Re: No HDMI Sound in Gnome (Debian Stretch)

2016-07-14 Thread Ric Moore

On 07/14/2016 02:23 PM, nice sw123 wrote:

Hi,

the Gnome-bases sound configuration no longer shows HDMI.

(I ONLY see Build-in Audio Analog Stereo).

But
aplay -D plughw:0,3 /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Front_Center.wav
does play sound through HDMI.

What can I do to get HDMI listed in the Gnome Sound Config??


Open alsamixer and unmute HDMI


--
My father, Victor Moore (Vic) used to say:
"There are two Great Sins in the world...
..the Sin of Ignorance, and the Sin of Stupidity.
Only the former may be overcome." R.I.P. Dad.
http://linuxcounter.net/user/44256.html



No HDMI Sound in Gnome (Debian Stretch)

2016-07-14 Thread nice sw123
Hi,

the Gnome-bases sound configuration no longer shows HDMI.

(I ONLY see Build-in Audio Analog Stereo).

But
aplay -D plughw:0,3 /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Front_Center.wav
does play sound through HDMI.

What can I do to get HDMI listed in the Gnome Sound Config??

Thanks



Re: How to disable (or change) the logout sound in gnome/GDM?

2011-03-29 Thread Yuwen Dai
On Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Vincent Lefevre vinc...@vinc17.net wrote:

 On 2011-03-28 09:58:57 +0800, Yuwen Dai wrote:
  The logout sound is a very ugly beep.  I can change the login sound in
  gdm.conf but can not find where the logout sound setting is.  I also put
  pcspkr module in the blacklist, no effect.

 Various solutions (the first one works on some machines, but not
 everywhere, and I don't know why):

 1. xset -b in your .xsession or whatever is run (this will disable
   the beep also in other applications, which is fine, IMHO).


Hi Vincent,

xset -b  works.  Thanks.



 2. With gdm, set SoundOnLogin=false in /etc/gdm/gdm.conf.


I've already set this, this is no effect.  In fact, the beep only occurs
when I shutdown the computer in gnome.  It doesn't beep when I login or
logout.



 3. With gdm3, the /etc/gdm3/greeter.gconf-defaults config file can be
   changed to have:

   /desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds   false



I don't use gdm3.

Best regards,
Yuwen


 --
 Vincent Lefèvre vinc...@vinc17.net - Web: http://www.vinc17.net/
 100% accessible validated (X)HTML - Blog: http://www.vinc17.net/blog/
 Work: CR INRIA - computer arithmetic / Arénaire project (LIP, ENS-Lyon)


 --
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact
 listmas...@lists.debian.org
 Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110328113235.gc1...@prunille.vinc17.org




Re: How to disable (or change) the logout sound in gnome/GDM?

2011-03-28 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2011-03-28 09:58:57 +0800, Yuwen Dai wrote:
 The logout sound is a very ugly beep.  I can change the login sound in
 gdm.conf but can not find where the logout sound setting is.  I also put
 pcspkr module in the blacklist, no effect.

Various solutions (the first one works on some machines, but not
everywhere, and I don't know why):

1. xset -b in your .xsession or whatever is run (this will disable
   the beep also in other applications, which is fine, IMHO).

2. With gdm, set SoundOnLogin=false in /etc/gdm/gdm.conf.

3. With gdm3, the /etc/gdm3/greeter.gconf-defaults config file can be
   changed to have:

   /desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds   false

-- 
Vincent Lefèvre vinc...@vinc17.net - Web: http://www.vinc17.net/
100% accessible validated (X)HTML - Blog: http://www.vinc17.net/blog/
Work: CR INRIA - computer arithmetic / Arénaire project (LIP, ENS-Lyon)


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110328113235.gc1...@prunille.vinc17.org



Re: How to disable (or change) the logout sound in gnome/GDM?

2011-03-28 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2011-03-28 13:32:35 +0200, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
 On 2011-03-28 09:58:57 +0800, Yuwen Dai wrote:
  The logout sound is a very ugly beep.  I can change the login sound in
  gdm.conf but can not find where the logout sound setting is.  I also put
  pcspkr module in the blacklist, no effect.
 
 Various solutions (the first one works on some machines, but not
 everywhere, and I don't know why):
 
 1. xset -b in your .xsession or whatever is run (this will disable
the beep also in other applications, which is fine, IMHO).
 
 2. With gdm, set SoundOnLogin=false in /etc/gdm/gdm.conf.
 
 3. With gdm3, the /etc/gdm3/greeter.gconf-defaults config file can be
changed to have:
 
/desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds   false

Actually, after some tests, (1) is unrelated. On one machine,
gdm3 no longer beeps even though I have

  /desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds   true

in /etc/gdm3/greeter.gconf-defaults and I do not use xset -b
(e.g. the beep works in Emacs).

gconftool -g /desktop/gnome/sound/event_sounds outputs false, so
that there may be something else. I'm happy with that, though.

-- 
Vincent Lefèvre vinc...@vinc17.net - Web: http://www.vinc17.net/
100% accessible validated (X)HTML - Blog: http://www.vinc17.net/blog/
Work: CR INRIA - computer arithmetic / Arénaire project (LIP, ENS-Lyon)


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110328114626.gd1...@prunille.vinc17.org



How to disable (or change) the logout sound in gnome/GDM?

2011-03-27 Thread Yuwen Dai
Dear all,

The logout sound is a very ugly beep.  I can change the login sound in
gdm.conf but can not find where the logout sound setting is.  I also put
pcspkr module in the blacklist, no effect.

Best regards,
Yuwen


Re: only Root can play sound in GNOME

2005-11-10 Thread chouck
You might need to change ALL the audio group files in /dev to 777  to get it to 
work outside of root.
I just had to do that on a thinkpad A30 to get sound to work for users (and 
installed the
correct drivers).

 Hi all,

 I just installed Debian sarge with X and the following problem occurs: When
 I log in in Gnome as a regular user my speakers are making noise like a
 factorymachine (alternating silence and 'tshhh') and I can't play
 audiofiles.
 While logged in as Root, or logged in in KDE as regular user there's no
 problem.

 I already checked that I am in the 'audio' group, and changed permissions of
 /dev/mixer* and /dev/dsp* to 777 (just to make sure... i know it's nasty)

 Can someone tell me what I'm doing wrong?

 Thanks,
 Joris


-- 
RotBotL

Craig  ..  
Systems: Servers; Software; Solution.


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: only Root can play sound in GNOME

2005-11-10 Thread Matt Zagrabelny
On Thu, 2005-11-10 at 02:00 +0100, Joris Hooijberg wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 I just installed Debian sarge with X and the following problem occurs:
 When I log in in Gnome as a regular user my speakers are making noise
 like a factorymachine (alternating silence and 'tshhh') and I can't
 play audiofiles.
 While logged in as Root, or logged in in KDE as regular user there's
 no problem.
 
 I already checked that I am in the 'audio'  group, and changed
 permissions of /dev/mixer* and /dev/dsp* to 777 (just to make sure...
 i know it's nasty)

what is the output of lsmod?
what is the output of lspci -vv?

are you using udev?

what is the output of dmesg after boot?

maybe turn on bootlogging. look at /etc/default/bootlogd.
then after boot look at /var/log/bootlog*

what about not logging into X and using some console audio apps like
ogg123 or play as a normal user.

-matt zagrabelny


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: only Root can play sound in GNOME

2005-11-10 Thread s. keeling
Matt Zagrabelny [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
  On Thu, 2005-11-10 at 02:00 +0100, Joris Hooijberg wrote:
  
  I just installed Debian sarge with X and the following problem occurs:

Me too.

  When I log in in Gnome as a regular user my speakers are making noise
  like a factorymachine (alternating silence and 'tshhh') and I can't
  play audiofiles.

Mine sounds like fast repeating high freq. static.  Lasts a few
seconds so far (existing /usr/share/... audiofiles I've found).

  While logged in as Root, or logged in in KDE as regular user there's

I haven't tried root.  I don't intend for it to work for root.

  what is the output of lsmod?

(0) infidel /home/keeling_ lsmod | egrep 'sound|mae|mixer|oss|snd'
snd_maestro3   25512  0 
snd_ac97_codec 69988  1 snd_maestro3
maestro3   37128  1 
ac97_codec 18956  1 maestro3
snd_pcm_oss55080  0 
snd_pcm98728  2 snd_maestro3,snd_pcm_oss
snd_page_alloc 11752  1 snd_pcm
snd_timer  25732  1 snd_pcm
snd_mixer_oss  20096  1 snd_pcm_oss
snd57156  6 
snd_maestro3,snd_ac97_codec,snd_pcm_oss,snd_pcm,snd_timer,snd_mixer_oss
soundcore  10336  3 maestro3,snd

  what is the output of lspci -vv?

:00:08.0 Multimedia audio controller: ESS Technology ES1983S Maestro-3i PCI 
Audio Acce
lerator (rev 10)
Subsystem: Dell: Unknown device 00b0
Control: I/O+ Mem+ BusMaster+ SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr- 
Stepping- SERR
- FastB2B-
Status: Cap+ 66MHz- UDF- FastB2B+ ParErr- DEVSEL=medium TAbort- 
TAbort- MAbort-
 SERR- PERR-
Latency: 32 (500ns min, 6000ns max)
Interrupt: pin A routed to IRQ 5
Region 0: I/O ports at d800 [size=256]
Region 1: Memory at f3ffe000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=8K]
Capabilities: available only to root

  are you using udev?

Yes.

  what is the output of dmesg after boot?

maestro3: version 1.23 built at 17:58:25 May 19 2005
ACPI: PCI interrupt :00:08.0[A] - GSI 5 (level, low) - IRQ 5
maestro3: Configuring ESS Maestro3(i) found at IO 0xD800 IRQ 5
maestro3:  subvendor id: 0x00b01028

  maybe turn on bootlogging. look at /etc/default/bootlogd.

Thanks for that!  Don't know how I missed it.

  ogg123 or play as a normal user.

I've been using play/esdplay.  The latter produces static, the former
nothing. 


-- 
Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(*)http://www.spots.ab.ca/~keeling   Linux Counter #80292
- -Spammers! http://www.spots.ab.ca/~keeling/autospam.html
   http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1855.txt


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]



only Root can play sound in GNOME

2005-11-09 Thread Joris Hooijberg
Hi all,

I just installed Debian sarge with X and the following problem occurs:
When I log in in Gnome as a regular user my speakers are making noise
like a factorymachine (alternating silence and 'tshhh') and I can't
play audiofiles.
While logged in as Root, or logged in in KDE as regular user there's no problem.

I already checked that I am in the 'audio' group, and changed
permissions of /dev/mixer* and /dev/dsp* to 777 (just to make sure... i
know it's nasty)

Can someone tell me what I'm doing wrong?

Thanks,
Joris


[sid] kein Sound unter Gnome

2004-06-16 Thread Eckhard Lehmann
Hallo Liste,

dass es unter Debian sid und Gnome 2.6 keinen Sound gab/gibt(?) hab ich
schonmal hier gelesen. 
Jetzt habe ich aber ein noch ziemlich seltsames Problem. Meine
Soundkarte (die auf dem Intel 82801 Laptop Chip) lief bisher, noch als
ich Gnome 2.6 aus experimental installiert hatte, einwandfrei. Sie wurde
direkt vom Kernel unterstützt, ohne OSS oder ALSA und ich brauchte sie
nichtmal manuell irgendwo als Kernelmodul laden.

Dann kam aber mit apt-get upgrade mal eine neue glibc und Gnome 2.6
aus sid - und seitdem funktioniert der Sound nicht mehr. Keine Ahnung ob
es an der glibc liegt (was ich aber annehme) oder am Gnome.
Jetzt habe ich festgestellt, dass der Sound über OSS zu funktionieren
scheint, auch über libesd scheint es zu klappen. Das
gnome-volume-control panel lässt sich wieder öffnen (war vorher nicht:
Kein Mixergerät gefunden), seitdem ich gstreamer0.8-oss installiert
habe und die Lautstärke lässt sich auch wieder regeln. Funktionieren
heisst in dem Fall: Die Soundkarte ist erkannt worden, xmms bzw. Totem
spielen mp3's visuell sichtbar ab (die visualisierungs-modi zeigen was
an) ABER: es kommt kein Ton?! (Lautsprecher funktionieren ;-))

Wenn nur meine Soundkarte falsch erkannt worden wäre oder ich nicht in
der Gruppe snd, audio, usw. eingetragen wäre, dann könnte man da starten
und das Problem versuchen zu beheben, aber so weiß ich nicht weiter.
Ist das ein Bug den man aussitzen muss oder ist das Problem behebbar?

Danke für jeden Tipp - 

Eckhard



Re: [sid] kein Sound unter Gnome

2004-06-16 Thread Patrick Schoenfeld
Guten Morgen,
 Die Soundkarte ist erkannt worden, xmms bzw. Totem
spielen mp3's visuell sichtbar ab (die visualisierungs-modi zeigen was
an) ABER: es kommt kein Ton?! (Lautsprecher funktionieren ;-))
falls du das noch nicht hast: Installier mal einen Mixer (aumix z.B.)
und dreh damit die Lautstärke (insbesondere des PCM (o.s.ä.) Kanal) 
hoch. Ich vermute das es daran liegt, oder aber versuch mal ein anderes
Ausgabe-Plugin in xmms einzustellen, wobei ich letzteres eher als
unwahrscheinlich einstufe.

Gruß
Patrick
--
IN MEDIAS RES
-=Operations=-
tel. +49 (0) 2166 - 99 99 - 685
fax. +49 (0) 2166 - 99 99 - 850
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web: www.in-medias-res.com
--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ): 
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)


Re: [sid] kein Sound unter Gnome

2004-06-16 Thread Eckhard Lehmann
Guten Morgen,

Am Mi, den 16.06.2004 schrieb Patrick Schoenfeld um 10:49:
 falls du das noch nicht hast: Installier mal einen Mixer (aumix z.B.)
 und dreh damit die Lautstärke (insbesondere des PCM (o.s.ä.) Kanal) 
 hoch. Ich vermute das es daran liegt, oder aber versuch mal ein anderes
 Ausgabe-Plugin in xmms einzustellen, wobei ich letzteres eher als
 unwahrscheinlich einstufe.

Also das mit dem Mixer hat nicht hingehauen, aumix ist quasi das selbe
wie der GNOME mixer und regelt auch nicht anders als derselbe.
Gerade hab ich aber in XMMS statt dem OSS mal wieder das esound plugin
eingestellt - und jetzt hör ich was :). Die Frage ist jetzt nur, wie ich
das default mäßig einstelle, auch für Totem - aber vielleicht
funktioniert es ja schon. 

Eckhard ;)



No sound in Gnome (Sarge, SoundBlaster card, Gnome 2.4.1)

2004-05-21 Thread James Buchanan
So far Google reveals only that SoundBlaster cards sometimes misbehave. 
I couldn't find anything specific about not getting any sound out of
Gnome with a SoundBlaster Live 5.1 card.

I have the correct modules loaded (2.6.3 kernel, snd-emu10k1,
snd/sound/coundcore, ac97-codec), fixed permissions on /dev/mixer and
/dev/dsp, and added myself to the audio group.

Looking in /proc/driver/emu10k1/:00:0f.0 :

$ cat info:

Driver Version : 0.20a
Card type  : Emu10k1
Revision   : 10
Model  : 0x8064
IO : 0xa800-0xa81f
IRQ: 18
 
Registered /dev Entries:
/dev/dsp0
/dev/dsp1
/dev/mixer0
/dev/midi0
/dev/sequencer

$ cat ac97:

Vendor name  : Unknown
Vendor id: 454D 4328
AC97 Version : 2.0 or later
Capabilities :
DAC resolutions  : -16-bit- -18-bit-
ADC resolutions  : -16-bit- -18-bit-
3D enhancement   : No 3D Stereo Enhancement
POP path : pre 3D
Sim. stereo  : off
3D enhancement   : off
Loudness : off
Mono output  : MIX
MIC select   : MIC1
ADC/DAC loopback : off
Ext Capabilities : -PCM surround DAC- -slot/DAC mappings-
Front DAC rate   : 0

---

Looks like /dev/dsp and /dev/mixer aren't handled by the device driver
under Registered /dev Entries so nothing's happening when applications
use /dev/dsp and /dev/mixer.  But if I cat /dev/urandom  /dev/dsp I do
get a hissing sound, leading me to believe that I am completely confused
and out of my depth...

I'm not sure how to instruct Gnome to use /dev/dsp0 or /dev/dsp1, or
/dev/mixer0 or /dev/mixer1, or whatever it is that I must do.

Any help appreciated,
Thanks.



-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]



[SOLVED] No sound in Gnome

2004-05-21 Thread James Buchanan
Sorry list, problem solved.

Symlinked /dev/dsp0 to /dev/dsp and /dev/mixer to /dev/mixer0.
Didn't have speaker volume turned up :)

D'oh!



-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]



sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
moin moin liste 

hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)

also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.

soundkarte mit ALSA zum laufen bekommen alles super 

nun zu meiner frage :

die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
lautstärkenregler, und gnome sound's)

greifen auf /dev/dsp bzw /dev/mixer zu 

a) welches device wird von alsa erzeugt bzw gnutzt ?
b) wie bekomme ich gnome dazu das er alsa nutzt ? 

also film mp3 und sonstige anwedungen funzen prima 
nur die kleinigkeit der gnome sound's 

gruss und danke torben 



--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ):
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread Jrg Schtter
Hallo Torben,

On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 12:22:30 +0100
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 moin moin liste 
 
 hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)
 
 also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
 grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.
 
 soundkarte mit ALSA zum laufen bekommen alles super 
 
 nun zu meiner frage :
 
 die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
 lautstärkenregler, und gnome sound's)
^^
ich vermute, daß außer deiner Umschalttaste auch das Encoding
noch nicht passt.
 
 greifen auf /dev/dsp bzw /dev/mixer zu 
 
 a) welches device wird von alsa erzeugt bzw gnutzt ?
 b) wie bekomme ich gnome dazu das er alsa nutzt ? 

Installier mal esd (esound). Ich habe auf meinem System folgende Pakete
(apt-show-versions -b | grep -i esd | cut -d / -f 1) installiert:
mpg123-esd
libesd-alsa0
libsdl1.2debian-esd


Jörg

-- 
Jörg Schütter   http://www.lug-untermain.de/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.schuetter.org/joerg/
ICQ: 298982789  http://mypenguin.bei.t-online.de/


--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ):
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread Jrg Schtter
Hello Jörg,

On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 12:33:35 +0100
Jörg Schütter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hallo Torben,
 
 On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 12:22:30 +0100
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  moin moin liste 
  
  hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)
  
  also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
  grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.
  
  soundkarte mit ALSA zum laufen bekommen alles super 
  
  nun zu meiner frage :
  
  die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
  lautstärkenregler, und gnome sound's)
 ^^
 ich vermute, daß außer deiner Umschalttaste auch das Encoding
 noch nicht passt.
  
  greifen auf /dev/dsp bzw /dev/mixer zu 
  
  a) welches device wird von alsa erzeugt bzw gnutzt ?
  b) wie bekomme ich gnome dazu das er alsa nutzt ? 
 
 Installier mal esd (esound). Ich habe auf meinem System folgende Pakete
 (apt-show-versions -b | grep -i esd | cut -d / -f 1) installiert:
apt-show-versions -b | grep -E (esd|esound) | cut -d / -f 1 | sort
wäre sinnvoller gewesen. Hier das Resultat:
esound
esound-clients
esound-common
libesd-alsa0
libsdl1.2debian-esd
mpg123-esd


Jörg

-- 
Jörg Schütter   http://www.lug-untermain.de/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.schuetter.org/joerg/
ICQ: 298982789  http://mypenguin.bei.t-online.de/


--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ):
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
danke erstmal fuer deine unterstuezung
hab die sachen mal installiert, esd laeuft auch 

nuetzt dem gnome aber leider nix , also nur noch mal ne verstaedniss
frage : esd erzeugt auch kein device oder ? so das ich eventuell durch
einen einfachen softlink das esd device auf /dev/dsp umbiegen kann ? 



Am Di, den 24.02.2004 schrieb Jörg Schütter um 12:41:
 Hello Jörg,
 
 On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 12:33:35 +0100
 Jörg Schütter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Hallo Torben,
  
  On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 12:22:30 +0100
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
   moin moin liste 
   
   hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)
   
   also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
   grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.
   
   soundkarte mit ALSA zum laufen bekommen alles super 
   
   nun zu meiner frage :
   
   die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
   lautstÀrkenregler, und gnome sound's)
  ^^
  ich vermute, daß außer deiner Umschalttaste auch das Encoding
  noch nicht passt.
   
   greifen auf /dev/dsp bzw /dev/mixer zu 
   
   a) welches device wird von alsa erzeugt bzw gnutzt ?
   b) wie bekomme ich gnome dazu das er alsa nutzt ? 
  
  Installier mal esd (esound). Ich habe auf meinem System folgende Pakete
  (apt-show-versions -b | grep -i esd | cut -d / -f 1) installiert:
 apt-show-versions -b | grep -E (esd|esound) | cut -d / -f 1 | sort
 wäre sinnvoller gewesen. Hier das Resultat:
 esound
 esound-clients
 esound-common
 libesd-alsa0
 libsdl1.2debian-esd
 mpg123-esd
 
 
 Jörg
 
 -- 
 Jörg Schütter   http://www.lug-untermain.de/
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.schuetter.org/joerg/
 ICQ: 298982789  http://mypenguin.bei.t-online.de/
 


--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ):
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread Pierre Gillmann
Am Die, den 24.02.2004 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED] um 13:23:
 danke erstmal fuer deine unterstuezung
 hab die sachen mal installiert, esd laeuft auch 
 
 nuetzt dem gnome aber leider nix , also nur noch mal ne verstaedniss
 frage : esd erzeugt auch kein device oder ? so das ich eventuell durch
 einen einfachen softlink das esd device auf /dev/dsp umbiegen kann ? 
WaS? esd ist der Sound-Daemon, den GNOME unterstützt. esd(bzw. esound)
installieren, GNOME starten, Lautstärkeregler ausführen, aufdrehen und
Soundabspielen (wenn deine Programme auch einen dementsprechenden Output
besitzen).

MfG
Pierre

-- 
Erst wenn der Mensch seine Fehler einsieht, ist er kein Mensch mehr.


-- 
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ): 
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread Mike Przygoda
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
moin moin liste 

hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)

also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.
soundkarte mit ALSA zum laufen bekommen alles super 

nun zu meiner frage :

die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
lautstärkenregler, und gnome sound's)
greifen auf /dev/dsp bzw /dev/mixer zu 

a) welches device wird von alsa erzeugt bzw gnutzt ?
b) wie bekomme ich gnome dazu das er alsa nutzt ? 

also film mp3 und sonstige anwedungen funzen prima 
nur die kleinigkeit der gnome sound's 

gruss und danke torben 



kann dein alsa /dev/dsp und /dev/mixer ? ,,, das sind eigentlich oss 
devices ,,, aber alsa kann diese emulieren ,,, dieses muss man aber mit 
ein-kompilieren b.z.w. das modul aktivieren

--
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ): 
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)


Re: sound problem gnome (newbie)

2004-02-24 Thread Michelle Konzack
Am 2004-02-24 12:22:30, schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
^
Hier sollte Dein Name stehen

moin moin liste 

N'abend

hat der test alo funktioniert ;-)

Nee, Du hast keinen:

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=
  ^^^
  iso-8859-15

gesetzt.

also ich habe ein unstable/testing sytem mit nem 2.6.3
grade aufgesetzt alles frisch.

Und noch nicht anständig konfiguriert...

die sound geschichten des gnome desktop's (also mixer, einfacher
lautst??rkenregler, und gnome sound's)
   ^^
Charset setzen

gruss und danke torben 

Greetings
Michelle

-- 
Registered Linux-User #280138 with the Linux Counter, http://counter.li.org/ 


-- 
Haeufig gestellte Fragen und Antworten (FAQ): 
http://www.de.debian.org/debian-user-german-FAQ/

Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)



Re: Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-12-03 Thread Rob Weir
On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 01:48:17PM +, Pigeon wrote:
 Soundblasters have the aforementioned FS-unfriendly problem and also
 apparently resample everything to 48kHz, so CMI8738 it was. There are
 still driver problems, both in Windoze and Linux, but at least in
 Linux it's possible to hack round them. In Windoze, it screws up the
 S/PDIF recording when you update your modem drivers...

Ah, interesting.  I've been idly looking for a soundcard with 'real'
s/pdif input (the sblive resampling stupidity ruled them out), I'll have
a look at the CMI8738 cards.

-rob



msg16917/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-12-02 Thread Pigeon
On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 04:37:57PM +, Rob Weir wrote:
 Oh, ok.  I was under the impression that the digital connector was
 pretty standard these days.  I have a miscellaneous TEAC CD-ROM drive
 and I'm using the digital connector with my SBLive and it works fine.
 IIRC, it worked with just the analogue connector too.

S/PDIF output is much more common than input for some reason.
I was looking around for something to accept S/PDIF input from my
24-bit outboard ADC, and the choice seemed to be:

1) Mid-range and upwards Soundblasters
2) CMI8738-DX or -MX based cards (NOT -SX or -LX)
3) Really expensive cards which often use the same chip as a cheaper
one but have more connectors, cost two or three times as much and
still want you to buy an extra little daughter board to connect the
S/PDIF I/O.

Soundblasters have the aforementioned FS-unfriendly problem and also
apparently resample everything to 48kHz, so CMI8738 it was. There are
still driver problems, both in Windoze and Linux, but at least in
Linux it's possible to hack round them. In Windoze, it screws up the
S/PDIF recording when you update your modem drivers...

Pigeon


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-12-01 Thread Rob Weir
On Fri, Nov 29, 2002 at 01:33:51PM -0800, Andres Guedez wrote:
 Greetings,
 
 I've been having trouble getting sound to work in my
 Debian unstable setup. Environment sounds seem to work
 well in KDE (I get a sound when I open and close
 windows and that kind of stuff) and I was able to get
 sound when playing MP3s through XMMS. However, I
 cannot get any sound when playing CDs.

Have you plugged your cd-rom drive into your sound card?  Most CD
playing programs completely bypass your computer and just tell your
drive to blit bits down a digital interface onto your soundcard.  Also,
don't forget to pump up the CD channel using aumix or whatever.

 soundcore and emu10k1 are loaded as modules in kernel
 2.4.19.

Good.

 My other problem is the gnome2 desktop. I upgraded
 from gnome to gnome2 and I seem to be having
 conflicts. 

Conflicts?  Do you mean that some bits are GNOME 1.4 based and some bits
are GNOME 2 based?  This is to be expected at the moment, because a) not
every package has been updated to the gnome 2 versions, and b) not every
piece of gnome 1.4 software even has a gnome2 version yet (and might not
ever, of course).

 How can I completly remove all the gnome
 related stuff so that I can install gnome2 from
 scratch?

Erk, this is going to be painful.  If you decide to do this, then use
aptitude or apt or whatever (not dpkg) to remove libgnome{1,2} or something
similar; every gnome{1,2} app will depend on these and get removed along
with it.

-rob



msg16358/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-12-01 Thread Pigeon
On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 04:49:52PM +1100, Rob Weir wrote:
 On Fri, Nov 29, 2002 at 01:33:51PM -0800, Andres Guedez wrote:
  Greetings,
  
  I've been having trouble getting sound to work in my
  Debian unstable setup. Environment sounds seem to work
  well in KDE (I get a sound when I open and close
  windows and that kind of stuff) and I was able to get
  sound when playing MP3s through XMMS. However, I
  cannot get any sound when playing CDs.
 
 Have you plugged your cd-rom drive into your sound card?  Most CD
 playing programs completely bypass your computer and just tell your
 drive to blit bits down a digital interface onto your soundcard.

... if you're lucky enough to have a sound card with an S/PDIF
connector for the CD-ROM (which the SB Live does) - 2-pin plug.
Otherwise the CD-ROM does the D-to-A and passes analogue signals
to the sound card - 3 or 4-pin plug.

This may mean you have to set something in the mixer. What Linux calls
it for your SB-Live I don't know. The Windoze drivers for my CMI8738
call it Monitor S/PDIF IN (pass S/PDIF IN to analogue line out). The
Linux drivers for my card either don't use S/PDIF input at all or have
this option switched on permanently, compiled in. So if you're really
unlucky you may have to hack the kernel modules. And I think this
means you may have to sign up as a Creative developer to get info on
how to do it. I asked Creative a while back for a data sheet on the
SB-Live and they said that due to copyright issues they couldn't
send me one, which is one reason why I don't have a Soundblaster.

If you don't mind the load you might try playing CDs through the
computer with something like what I use (not very often, cos I
usually play them through the hi-fi):

cdda2wav -q -e -D/dev/cdrom -N -B 2/dev/null 

(that's for CD-ROM on ide-cd; if yours is ide-scsi use cdrecord
-scanbus to get the n,n,n parameters for -D )

Pigeon


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-12-01 Thread Rob Weir
On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 04:12:34PM +, Pigeon wrote:
 On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 04:49:52PM +1100, Rob Weir wrote:
  On Fri, Nov 29, 2002 at 01:33:51PM -0800, Andres Guedez wrote:
   Greetings,
   
   I've been having trouble getting sound to work in my
   Debian unstable setup. Environment sounds seem to work
   well in KDE (I get a sound when I open and close
   windows and that kind of stuff) and I was able to get
   sound when playing MP3s through XMMS. However, I
   cannot get any sound when playing CDs.
  
  Have you plugged your cd-rom drive into your sound card?  Most CD
  playing programs completely bypass your computer and just tell your
  drive to blit bits down a digital interface onto your soundcard.
 
 ... if you're lucky enough to have a sound card with an S/PDIF
 connector for the CD-ROM (which the SB Live does) - 2-pin plug.
 Otherwise the CD-ROM does the D-to-A and passes analogue signals
 to the sound card - 3 or 4-pin plug.

Oh, ok.  I was under the impression that the digital connector was
pretty standard these days.  I have a miscellaneous TEAC CD-ROM drive
and I'm using the digital connector with my SBLive and it works fine.
IIRC, it worked with just the analogue connector too.

 This may mean you have to set something in the mixer. What Linux calls
 it for your SB-Live I don't know. The Windoze drivers for my CMI8738
 call it Monitor S/PDIF IN (pass S/PDIF IN to analogue line out). The
 Linux drivers for my card either don't use S/PDIF input at all or have
 this option switched on permanently, compiled in. 

I'm using ALSA, and with aumix and the OSS emulation it's just the 'CD'
(and the main master volume, of course) channel that has to be turned
up.  alsamixer also lists a CD channel, so crank that up see if it
helps.

 So if you're really unlucky you may have to hack the kernel modules. 

I really doubt you'll have to do this, unless I'm missing something important.

 And I think this means you may have to sign up as a Creative developer
 to get info on how to do it. I asked Creative a while back for a data
 sheet on the SB-Live and they said that due to copyright issues they
 couldn't send me one, which is one reason why I don't have a
 Soundblaster.

For a while there, Creative was on the right track with their emu10k1
drivers.  They hired a guy to do it, and GPL'd the code, but kept the
actual documentation under an NDA but actually let people sign up for
it.  It seemed like they were actually going to Free the specs, but then
opensource.creative.com shut down, the dude was fired and development
moved to sourceforge.  So, yeah, not all that Free Software friendly,
but they are (or were, at least) trying harder than NVidia, f'r
instance.

 If you don't mind the load you might try playing CDs through the
 computer with something like what I use (not very often, cos I
 usually play them through the hi-fi):
 
 cdda2wav -q -e -D/dev/cdrom -N -B 2/dev/null 
 
 (that's for CD-ROM on ide-cd; if yours is ide-scsi use cdrecord
 -scanbus to get the n,n,n parameters for -D )

Good idea, but I really think that you can get CDDA working.

-rob



msg16523/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Sound (SBLive) | Gnome Problems

2002-11-29 Thread Andres Guedez
Greetings,

I've been having trouble getting sound to work in my
Debian unstable setup. Environment sounds seem to work
well in KDE (I get a sound when I open and close
windows and that kind of stuff) and I was able to get
sound when playing MP3s through XMMS. However, I
cannot get any sound when playing CDs.

soundcore and emu10k1 are loaded as modules in kernel
2.4.19.

My other problem is the gnome2 desktop. I upgraded
from gnome to gnome2 and I seem to be having
conflicts. How can I completly remove all the gnome
related stuff so that I can install gnome2 from
scratch?


__
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now.
http://mailplus.yahoo.com


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Kein Sound in gnome

2002-02-05 Thread Reinhard Echle

On Tue, Jan 29, 2002 at 12:51:48AM +0100, David Elze wrote:

 Ein esdplay irgendwas.wav funktioniert erstaunlicherweise. Im Control
 Center ist unter Audio auch alles (Enable sound server startup + Sounds
 for event) aktiviert.

bei mir auch ;-)

 
 OK, demnach läuft also der esd bei dir. Du musst unterscheiden zw. der
 nativen Soundunterstützung durch den Kernel (wahrscheinlich bei dir
 OSS - das OpenSoundSystem - oder ein direkter Treiber für deine
 Soundkarte) und einem sog. Soundserver wie der esd einer ist. 

jo, und das läßt sich im applet dann auch gut prüfen oder man
gibt im terminal esd ein.

 Netzwerkfähigkeiten eines esd wenn ich nicht irre)
jo, auch das ist möglich, wenn ich es auch noch nicht getestet habe.

 Hm, der esd hat teilweise eine eigene Volume-Steuerung, vielleicht ist
 die zu leise eingestellt? Ansonsten sind die Sound-Files für diese
 events in einem extra Gnome-Paket enthalten, ist das evtl. nicht
 installiert? Ansonsten fällt mir nichts ein, sorry...
 
 CU
   David

tja david, das ist bei mir installiert und funktionierte bis heute
weder als user noch als root. oh wunder, heute gibt esd zumindest beim user
töne von sich. root soll wohl nicht. diesmal habe ich mich auch zuerst mal
als user eingelogt. da hörte man ja was ;-)))

aber fragt mich bitte nicht wieso, gestern nach dem update ging es
nicht, heute ja. aber samba und die anderen paar pakete, die
aktualisiert wurden werden ja wohl nichts mit dem esd zu tun haben
oder?

na vorerst bin ich schon mal froh daß ich etwas höre. 

grüße reinhard


-- 
Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)




Re: Kein Sound in gnome

2002-01-30 Thread David Elze

On Tue, Jan 29, 2002 at 11:11:28PM +0100, Karlheinz Nolte wrote:

Hallo nochmal, 

gerade bei google noch gefunden, vielleicht suchst du entsprechend
weiter denn anscheinend bist du nicht der Einzige mit solch einem
Problem...

http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-list/2000-January/msg00785.html

CU
  David


-- 
Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)




Re: Kein Sound in gnome

2002-01-29 Thread Karlheinz Nolte

On Tue, Jan 29, 2002 at 12:51:48AM +0100, David Elze wrote:
 On Mon, Jan 28, 2002 at 10:11:09PM +0100, Karlheinz Nolte wrote:
 
 Installiere dir ruhig mal das von Lothar erwähnte esd-control
 Panel-Applet mit dem du bequem den esd ein- und ausschalten kannst und
 spiele ein wenig damit rum. Du wirst sehen, dass mit aktiviertem esd
 mehrere (esd-fähige! oder zumindest per esdplay kompatible)
 Soundprogramme gleichzeitig auf deinen Boxen ausgeben und bei inaktivem
 esd nur ein Programm auf /dev/dsp zugreifen kann.
 

Ja, ich kann mit dem Applet den esd ein- und ausschalten. Das bringt
aber alles nix. Ich kann auch dort im Sound-Monitor Manager die Samples
abspielen, aber nicht im Control-Center. Für mich ist das alles ziemlich
seltsam.

Kann es vielleicht sein, dass gnome den esd gar nicht verwendet? Kann
man das überprüfen?

Karlheinz.


-- 
Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)




Re: Kein Sound in gnome

2002-01-28 Thread David Elze

On Mon, Jan 28, 2002 at 10:11:09PM +0100, Karlheinz Nolte wrote:

N'Abend, 

Ein esdplay irgendwas.wav funktioniert erstaunlicherweise. Im Control
Center ist unter Audio auch alles (Enable sound server startup + Sounds
for event) aktiviert.

OK, demnach läuft also der esd bei dir. Du musst unterscheiden zw. der
nativen Soundunterstützung durch den Kernel (wahrscheinlich bei dir
OSS - das OpenSoundSystem - oder ein direkter Treiber für deine
Soundkarte) und einem sog. Soundserver wie der esd einer ist. 

Der Sinn des esd (oder auch aRts iirc unter KDE!?) besteht darin,
mehrere Audio-Streams parallel zuzulassen was mit nativen 
(OSS-)Kerneltreibern meist nicht funktioniert ohne besondere
Maßnahmen wie mehrere dsp-devs ect. (ganz zu schweigen von den
Netzwerkfähigkeiten eines esd wenn ich nicht irre)

Installiere dir ruhig mal das von Lothar erwähnte esd-control
Panel-Applet mit dem du bequem den esd ein- und ausschalten kannst und
spiele ein wenig damit rum. Du wirst sehen, dass mit aktiviertem esd
mehrere (esd-fähige! oder zumindest per esdplay kompatible)
Soundprogramme gleichzeitig auf deinen Boxen ausgeben und bei inaktivem
esd nur ein Programm auf /dev/dsp zugreifen kann.

Und bedenke auch immer, dass solche Soundserver erstens die
Reaktionszeiten verlängern und zweitens auch Probleme auftreten können,
bei mir z.B. im Zusammenhang mit avifile-player und DivX-files wo bei
aktiviertem esd ein unerträgliches Rauschen/Fiepen kommt.

Trotzdem höre ich nichts, wenn ich z.B. unter Sound Events den Play 
Button drücke.

Hm, der esd hat teilweise eine eigene Volume-Steuerung, vielleicht ist
die zu leise eingestellt? Ansonsten sind die Sound-Files für diese
events in einem extra Gnome-Paket enthalten, ist das evtl. nicht
installiert? Ansonsten fällt mir nichts ein, sorry...

CU
  David


-- 
Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)




Re: Kein Sound in gnome

2002-01-27 Thread David Elze

On Sun, Jan 27, 2002 at 01:08:20PM +0100, Karlheinz Nolte wrote:

Hi, 

solbald ich gnome starte, ist keinerlei Sound-Ausgabe mehr möglich: 
Weder die Systemklänge, noch ein bplay auf eine Sound Datei 
funktionieren.

Nur ein Schuss in's Blaue ... könnte es was mit esd zu tun haben, dem
Enlightened Sound Deamon? Versuch doch mal in einem xterm während gnome
läuft ein ps aux  grep esd oder schau' im Control-Center nach, ob
unter Multimedia - Audio - General der Soundserver aktiviert ist. 

Kannst auch mal ein esdplay bplay versuchen und schauen, ob's dann
funzt - falls ja, läuft der esd.

CU
  David


-- 
Zum AUSTRAGEN schicken Sie eine Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mit dem Subject unsubscribe. Probleme? Mail an [EMAIL PROTECTED] (engl)




sound in gnome

2001-10-20 Thread Andreas Leitner

Hi,

on my sid machine (totally recent, except for the new mozilla packages from 
today), I never managed to get the gnome sounds working. esd is up and running, 
mpg321 -o esd, and a lot of other apps all play sound without a problem (I am 
using the std. kernel oss drivers). But gnome never plays a sound. Even if I go 
into the control-center, click on the sounds tab and ask it to play one of the 
event sounds manually, i get nothing to hear.

Anybody knows what could be wrong?


tia,
Andreas
PS: Btw, what is the best way to filter debian mailing list mails? There seem 
to be mails with various header fields indicating the list (X-Mailing-List, ...)



Sound Card Gnome

2001-08-29 Thread Joao Pissarro

Hello all,

I am working with Potato/gnome 1.4, and I am trying to get the sound 
driver working, with the application sounds of gnome.


On the boot, I get:

es1371: version v0.22 time 19:13:40 Nov 18 2000
es1371: found chip, vendor id 0x1274 device id 0x5880 revision 0x02
es1371: found es1371 rev 2 at io 0xe800 irq 11
es1371: features: joystick 0x0
es1371: codec vendor   v (0x838476) revision 9 (0x09)
es1371: codec features 18bit DAC 18bit ADC
es1371: stereo enhancement: SigmaTel SS3D

and later on:

Starting sound driver Snd-card-ens1371: failed

which I can not understand.

When I send somthing to the /dev/dsp it works, but on the applications 
sound I do not get nothing.


Why?  Any ideas?

Thanks

Joao Pissarro




Re: Sound Card Gnome

2001-08-29 Thread Jason Majors
On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 01:11:17AM +0100, Joao Pissarro scribbled...
 Thnaks for replying. 
 
 Here are the installed modules, and esound is intalled. 
 
 jpissarro:/home/ct1dbh# lsmod 
 Module  Size  Used by 
 bttv   37116   1 
 tuner   2088   1 
 i2c 3352   2  [bttv tuner] 
 videodev2512   2  (autoclean) [bttv] 
 vmnet  16512   3 
 vmppuser5920   0  (unused) 
 vmmon  18176   0  (unused) 
 parport_probe   3348   0  (autoclean) 
 parport_pc  7268   1  (autoclean) 
 lp  4756   0  (autoclean) (unused) 
 parport 6836   1  (autoclean) [vmppuser parport_probe  
 parport_pc lp] 
 yam28760   0  (unused) 
 ax25   32668   0  [yam] 
 usbcore41804   0  (unused) 
 3c59x  18480   1 
 sound  56364   0  (unused) 
 soundlow 368   0  [sound] 
 serial 19640   0 
 es1371 26544   1 
 soundcore   2440   7  [sound es1371] 
 vfat9408   0  (unused) 
 smbfs  24880   0  (unused) 
 nls_cp860   3624   0  (unused) 
 nfs43820   0  (unused) 
 lockd  41720   0  [nfs] 
 sunrpc 55452   0  [nfs lockd] 
 unix   11336 113  (autoclean) 
 
 Here are the error when the esound is run. Kernel is the 2.2.18pre21  
 (the one that comes with the distribution). 
 
 jpissarro:/home/ct1dbh# esd 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, stereo, 16bit  
 failed 
 Trying 44.1Khz, 8bit stereo. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, stereo, 8bit  
 failed 
 Trying 22.05Khz, 8bit stereo. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 22.05Khz, stereo, 8bit  
 failed 
 Trying 44.1Khz, 16bit mono. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, mono, 8bit 
 failed 
 Trying 22.05Khz, 8bit mono. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 22.05Khz, mono, 8bit 
 failed 
 Trying 11.025Khz, 8bit stereo. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 11.025Khz, stereo, 8bit  
 failed 
 Trying 11.025Khz, 8bit mono. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 11.025Khz, mono, 8bit  
 failed 
 Trying 8.192Khz, 8bit mono. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 8.192Khz, mono, 8bit 
 failed 
 Trying 8Khz, 8bit mono. 
 audio_alsa: no cards found!Sound device inadequate for Esound. Fatal. 

I'd guess something's wrong in the alsa library.
I'd suggest replying to the list, not to individuals, so everyone can see
your problem. There are people who know a lot more about it than I do.
When you respond list the versions of all your sound stuff.
dpkg -l|grep esound; dpkg -l|grep alsa
Incidentally...can you play sound or load esound as root? If so it's a
device permission issue.



Re: Sound Card Gnome

2001-08-29 Thread Joao Pissarro

Ok Jason,

the dpkg -l | grep esound is:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -l | grep esound
ii  esound-alsa0.2.17-7   Enlightened Sound Daemon (ALSA) - 
Support bi

ii  esound-common  0.2.17-7   Enlightened Sound Daemon - Common files

and

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -l | grep alsa 
ii  alsa-base  0.4.1i-5   ALSA driver common files

ii  alsaconf   0.4.2-3ALSA configurator
ii  alsautils  0.4.1-5Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (utils)
ii  esound-alsa0.2.17-7   Enlightened Sound Daemon (ALSA) - 
Support bi
ii  libesd-alsa0   0.2.17-7   Enlightened Sound Daemon (ALSA) - 
Shared lib


When starting the esd as root I get the same problem no cards found

on modules.conf is:


# --- BEGIN: Generated by ALSACONF, do not edit. ---
# --- ALSACONF verion 0.4.2 ---
alias char-major-116 snd
alias snd-card-0 snd-card-ens1371
alias char-major-14 soundcore
alias sound-slot-0 snd-card-0
alias sound-service-0-0 snd-mixer-oss
alias sound-service-0-1 snd-seq-oss
alias sound-service-0-3 snd-pcm1-oss
alias sound-service-0-12 snd-pcm1-oss
options snd snd_major=116 snd_cards_limit=1 snd_device_mode=0660 
snd_device_gid=29 snd_device_uid=0
options snd-card-ens1371 snd_index=1 snd_id=CARD_1 
snd_dac1_frame_size=64 snd_dac2_frame_size=64 snd_adc_frame_size=64

# --- END: Generated by ALSACONF, do not edit. ---

I can run (as root and as user) all other applications like xmms, mp123, 
xawtv and so on, just the gnome applications sound does not work.


Thanks
Joao Pissarro

Jason Majors wrote:


On Thu, Aug 30, 2001 at 01:11:17AM +0100, Joao Pissarro scribbled...

Thnaks for replying. 

Here are the installed modules, and esound is intalled. 

jpissarro:/home/ct1dbh# lsmod 
Module  Size  Used by 
bttv   37116   1 
tuner   2088   1 
i2c 3352   2  [bttv tuner] 
videodev2512   2  (autoclean) [bttv] 
vmnet  16512   3 
vmppuser5920   0  (unused) 
vmmon  18176   0  (unused) 
parport_probe   3348   0  (autoclean) 
parport_pc  7268   1  (autoclean) 
lp  4756   0  (autoclean) (unused) 
parport 6836   1  (autoclean) [vmppuser parport_probe  
parport_pc lp] 
yam28760   0  (unused) 
ax25   32668   0  [yam] 
usbcore41804   0  (unused) 
3c59x  18480   1 
sound  56364   0  (unused) 
soundlow 368   0  [sound] 
serial 19640   0 
es1371 26544   1 
soundcore   2440   7  [sound es1371] 
vfat9408   0  (unused) 
smbfs  24880   0  (unused) 
nls_cp860   3624   0  (unused) 
nfs43820   0  (unused) 
lockd  41720   0  [nfs] 
sunrpc 55452   0  [nfs lockd] 
unix   11336 113  (autoclean) 

Here are the error when the esound is run. Kernel is the 2.2.18pre21  
(the one that comes with the distribution). 

jpissarro:/home/ct1dbh# esd 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, stereo, 16bit  
failed 
Trying 44.1Khz, 8bit stereo. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, stereo, 8bit  
failed 
Trying 22.05Khz, 8bit stereo. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 22.05Khz, stereo, 8bit  
failed 
Trying 44.1Khz, 16bit mono. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 44.1Khz, mono, 8bit 
failed 
Trying 22.05Khz, 8bit mono. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 22.05Khz, mono, 8bit 
failed 
Trying 11.025Khz, 8bit stereo. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 11.025Khz, stereo, 8bit  
failed 
Trying 11.025Khz, 8bit mono. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 11.025Khz, mono, 8bit  
failed 
Trying 8.192Khz, 8bit mono. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Audio device open for 8.192Khz, mono, 8bit 
failed 
Trying 8Khz, 8bit mono. 
audio_alsa: no cards found!Sound device inadequate for Esound. Fatal. 



I'd guess something's wrong in the alsa library.
I'd suggest replying to the list, not to individuals, so everyone can see
your problem. There are people who know a lot more about it than I do.
When you respond list the versions of all your sound stuff.
dpkg -l|grep esound; dpkg -l|grep alsa
Incidentally...can you play sound or load esound as root? If so it's a
device permission issue.







Sound in gnome

2001-06-11 Thread Evrard Nicolas
Hello everyone,

I just switch from SuSE to Debian and I really, really happy (rpms were
difficult to find for SuSE and anyhow I prefer a non-commercial distro).

There is just one thing that doesn't seem to work : the sound in gnome, no
gnome event produce sound althought sawfish does prduce sound, esdplay
file works too ... the esd server is working and I'm member of the audio
group. Any clue ??

BTW this is gnome 1.4

-- 
- -°)
Evrard Nicolas/\\
Liège_\//
-



Re: No sound in Gnome

2001-04-19 Thread Martin Schulze
[repost]

Deryk Lister wrote:
 Here's an odd one, it's had me tearing my hair out for hours and I still 
 can't figure it out!
 I can't get some gnome apps (specifically, the Gnome Control Center or 
 Gabber) to make sounds.
 
 The situation so far:
 esound and OSS are both working, I've tested them both via xmms.
 Sound also works in the KDE environment.
 The Sawfish window manager is making its noises, which means esound is 
 definitely working.
 I tried playing sounds from Control Center with esd enabled, and tried it 
 again after killing esd.  Nada in either case.  It doesn't give any errors, 
 in fact it looks as if it's playing, but it's silent.
 I was using Xemian Gnome, but tried removing it, deleting /etc/gnome, 
 /etc/esound and ~/.gnome* and installing Debian's own packages of Gnome.  
 Still nothing.
 /dev/dsp and /dev/sound are both writable by all users.
 
 The system:
 Debian Testing (originally Potato, but upgraded via apt-get dist-upgrade)
 Kernel 2.4.2
 Sound Blaster Live (tried both OSS and ALSA too, no difference)
 
 Any help greatly appreciated!  I'm sure it's just something stupid I'm doing, 
 but I've now been fiddling with it on and off for days and am almost out of 
 hair.

-- 
Life is too short to run proprietary software.  -- Bdale Garbee



Re: sound in gnome-sawfish

2001-02-23 Thread Steve R. Hastings
The Gnome environment uses EsounD, the sound daemon originally written 
for the Enlightenment window manager.  The actual name of the daemon is esd.


esd will work great with a Sound Blaster Live! card.  When you said 
enable sound server startup you were saying yes to esd, but esd did 
not work.


I had this problem too.  It was due to file permissions.  I think you 
have the same problem.


esd wants to talk to the device file /dev/dsp, which is owned by a group 
called audio.  One way to fix the problem would be to add read/write 
permission for anyone on the file /dev/dsp, but that is not the best way 
to fix it.  The best way is to add your user name to the audio group 
in the /etc/group file.  (Use the command man group for details on the 
format of /etc/group.)  Once you are a member of the audio group, audio 
should work for you.  Good luck.




Re: sound in gnome-sawfish

2001-02-23 Thread Marcelo Chiapparini
Steven,

thank you very much for your help. Currently I am already a member of the 
audio group:

$ groups myself
$ myself: myself dialout audio dip

Remember that I can play music CD normally. The problem is 
with the system sounds. 
Any other idea?

Thank again!

Marcelo

On Fri, Feb 23, 2001 at 01:25:49AM -0800, Steve R. Hastings wrote:
 The Gnome environment uses EsounD, the sound daemon originally written 
 for the Enlightenment window manager.  The actual name of the daemon is esd.
 
 esd will work great with a Sound Blaster Live! card.  When you said 
 enable sound server startup you were saying yes to esd, but esd did 
 not work.
 
 I had this problem too.  It was due to file permissions.  I think you 
 have the same problem.
 
 esd wants to talk to the device file /dev/dsp, which is owned by a group 
 called audio.  One way to fix the problem would be to add read/write 
 permission for anyone on the file /dev/dsp, but that is not the best way 
 to fix it.  The best way is to add your user name to the audio group 
 in the /etc/group file.  (Use the command man group for details on the 
 format of /etc/group.)  Once you are a member of the audio group, audio 
 should work for you.  Good luck.
 
 
 -- 
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 



sound in gnome-sawfish

2001-02-22 Thread Marcelo Chiapparini
 Hi to all!

 I am running potato 2.2r2 with 2.2.17 kerner and ximian-gnome. The default
 window manager is sawfish. I use the SB module in order to play CDs in 
 my system without problems. But when I enter the Gnome control center 
 and select multimidia/sound/general and enable sound server at startup 
 and sounds for events options,  nothig happens. Any event generates 
 a plack! sound.
 The same thing occurs when, besides the settings in the Gnome 
 Multimidia, I select play sound effects for window events in the 
 sawfish/sound folder.
 Any help will be very welcome!

 Regards,
 Marcelo
 



Re: Sound in Gnome

2000-11-28 Thread Moritz Schulte
Arlen Carlson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 I've also experienced sound not working in KDE2 if I happen to go into Gnome
 first, logout, and then login in KDE2.

This could be a problem with 'esd', the Enlightenment Sound Daemon. If
you login into GNOME, logout, do you still have process 'esd' running?
If yes, try killing it.

moritz
-- 
Moritz Schulte [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hp9001.fh-bielefeld.de/~moritz/
Debian/GNU supporter - http://www.debian.org/ http://www.gnu.org
GPG fingerprint = 3A14 3923 15BE FD57 FC06  B501 0841 2D7B 6F98 4199



Re: Sound in Gnome

2000-11-28 Thread Scott Patterson



In order to make more space on my hard drive I recently created a new partition
and copied /home over to this using the following:

tar cSpf - . | (cd /home2 ; tar xvSpf - )

Now, running off my new partition as home, I've come across an error that I
attribute to this change (as far as I can tell because I have no other
explanation at present): sound does not work in Gnome.  Yet under KDE2 sound
works.  I don't even seem to be able to get access to the cdrom for playing
music, yet my permissions for that are in tact.

I've also experienced sound not working in KDE2 if I happen to go into Gnome
first, logout, and then login in KDE2.

Any ideas and solutions would be much appreciated.

---
Arlen Carlson [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Both environments have sound daemons running so more than one sound can be
played at the same time. KDE2 uses artsd for sound and GHOME used esd. After
you leave KDE2 or GNOME, do a ps -ef and look for one of these sound daemons.
If it's still active, do a kill -9 pid on it. I believe these daemons should
stop once you leave the environment, but, I could be wrong. You can't have two
of these running at the same time!

Another method would be to run the sound app from an xterm while in KDE2 or
GNOME. This way you'd get the stderr messages indicating the audio device is
already in use or something like that. At that point, kill any sound daemons
running and start the respective sound daemon for the enviroment you're in.
Then, try running your sound app again.

Scott









Sound in Gnome

2000-11-27 Thread Arlen Carlson
In order to make more space on my hard drive I recently created a new partition
and copied /home over to this using the following:

tar cSpf - . | (cd /home2 ; tar xvSpf - )

Now, running off my new partition as home, I've come across an error that I
attribute to this change (as far as I can tell because I have no other
explanation at present): sound does not work in Gnome.  Yet under KDE2 sound
works.  I don't even seem to be able to get access to the cdrom for playing
music, yet my permissions for that are in tact.

I've also experienced sound not working in KDE2 if I happen to go into Gnome
first, logout, and then login in KDE2.

Any ideas and solutions would be much appreciated.

---
Arlen Carlson [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a
week sometimes to make it up.
-- Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad


This message was sent by XFmail (Linux)

-o)
/\\
   _\_v

The penguins are coming...
 the penguins are coming...
---



Re: Poor sound in GNOME

1999-06-11 Thread Kristopher Johnson
Thanks for the suggestion. It turns out that the three sounds in the gtk-events
folder (clicked.wav, activate.wav, and toggled.wav) have the clicky staticky
sound, but none of the other WAV files I played do.  So I think the gtk-events
sounds just suck, and I'll replace them.

- Kris

Jonathan Lupa wrote:

 On Thursday, June 10, 1999 5:30 AM, Kristopher Johnson
 [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Can anyone suggest any possible fixes?

 DISCLAIMER: All of this is to the best of my knowledge which is somewhat
 limited, but I'm sure someone will step up to correct me if I'm wrong! =)

 I had a problem similar to this very recently with my SB AWE32 PnP.  It
 turns out that the driver was having problems allocating DMA buffers because
 low address memory had become so fragmented. Since I have a decent amount of
 RAM (128M), I recompiled the kernel to load up the DMA buffers at load time
 and maintain them.

 This can be done 2 ways:
 1. If you compiled sound support as a module, you need to pass the
 parameter dmabuf=1 to the module when it loads. Read the man page on
 update-modules for more information about how to get that into
 /etc/conf.modules.
 2. If you compiled sound support directly into the kernel, there is
 an option in the sound menu to preserve DMA buffers. mark it Y and
 recompile.

 CAVEAT 1: This may not really be the problem you are looking at. If not, I
 can't think of anything to try. =(

 BONUS: Even if it is not, if you have a reasonable amount of memory, it
 isn't going to hurt anything by doing this.

 CAVEAT 2: If you are using the kernel autoloader to load sound support, that
 may not be the best idea.  I would either stic k it in /etc/modules, or
 compile support in as necessary.

 Good Luck

 -Jonathan Lupa
 ~
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Poor sound in GNOME

1999-06-10 Thread Kristopher Johnson
When sounds play when I'm running GNOME, the sounds have a staticky
click or pop at the end of them.  I assume that this is some problem
with ESD, but I'm not sure.

The bad sounds don't happen when I'm not running GNOME.  They also
didn't happen when I used GNOME with Red Hat on this machine.  I have a
SoundBlaster AWE64 sound card.

Can anyone suggest any possible fixes?

- KDJ



RE: Poor sound in GNOME

1999-06-10 Thread Jonathan Lupa
On Thursday, June 10, 1999 5:30 AM, Kristopher Johnson
[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Can anyone suggest any possible fixes?

DISCLAIMER: All of this is to the best of my knowledge which is somewhat
limited, but I'm sure someone will step up to correct me if I'm wrong! =)

I had a problem similar to this very recently with my SB AWE32 PnP.  It
turns out that the driver was having problems allocating DMA buffers because
low address memory had become so fragmented. Since I have a decent amount of
RAM (128M), I recompiled the kernel to load up the DMA buffers at load time
and maintain them.

This can be done 2 ways:
1. If you compiled sound support as a module, you need to pass the
parameter dmabuf=1 to the module when it loads. Read the man page on
update-modules for more information about how to get that into
/etc/conf.modules.
2. If you compiled sound support directly into the kernel, there is
an option in the sound menu to preserve DMA buffers. mark it Y and
recompile.

CAVEAT 1: This may not really be the problem you are looking at. If not, I
can't think of anything to try. =(

BONUS: Even if it is not, if you have a reasonable amount of memory, it
isn't going to hurt anything by doing this.

CAVEAT 2: If you are using the kernel autoloader to load sound support, that
may not be the best idea.  I would either stic k it in /etc/modules, or
compile support in as necessary.

Good Luck

-Jonathan Lupa
~
[EMAIL PROTECTED]