Hallo,
tim hall hat gesagt: // tim hall wrote:
You might be
better of by creating a file
/etc/modutils/alsa as described on
alsa-project.org and run
update-modules as root by hand.
interestingly enough alsaconf updated /etc/alsa/modutils/0.5
Delete this, if you don't use ALSA 0.5 and you really shouldn't do
that as well, 0.5 is way obsolete.
I have a file next door to it called ./0.9-demudi,
which is much easier to
read.
I tried applying some appropriate looking values to this file, but I'm not
sure how to activate it. update-modules does not appear to touch this file.
I'm also not sure that I should be putting my soundcard details in
/etc/modutils as that duplicates the values in /etc/alsa/modutils.
They may already be the same file, i.e. one is a link to the other
like here:
$ ls -l /etc/modutils/
total 21
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 22 Aug 12 2002 alsa -> /etc/alsa/modutils/0.9
It is important, that you have one under /etc/modutils/.
update-modules collects everything under this directory to build the
'real' module configuration, which is in /etc/modules.conf. This last
file gets overwritten everytime you or an installaton script calls
update-modules.
ciao
--
Frank Barknecht _ ______footils.org__