https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=287813
Tomasz "CeDeROM" CEDRO <to...@cedro.info> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |to...@cedro.info --- Comment #4 from Tomasz "CeDeROM" CEDRO <to...@cedro.info> --- Can you provide exact vendor name and model of the device? Do you connect it to the laptop or desktop? Do you connect it over USB cable extender or directly to the USB port? If cable is it USB 2.0 or 3.0 cable? Have you tried different cable? Do you connect it to the USB 2.0 or 3.0 port? Does device have USB-C connector or USB-A connector? If USB-C do you use USB-C-to-USB-A adapter? Have you tried using this device on windows or macos with success? Have you tried upgrading firmware of the device? Have you tried working with device from base console using OSS only without PulseAudio? You can use cvlc or ocp to play music in console. Have you tried `cat /dev/random > /dev/dspN` where N is the number of device that shows up after connecting (you can also check it with `cat /dev/sndstat`)? I would first try this device on some popular OS like macos or windows where it should work fine just to make sure this specific device unit is not broken. There may be some sort of driver / application required for proper operation. There may be firmware upgrade utility that may fix the broken firmware. I have two usb-bluetooth audio cards that work fine. These show up as /dev/dspN and I can listen to music. Microphone does not work in one (KM-BT1) and works in BT-W6 (but requires manual on/off). KM-BT1 has micro-USB socket and works over long USB cable extender that I use to extend range by installing under ceiling. BT-W6 has USB-C plug and does not like any sort of cable extenders also can hang during operations so I prefer using KM-BT1. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.