Sounds like whatever graphical display you are trying to use is trying to access an OpenGL related function (Or some kind of function that has to do with 3D). The nv driver used for Nvidia cards supports 2D ONLY. I would recommend going to Nvidia's web site and downloading the latest driver and GLX driver that fits your distro configuration. Then see if that fixes your problem. Basically the message is telling you that it's trying to access something that simply does not exist for the display device.
Also, I doubt this is an ALSA problem, so always make sure that you check to be sure that you have narrowed the problem down to an ALSA specific problem before posting it on this list.
-----Original Message-----
From: Frank Pirrone [mailto:fpirrone@localnet.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2003 8:50 PM
To: linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu
Subject: [linux-audio-user] problem with snd
Using the current Planet CCRMA rpms on a RedHat 8.0 system running ALSA,
lowlat kernel, etc. I get the following error when trying to execute
the graphical snd linked to openmotif:
Xlib: extension "NV-GLX" missing on display ":0.0".
Segmentation fault
Snd and its tools work fine at the console, but this gui problem has me
stumped. My Dell 410 Workstation has the NVIDIA/TNT2 video chipset but
I am running the distro's XFree86 driver not the chipmaker's accelerated
one. I'm assuming this NV-GLX in the error message is in reference to a
video configuration problem.
I guess I'm not making this sound like a Linux-audio problem, but
afterall, it is snd.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Frank
Greetings:
I'd like to try building the latest ReZound soundfile editor, but it
appears that the required FOX Toolkit is seriously off-line. Does anyone
here know where I can retrieve the FOX sources ?
Best regards,
== Dave Phillips
The Book Of Linux Music & Sound at http://www.nostarch.com/lms.htm
The Linux Soundapps Site at http://linux-sound.org
Currently listening to: The sound of snow falling, falling, falling...
still falling...
Hello,
I am wanting to put together a dedicated DAW for the recording of
sermons. From that recording I will produce cassettes, cds, mp3 and
ogg/speek (as hardware support comes).
I am totally uneducated as to what is best for such.
Hardware:
I am currently looking at picking up used rackmount unit (4U) for this
machine.
How much processor is desired/required for this task?
PII, PIII, P4/Athlon.
Are dual systems (PII,PIII) desireable?
I will buy plenty of RAM and hard drive space.
Any preference in soundcards?
Anything else?
I do want good quality recording.
Software:
Need not be complicated or highly featured per se.
My editing needs currently are minimal.
Pick a starting point, pick an end point.
Create new file.
Ability to select beginning, middle and end points when creating cassettes.
I will be connecting this to a rackmounted cassette deck, a mixer, etc.
I currently use Debian (Sid) for my home machine.
If that makes any difference.
Thanks for help and suggestions.
Jimmie Houchin
Hi David, hi Markus:
I have it now. Thanks a lot !
Best regards,
== Dave Phillips
The Book Of Linux Music & Sound at http://www.nostarch.com/lms.htm
The Linux Soundapps Site at http://linux-sound.org
Currently listening to: Harold Budd & Brian Eno, "Foreshadowed"
David Durham wrote:
>
> ooo.. yes, I guess I picked a slightly bad time to make this release.
> The author of FOX said that the site would be down for a little while
> because his ISP is moving sites. But he did leave an alternate:
>
> http://www.fifthplanet.net/
> and
> http://www.fifthplanet.net/fox/fox.html (but the download links on this
> one point to the original site)
>
> Sorry about that...
>
Markus Schwarzenberg wrote:
>
> (Sorry for replying directly - the message I sent to LAU was delayed
> by the list - I still have to change my subscription to LAU in the
> next days, our institute's name --> my email address changed recently)
>
> On Jan 29, 10:00, Dave Phillips wrote:
> > Subject: [linux-audio-user] FOX Toolkit ?
> > Greetings:
> >
> > I'd like to try building the latest ReZound soundfile editor, but it
> > appears that the required FOX Toolkit is seriously off-line. Does anyone
> > here know where I can retrieve the FOX sources ?
>
> http://www.fox-toolkit.org/ftp/fox-1.0.30.tar.gz
>
> works for me (do you need a copy?)
>
> Markus Schwarzenberg
--
Hi guys,
Rosegarden is ready to be localized. There is rosegarden.pot in the
/po directory. Anyone wishing to translate GUI of Rosegarden - go
ahead, please :-)
--
Alexandre Prokoudine
ALT Linux Documentation Team
JID: prokoudine(a)jabber.org
Hi all.
Just got Slackware 8.1 up and running with kernel 2.4.20 and ALSA 0.9rc6. I
have a TerraTec DMX 6Fire 24/96 card. The chipset it uses is an Envy24.
I am wondering what all the different mixer options are for. These are
taken from alsamixer:
* IEC958
* IEC958 1
* ADC -- I think this is a line input.
* ADC 1-5 -- I also think these are inputs.
* Analog Input select
* Breakbox LED
* DAC -- These are the outputs. I know these, I have 6 of them.
* Deemphasis -- I have 3 of these.
* Front digital input
* H/W -- I have 6 of these.
* IPGA Analog -- I have 6 of these.
* Multi -- I have 10 of these.
* Multi Capture -- I have 10 of these.
*Multi Track Internal Clock -- I think this has something to do with recording.
* Multi Track Peak -- I have 4 of these.
* Multi Track Rate Locking
* Multi Track Rate Reset
* Multi Track Volume Rate
* Optical Digital Input -- Digital connectors on the front panel I presume.
* Phone Analog Input -- Self explanetory.
Any help as to what these all are would be much appreciated.
Thanks
Luke.
Hello List:
My name is Josh, and I am a musician and linux user in Texas. After buying
Linux Music and Sound about 6 months ago, I am starting to get into using my
linux box for music applications. I've found most of the major resources on
the web for this sort of thing, but I find that I'm running into new ones
every day. Is there a FAQ for this list that answers many "newbie"
questions that I could ask?
My second question: I am wanting a MIDI utility that will help me deal with
changing patches on my synths (am I allowed to brag? Yamaha S80 and EX5...)
without having to manually do it. Is there such a utility, or should I
stick with sequencers? A sequencer seems a little full-featured for what I
am wanting to do, that is, simply send bank and program change messages to
my various synths.
Thanks list!
Josh Lawrence
Greets all,
alsa 0.9rc1
jack 0.34.0
sound blaster 128, ens1371
Er, as it sais in the subject, jack-rack 1.12 segfaults on startup.
I'm starting jack like this:
# jackd -R -d alsa -d sb128
Am i supposed to be giving jack-rack any specific options on start-up?
Thanks, Jordan.
Hello
I've been getting into soundfonts recently so i started looking for graphical editors. I have compiled swami 0.9 along with iiwusynth 0.2.2. iiwusynth is working great with my midisport and alsa etc. But I can't get swami to work...
I launch swami
swami rhodes.sf2
and it warns that it can't find the config files in ~/.swami/ . Then it just exits listing the available options. I tried creating blank config files hoping it would set them up for me but still the same result. I also tried -d and -c but no luck :(
Can anyone suggest how to get swami running?
cheers
matthew
cheers
matthew