On Monday 17 September 2007 22:21:54 Rob wrote:
Harry Doyle wrote:
however whenever i reboot the machine the mixer command always shows the
default level of 90 which clips pretty hard.
My 6.2 system saves and restores the mixer settings across boots.
Apparently in the file
hi guys,
i've tried a couple suggestions, but nothing is working for me. here is a
few things from the console that might be helpful. no xwindows on this
machine, it's just a base freebsd network install with only the necessary
packages installed to do the audio stuff it needs to do.
radio#
On Tuesday 18 September 2007 23:18:23 Harry Doyle wrote:
when i issue /etc/rc.d/mixer stop then reboot, the mixer shows set to 7:7,
but then it still clips like it does on 90. then i set mixer to 7 and it
says setting mixer fro 90 to 7.
i am thinking that /etc/rc.d/mixer gets invoked
On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 18:18:23 -0300
Harry Doyle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi guys,
i've tried a couple suggestions, but nothing is working for me. here
is a few things from the console that might be helpful. no xwindows
on this machine, it's just a base freebsd network install with only
the
Harry Doyle wrote:
however whenever i reboot the machine the mixer command always shows the
default level of 90 which clips pretty hard.
My 6.2 system saves and restores the mixer settings across boots. Apparently
in the file /var/db/mixer0-state However, the file is root owned and 644;
hello everyone,
i am running a freebsd server to stream my local campus station's radio
broadcast to the net. i am using the stock ac97 audio, and using a little
script in /usr/local/etc/rc.d which uses kldload to load the driver.
i have to issue mixer rec -83 to get the audio down to a decent
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:22:03 -0300
Harry Doyle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hello everyone,
i am running a freebsd server to stream my local campus station's radio
broadcast to the net. i am using the stock ac97 audio, and using a little
script in /usr/local/etc/rc.d which uses kldload to load