Hiyall
I know that this isn't the right mailing list to ask this and I've already posted a request for help over at:
http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?p=1355763#post1355763
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
As stated in the post...
I recently purchased a Toshiba Qosmio x500 and installed Fedora 12. I've got all the hardware working.
The only real difficulty that I can see is that when I plug my headphones into the headhphone jack the speakers are not muted. Every mixer application that I can run shows very minimalistic options; 4 at best. In kmixer the options shown are: Master, PCM, Mic, Mic1
The information shown below seems to indicate that Fedora seems to have located some kind of Modem (Please Note the info about mixers on the bottom indicates it found something from conexant). And because of the order of things, It would seem that this device has taken precedence.
Any help to properly configure my sound system would be greatly appreciated.
KDE Info Center shows that I am running:
HDA Intel at 0xfo900000 irq 22 HDA NVidia at 0xcdefc000 irq 17
Audio devices:
0: HDA Generic (DUPLEX)
Synth devices: NOT ENABLED IN CONFIG
MIDI devices: NOT ENABLED IN CONFIG
Timers: 31: system timer
Mixers: 0: Conexant ID 5067 1: Nvidia ID d
Thanks in Advance
Eli
On Fri, Apr 30, 2010 at 11:16 AM, Eli Wapniarski eli@orbsky.homelinux.org wrote:
The only real difficulty that I can see is that when I plug my headphones into the headhphone jack the speakers are not muted. Every mixer application that I can run shows very minimalistic options; 4 at best. In kmixer the options shown are: Master, PCM, Mic, Mic1
Find the right model for your box: /usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-*/Documentation/sound/alsa/HD-Audio-Models.txt
Make a /etc/modprobe.d/hda-intel.conf
Fill it with:
options snd-hda-intel model=<yourmodel>
That helped me to workaround the same issue until it was fixed upstream and until the fix was finally downstream in Fedora (the latter was the time taking part).
Hope it helps you too.
Thanks Thomas
You did help. Your advice led me to bug report.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=537986
because the sound card as indicated with the chipset "conexant 5067" was not yet supported. Your advice about setting the hda-intel.conf was right on the money. And after I installed the latest alsa-driver as per advice from the bug report everything worked.
Thanks again
Eli
Quoting Thomas Janssen thomasj@fedoraproject.org:
On Fri, Apr 30, 2010 at 11:16 AM, Eli Wapniarski eli@orbsky.homelinux.org wrote:
The only real difficulty that I can see is that when I plug my headphones into the headhphone jack the speakers are not muted. Every mixer application that I can run shows very minimalistic options; 4 at best. In kmixer the options shown are: Master, PCM, Mic, Mic1
Find the right model for your box: /usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-*/Documentation/sound/alsa/HD-Audio-Models.txt
Make a /etc/modprobe.d/hda-intel.conf
Fill it with:
options snd-hda-intel model=<yourmodel>
That helped me to workaround the same issue until it was fixed upstream and until the fix was finally downstream in Fedora (the latter was the time taking part).
Hope it helps you too.
-- LG Thomas
Dubium sapientiae initium _______________________________________________ kde mailing list kde@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org
-- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
Eli Wapniarski wrote:
The only real difficulty that I can see is that when I plug my headphones into the headhphone jack the speakers are not muted. Every mixer application that I can run shows very minimalistic options; 4 at best. In kmixer the options shown are: Master, PCM, Mic, Mic1
You can try: KMIX_PULSEAUDIO_DISABLE=1 kmix to get access to the full set of hardware-level controls.
Kevin Kofler
Thanks for that Kevin...
After I applied the workaround that was recommended in the bug report I believe that I got all the features. Nevertheless, I just tried your suggestion with no changes to the additions that were already present after the workaround.
Be that as it may, isn't that supposed to be the default setting now anyway?
Eli
Quoting Kevin Kofler kevin.kofler@chello.at:
Eli Wapniarski wrote:
The only real difficulty that I can see is that when I plug my headphones into the headhphone jack the speakers are not muted. Every mixer application that I can run shows very minimalistic options; 4 at best. In kmixer the options shown are: Master, PCM, Mic, Mic1
You can try: KMIX_PULSEAUDIO_DISABLE=1 kmix to get access to the full set of hardware-level controls.
Kevin Kofler
kde mailing list kde@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org
-- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.