n0g0013 writes:
any attempt at discourse here deteriorates, at best, to
pissing contest
This is what should go on the t-shirt.
Rob Lytle writes:
Looks like Apple is way ahead of everyone else.
Oh, Rob, what are we going to do with you ;)
I have about 50 codec dumps in my collection; Ariff from FreeBSD
has shared even more; we have full source code from FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenSolaris, Linux and Open Sound.
You are
Rob Lytle writes:
The only way I can get a decent sound level is using XMMS and
its equalizer, raising the master level.
Try using mixerctl. Ports don't always handle volume properly.
Hi Rob,
Rob Lytle writes:
I need to look up the data sheet for my codec.
There are no datasheets for these Sigmatel HDA codecs found in
VAIOs. Yours seems to be very similar to mine, so I had us use
the same code. It's possible that the hardware volume control
behaves differently, so you
Rob Lytle writes:
Using audioctl and mixerctl I just experimented until I got
settings that workied, then put them in a file sourced upon
logon. Very simple hack.
Not really a hack. It's documented in mixerctl.conf(5).
Edd, although no developer I am interested in assisting.
Personally, following the six month -stable cycle fits my
needs better than following -current. I have used the diffs
at http://openbsd.rutgers.edu/ as a resource for creating
-stable packages and I now see UNSUPPORTED 4.3 packages are
Gabriel Guzman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Also running 4.3 generic, and been reading here and in
archives about people having issues with the azalia driver.
Here is my info, if it's useful to devs, or if you guys need
anything else from me, let me know:
short story: xmms works fine - cdio
Jacob Yocom-Piatt [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
have a little via c7 machine for my home workstation and the audio
chipset is detected as an azalia device
azalia0 at pci4 dev 1 function 0 VIA HD Audio rev 0x00: irq 5
azalia0: host: High Definition Audio rev. 1.0
azalia0: codec: VIA/0x1708 (rev.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am running OpenBSD 4.3 generic, and cannt change the playing
rate with audioctl to play mp3s with mpg123.
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html#playaudio
,
| Some sound devices can play only fixed sample rates. For
| instance, you may be trying to play a 22050
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
# dmesg |grep azalia
azalia0 at pci0 dev 27 function0 Intel 82801GB HDAudio rev
0x02:apic2 int 22(irq10)
azalia0: codec[s]: Realtek/0x861, audio at azalia 0
p.s. #cdio play gives no sound either
thx
Try setting all volume levels to something over 200, and
Alexander Hall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I cannot seem to get any input from my azalia(4) sound device
(Intel 82801H HD Audio). `mixerctl` reports no inputs and dd
if=/dev/audio gives me nohing but ^A^@'s.
Is this a know issue or have I missed something?
Yep, it's known. When I added
Juan Miscaro writes:
--- Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 03:55:20PM -0400, Juan Miscaro wrote:
Seems like something a lot of people get bitten by. How does one
stay
informed on this snapshot libc/packages synchronization issue?
subscribe to [EMAIL
There's probably a better way to do it, but I don't know how. At least
this works.
Here's mine. This is covered in man.conf(5).. :)
--- man.conf.orig Wed Mar 26 15:52:28 2008
+++ man.confWed Mar 26 16:21:48 2008
@@ -7,9 +7,11 @@
_whatdb/usr/share/man/whatis.db
Peter N. M. Hansteen writes:
notice the hw.sensors.acpibat0.* values. I haven't really
looked for anything that shows those values live or in a
graphical form, but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist or
could not be easily ported from $elsewhere.
This is in systat(1).
Edd Barrett writes:
Gmail has a wonderful knack of shredding diffs during transit. It is
not much fun.
So get a real mail account.
Antti Harri writes:
how can I reverse the audio output, left-right and
right-left channel? It would help with the placement
of my PC's speakers.
Depends on your hardware. Some have kernel flags for it, so
look in the manpage for your device.
Antti Harri writes:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008, Deanna Phillips wrote:
Depends on your hardware. Some have kernel flags for it, so
look in the manpage for your device.
It's emu, which doesn't support it?
Why is the reverse feature in the driver layer, and not in
more generic layer
Jacob Meuser writes:
that (AC97_HOST_SWAPPED_CHANNELS) just tells the ac97 layer to
swap the gains (change the left gain when the request was to
change the right gain), not the channels.
HD Audio can actually do it in the driver; I just don't think
it's worth adding more mixer items. The
Christ, the guy obviously had difficulty with the English
language. He probably learned that greeting from a textbook.
Learn to pick your battles.
Bachman Kharazmi writes:
yeay!
outputs.speaker.eapd=off - on
did turn off the mute led. and now I get should ;)
Great. :)
I can adjust level using for example mixerctl
outputs.speaker=200,200 but the control in aumix is not
adjustable.
This is the biggest problem with that driver: it
Bachman Kharazmi writes:
outputs.speaker.eapd=off
Could you try setting that to on?
And try setting all of the volume levels to 200 or more. Some
laptops have very quiet speakers.
Bachman Kharazmi writes:
OpenBSD 4.2 (GENERIC) #375: Tue Aug 28 10:38:44 MDT 2007
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
Please try with -current.
Jonathan Schleifer writes:
Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
that would require kernel level ALSA emulation, just as we
have kernel level OSS emulation for linux binaries using OSS.
I have absolutely no interest in that whatsoever. you'd have
better luck convincing Adobe to make an
Marco S Hyman writes:
Deanna Phillips writes:
But for Linux binary emulation? No way. If you want that, run
Linux. What kind of people run Linux binaries on OpenBSD,
anyway? Don't give me that I need Flash, since I spent months
of my life working on Gnash for OpenBSD just so you
It obviously was poor choice of words and I am sorry for
saying it.
Thanks.
Sorry for calling you on it, but I'm annoyed enough at having
to read these hundreds of RMS-related messages in the first
place.
When will you people give up? Some of us feel obligated to keep
up with the lists and
Well Stallman is actually softening up a little after it
all.. he is admitting to mistakes and correcting
them.. slowly...
Who cares? He is completely irrelevant.
Marco Peereboom writes:
Blah blah blah my feelers are hurt. Do I need to mail you
some maxi pads?
Do I need to point out that you've attempted to insult someone
by comparing him to some bullshit stereotype about women?
Diego Fernando Nieto Moreno writes:
Hi Joel
Thanks for the response and your time
Try entering the boot config (type '-c' at the boot
prompt) and disable the azalia driver
I made this steps but the Kernel crash again. I type
code
boot bsd.mp -c
disable azalia
quit
/code
Who would
Matthew Szudzik writes:
I used to hope that Gnash, the Gnu Flash Player, would
eventually support Flash 9 on OpenBSD, but that seems unlikely
now
Don't take what I wrote too seriously; tempers were flaring at
the time. If they produce a release that is an improvement upon
0.8.0 for OpenBSD
L writes:
Yee will find it interesting if yee is a uman.
Har, har.
Just use they.
It used to be considered poor English to use they when
speaking of a single person, but the language has evolved.
I did not find the thread title objectionable; in fact I found
it humorous that anyone thought
Karthik Kumar writes:
If the confusion regarding whether such a flash player exists at all:
http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=articlesid=20070907181228
The irony there is that I stopped working on Gnash (an official
FSF project) for OpenBSD when they added a Windows developer as
a project
Hi,
Amarendra Godbole writes:
mixerctl output has some duplicate entries (duplicated names, but
different values), which leaves me confused. Here is the output:
I see... this happens when an item has both input and output
levels that can be adjusted.
Could you try this diff please? It
Rob Lytle writes:
Here is the dmesg. Note that I have #define AZALIA_DEBUG but there
are no debug messages.
OpenBSD 4.2-current (ROBKERN3) #0: Mon Dec 10 21:56:24 PST 2007
root@:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/ROBKERN3
Can you reproduce this (whatever it is) while running a snapshot
Rob Lytle writes:
It is giving the sound card commands it can't recognize:
sound_open_for_read: sndopen: setinfo failed: m and
sound_open_for_write: sndopen: setinfo failed: m
Is that really the error message? What a horrible error
message.
The program is probably trying to use an
What other sip clients are there which will work on
OpenBSD?
I'm using icewm and don't consider Ekiga an option.
As was mentioned earlier, pjsua, a command-line sip user agent,
is in ports. It's the definition of nothing fancy, but it
does demonstrate that the MI audio layer and various
Rob Lytle writes:
Allright both speakers and headphones work now and show up on
XMMS as master volume control in the mixer section of the
output config. Same thing with mixer apps.
Great. The fix has been committed, thanks.
Rob Lytle writes:
I am running -current cvsup'd as of a day ago. First of all,
with the generic kernel, any attempt at using audio locks up
the computer and requires a hard reboot. I went in and
deleted all sound entries except azalia and the lockups ended.
Please post your GENERIC dmesg.
Rob Lytle writes:
So I am SOL with the -current azalia driver.
Well, no, you are not SOL, since you are willing to run -current
and I am willing to fix it for you ;)
Please try a -current kernel with 'option AZALIA_DEBUG' in the
config file and this patch applied, then mail me the new dmesg.
STeve Andre' writes:
I recently got a T60p ThinkPad to replace my A31p. Lots of stuff
works, but sound has proved to be a problem. I can play MP3s, but
with extremely low audio, barely there but from what I can hear it
sounds OK. This happens with both the speakers and headphones.
.
Chipset is ATI RS485M / SB600.
Deanna Phillips just fixed the audio issue on that chipset,
but the patch is not yet in current.
Yep, I just committed the fix. Thanks for testing it. This
issue probably exists with other ATI and NVIDIA chipsets, but I
can't find many in the dmesg collection
Douglas A. Tutty writes:
I think the following paragraphs would enhance the FAQ to
provide the person new to the OpenBSD focus a heads up on some
of the difficulties.
You are making some weird assumptions about what the desktop
is. My desktop is nothing like the one you describe, and
OpenBSD
Vim Visual writes:
I finally got my brand new lenovo thinkpad wireless device
(Intel 4965AGN) and sound card (Intel 82801H HD) to work with
OpenBSD -current.
Please note that the sound changes haven't been committed yet.
But they should be, eventually, with a little more testing and
review.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
azalia0 at pci0 dev 27 function 0 Intel 82801H HD Audio
Could we have a full dmesg? Preferably with option
AZALIA_DEBUG.
Can we expect sound support for this chip in 4.2?
No. 4.2 is already finished. You can expect it eventually,
though - especially if you're
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
=== gnash-0.8.0p0 depends on: boost-headers-* - not found
=== Verifying install for boost-headers-* in devel/boost
=== Faking installation for boost_1_33_1
install -c -s -o root -g bin -m 555
I'm trying to record audio samples using azalia and
4.1-Release I can monitor the audio but cannot record it.
This is fixed in -current.
Lontronics Mailinglist account writes:
I do have a Dell Inspiron 9400, running OpenBSD current.
The soundcard is detected, using cat {filename} /dev/sound
is working, but the layer between /dev/sound and for example
mplayer seems to be missing. Also tried xine, but there I do
have the same
bdz writes:
I have an ASUS notebook that uses the azalia driver for the
sound. The problem is that I can not adjust the volume with
applicaions' volume control. That includes xfce and xmms
too. In xfce's Sound setting panel there is only one mixer
(mixer0) that is set, in xmms there is no
SW writes:
That's freedom of choice, Free as in FreeBSD (and NetBSD and
DragonFly BSD etc.).
That's free? Whoever told you that was your enemy. ;)
Ray Percival writes:
No. Everybody with a clue knows that there is two sources for
good data. The errata page and source-changes.
I'd like to add undeadly's RSS here, since I don't think anyone
has mentioned it yet. There are two RSS feeds that would have
alerted people to this: one for
Samurai Chef writes:
portions of the sales will be donated back to the project.
Huh. What portions? Why not all proceeds? Just curious.
Samurai Chef writes:
Because I have a risk involved. I am placing my own money up
and spending my time to fill a market request. Therefore I
^
Aha, that's where I thought this was going. So your time spent
marketing a brand created by unpaid volunteers is worth
money.
Jacob Yocom-Piatt writes:
oops, it's 13.11 in the FAQ. sorry for tha noise
Don't do that. :)
There are other options besides what's in the FAQ.
,[ from an undeadly comment ]
| There are free options for playing Flash on OpenBSD.
|
| Check out Gnash (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash).
Michael Schmidt writes:
which experiences or what knowledge are/is available
concerning good and secure forum-software known to run under
OpenBSD? I am interested in feedback on this.
What about drupal? It's probably way more than you need for
just a forum, but it does look nice.
info :
joakinen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Where do you recommend me to start?
I've found reading the various cvswebs (free, net and openbsd)
to be very helpful. Seeing in the logs what's been changed or
improved, what was broken, how it was fixed, when and why
different things diverged from project
Breen Ouellette [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Marc Balmer wrote:
* Han Boetes wrote:
I've been working for quite some time now on an alternative
package-manager for OpenBSD, and since things start working rather
fine now I think it's time to let you guys know.
this is about the most idiotic
Didier Wiroth [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
1) Is there a nice way to see current source changes? (If
possible, I would prefer NOT to subscribe to another new
mailing list!)
Point a newsreader at :
nntp://news.gmane.org:gmane.os.openbsd.cvs
--
deanna at sdf
Miod Vallat [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
This port is unique amongst all the OpenBSD ports, as it has
been written without access to the hardware it runs on. This
has been possible because, unlike modern hardware, these
machines used to come with enough hardware documentation to
allow the
dave feustel [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Is there anyone who would be willing to mentor me
wrt OpenBSD (ie receive and answer my OpenBSD
questions off-list)?
How about IRC on freenode, #openbsd?
--
deanna at sdf
Daniel Ouellet [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Just got my CD raped in a nice T-Shirt
Well here's one case where blaming the victim is actually
appropriate. Those shirts are pretty sexy, so I'd say the CD
was asking for it.
--
deanna at sdf
Archimedes Arevalo [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
For the last few days I've been receiving so much emails (I
didn't want the daily digest), I noticed that there were also
from a [EMAIL PROTECTED] to the mailing list. I do
hope that the list maintainers/owners act on this spam. I have
enough
Qwerty [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Would it be fair to say that a Systems Administrator and a
Network Administrator are no longer two seperate entities but
have become one and the same. Don't the two dabble more and
more into each other's business.
I'd say certainly not; in fact the trend seems
Ioan Nemes [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
One of them administer systems (might have a hundred of *NIX -
and other servers to look after), the other one administers
the network (and might have a few hundred network devices,
like routers, firewalls, etc.). They might not even see each
other for
Hi there,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
i recently gave windows the heave-ho on my home desktop
machine (hooray!), but i'm having trouble regaining some of
the functionality i had before when it comes to setting up
s-video out on an ATI Radeon VE QY video card. i have done a
bunch of searching
Ray Lai [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Fri, Mar 24, 2006 at 02:24:31AM +, Deanna Phillips wrote:
ath0 at pci4 dev 2 function 0 Atheros AR5212 (IBM MiniPCI)
rev 0x01: irq 11
What's in your /etc/hostname.ath0? You can XXX out the IPs if
you want, I'm mainly interested in what parameters
Ryan Flannery [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I really hate prolonging this thread, but I'm curious about the
following... I've done quite bit of contract work around my area, and
in most cases I've been able to implement OpenBSD for something.
Whenever that's happened, I've always pushed for the
Andris Delfino [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Don't do that, that is extortion.
Well, it needn't be so severe. It could simply be an addition
to the users page ( http://www.openssh.org/users.html ) with
parenthetical notes such as:
( has donated to the project -- thank you. )
next to those that
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