC was listed at index 0 within the list of
pulseaudio sinks.
-> when in good state:
$ pacmd list-sinks
2 sink(s) available.
index: 0
name:
So, I usually set it as the default output sink:
$ pacmd set-default-sink 0
I thought it might worked as
Am 18.04.19 um 17:03 schrieb JB:
> I managed to track this bug down to udev,
How?
--
Why is it that all of the instruments seeking intelligent life in the
universe are pointed away from Earth?
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I managed to track this bug down to udev, but I am no expert when it comes to
it, so I might be wrong. I also thought it could be the kernel when I saw the
dmesg output but first I had to be sure it was not a udev issue.
At this point, I suspect it might even be a hardware issue (device which
Am 18.04.19 um 01:43 schrieb Jul':
> Sorry for the lack of details.
>
> 1) how udev assigns this name?
>
> Since I have no custom udev rule, AFAIK, udev assigns it with the standards
> rules (in "/lib/udev/rules.d/60-persistent-alsa.rules" since it is a sound
> device).
>
This rules file
Sorry for the lack of details.
1) how udev assigns this name?
Since I have no custom udev rule, AFAIK, udev assigns it with the standards
rules (in "/lib/udev/rules.d/60-persistent-alsa.rules" since it is a sound
device).
2) Is there a udev rule doing so? In which case, which udev rules files
Control: tags -1 + moreinfo
On 15.04.19 22:35, Julien-Benjamin wrote:
> Package: udev
> Version: 232-25+deb9u11
> Severity: normal
>
> Dear Maintainer,
>
> Sometimes when I boot, udev gives alsa a wrong device name for my USB DAC
> (HiFimeDIY SA9023 - model:UAE23).
>
> When in this state,
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