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Hi All,
I just got a new Asus Sabertooth X79, which is a really nice board, but apparently it has essentially no linux support beyond the basics. I am trying to get Alsa audio working and having trouble. OSS works fine, but I can't use it with either Chrome or Firefox so it is pretty useless.
In trying to get Alsa working, I did the following:
cat /proc/asound/card0/codec* | grep Codec
:
Codec: Realtek ALC892
lspci | egrep -i audio
:
00:1b.0 Audio device: Intel Corporation C600/X79 series chipset High Definition Audio Controller (rev 06)
01:00.1 Audio device: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD] nee ATI Turks/Whistler HDMI Audio [Radeon HD 6000 Series]
Based on this, I tried to blacklist the snd_intel kernel module:
/etc/modprobe.d/snd_blacklist.conf:
blacklist snd_intel8x0m
After that I tried to install alsa-driver.hda-intel.hda-codec-realtek-git from the AUR, it fails with the following message:
checking for kernel linux/version.h ... no
The file /home/dacre/Downloads/linux-ck/src/linux-3.7/include/INCLUDE_VERSION_H does not exist.
Please install the package with full kernel sources for your distribution
or use
--with-kernel=dir
option to specify another directory with kernel
sources (default is /lib/modules/3.7.4-1-ck/source)
I get the same this for the regular kernel, and the ck version. I have tried downloading the source directly with:
yaourt -G linux-ck
makepkg -o
That doesn't help. Pointing it to any of the pre-installed kernel sources doesn't work either. I am not sure what to do.... I am pretty sure I have all the right kernel sources, but it isn't finding version.h, and so I still have no sound.
Any help would be great.
-Mike
Last edited by MikeDacre (2013-04-01 23:37:42)
Home Page: www.michaeldacre.com
Lab: Hunter Fraser's Lab
GPG key: E76370D6
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OSS emulation works fine. And if it works, the ALSA driver must be working as well.
Install alsa-utils and run aplay -l, maybe you have more sound outputs (e.g. HDMI) and your applications are trying to use a wrong one. Run alsamixer and play with the controls. Try aplay /dev/urandom -fcd -Dhw:0 (change hw:0 to hw:1 etc. if you have more soundcards), this should play some white noise.
Maybe you have pulse audio installed?
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Ok, I feel stupid now. I have tried for days and days to get this working and had no luck. After I followed your suggestions it just worked. Well, everything but google-chrome. When I switched to Chromium, then it all worked, but now my extensions aren't syncing. Annoying.
Does anyone have any thoughts on the kernel sources issue though? That is actually a more important problem than sound.
Thanks!
Home Page: www.michaeldacre.com
Lab: Hunter Fraser's Lab
GPG key: E76370D6
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It turns out the actual problem with the audio was with pulseaudio not being set up correctly. However, I am still confused by that kernel source issue and would love to get anyone's advice on that.
Home Page: www.michaeldacre.com
Lab: Hunter Fraser's Lab
GPG key: E76370D6
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Just a follow up to this for anyone with the same issue. I ended up installing alsa, alsa-oss, and pulseaudio-alsa, and then configuring them with an Alsa Mixer (in this case xfce4-mixer, but there are others) and Pulseaudio Volume Control (pavucontrol). In Pulseaudio Volume Control, I disabled 'HD-Audio Generic', as it is for the HDMI output of my graphics card, and set 'Built-in Audio' to 'Analog Stereo Output'. I then unmuted the sound both in this application and in the Alsa Mixer application. After a system restart, sound seems to work fine everywhere.
Note: I am only using headphones on this machine, I haven't tested the other outputs, but I assume they work fine.
Home Page: www.michaeldacre.com
Lab: Hunter Fraser's Lab
GPG key: E76370D6
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