Sid Alsa

This is a discussion about Sid Alsa in the Everything Linux category; pliz tell me what sould i do to have sound in Debian Sid. I installed Alsa but it doesn't seem to work. i have AC'97 codec on board. What should i do?.

Everything Linux 1800 This topic was started by , . Last reply by ,


data/avatar/default/avatar30.webp

32 Posts
Location -
Joined 2004-10-13
 
pliz tell me what sould i do to have sound in Debian Sid.
I installed Alsa but it doesn't seem to work.
i have AC'97 codec on board.What should i do?

Participate in our website and join the conversation

You already have an account on our website? To log in, use the link provided below.
Login
Create a new user account. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds.
Register
This subject has been archived. New comments and votes cannot be submitted.
Oct 21
Created
Oct 23
Last Response
0
Likes
2 minutes
Read Time
User User User
Users

Responses to this topic


data/avatar/default/avatar01.webp

120 Posts
Location -
Joined 2004-03-23
howdy kobedf
 
Sound setup can generally be tricky at times. First off: are you using the ALSA-drivers that are included in the kernel, or did you d/l the sources from the ALSA-site, or did you do some APT/DSELECT-thing?
 
If you have installed ALSA via "dselect" or "apt-get" I can't tell you much as I don't use those tools too much as they never gave me a single software-piece without a thorough headache, but that's a different story.
 
In case it's the kernel-version, make sure you have "Alsa"-support checked and also check if you have included support for the respective sound-chip of your mobo. More info about the HW would be necessary at this point to tell you something more specific (mobo-vendor/type, soundchip). It's also possible that the support for ALSA is already there and the module just doesn't get loaded.
 
I did all my ALSA installs by compiling the sources from the ALSA-site. For this you need to make sure that you only have soundcard-support enabled in the kernel-config. The ALSA-driver then does the rest.
 
The "./configure"-run can take heaps of parameters, so I recommend to do something like
 
"./configure --help > alsa_options.txt"
 
first. This creates the above textfile with infos about what you exactly can pass to "confgure" as parameters. Take a thorough look at those and pick the options you need to pass to "configure". This should look something like ...
 
# ./configure --with-cards=emu10k1 --with-sequencer=yes
[and so on]
 
You will find plenty of info about supported chips and cards plus many installation docs on ...
 
> http://www.alsa-project.org/alsa-doc/
 
Lil tip: If you ever plan to give Doom3/Linux a go, also activate the otherwisely deprecated OSS, as this is the only sound-system Doom3 supports (haven't tested if it would also run without OSS as I have OSS installed anyway for some sound-apps)
 
hope that helps

data/avatar/default/avatar10.webp

2895 Posts
Location -
Joined 2002-08-30
Also check to see if alsa is not muted. Try as root user, typing in a console alsamixer and see if the settings are muted. Set the volumes all the way up and try sound again.