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Re: DMASOUND, scsi



On Wed, Feb 26, 2003 at 07:59:38AM -0500, Fred Heitkamp wrote:
> 
> So far I have been unable to get satisfactory sound using either
> OSS or Alsa.  The OSS driver plays sound through the built in
> speaker and I don't know how to turn it off.  I haven't been able
> to get Alsa to work yet at all.

In regards, alsa, you haven't said exactly what you've tried. Have you installed
the alsa-0.9 source and compiled it using 'make-kpkg modules'? If not,
that's the way to go.


> 
> I have a G4 dual 500 MHz snakebite.  I use a combination of
> Debian unstable and some programs compiled from scratch.  I have
> been using recent CVS kernels from Ben's trees.
> 
> Good news is I finally got X working again.
> 
> Has anyone gotten satisfactory sound on similar hardware?
> 
> 
> Fred
> 
> > Paul Talacko wrote:
> >  > On Thu, Feb 20, 2003 at 08:48:19PM -0800, Nathan S. wrote:
> >  >
> >  >>I compiled my own kernel yesterday (feeling very proud of doing just
> >  >>that) and have fixed some problems.  I have questions about dma sound
> >  >>and scsi though.  I compiled (kernel-source-2.4.18 with patch from
> >  >>kernel.org) with CONFIG_DMASOUND_PMAC=y and CONFIG_DMASOUND=y, but get
> >  >>no sound.  Do I need just dmasound_pmac, or do I need to include
> >  >>sound_dmap=y?
> >  >>
> >  >
> >  >
> >  > Sound has been a problem for me too.  On my 6500 (yes, I know it's
> >  > *really* old), I get no dmasound.  A partial solution is to use alsa.
> >  > If you do this make sure you uninstall the dmasound modules.
> >  >
> >  > ALSA is not perfect because I have no volume control at all unless I use
> >  > alsa-player, and even then the maximum volume is only half of what it
> >  > should be.  If I try to use a mixer when xmms or mp3blaster is playing
> >  > the sound starts to break up completely.
> >  >
> >  > I'm planning to try the alsa-xmms plugin to see what happens, but it's
> >  > only available in unstable at the moment and I'm running stable, and I
> >  > haven't figured out how to run one unstable package on a machine that is
> >  > running stable everywhere else -- but I'll get there.
> >  >
> >  > So, in short, try ALSA.
> >  >
> >  > Cheers,
> >  >
> >  > Paul
> >
> > I'm sorry to hear that about alsa - I was thinking of switching to that,
> > but it doesn't look like that would be a better solution than fixing
> > dmasound.
> >
> > As far as installing an unstable package while maintaining a stable
> > machine, I do it this way:
> >
> > add the line deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian unstable main (and
> > whatever else you want here) to /etc/apt/sources.list
> >
> > Then run apt-get update to get the new list of packages.  Then to
> > install the package just enter apt-get install foo.  If you only want
> > the one package, then you can go back in and comment out the 'unstable'
> > line in sources.list and run apt-get update again.  If you don't do
> > this, make sure you specify the version of any new packages you want
> > after that so that you don't install an unstable package by accident.
> >
> > I'm new to apt, so if something doesn't look right, somebody give a holler.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Nathan
> >
> >
> >
> > --
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> >
> 
> 
> 
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> 

-- 


Paul Talacko



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