On 7/31/06, Lee Revell <rlrevell(a)joe-job.com> wrote:
On Mon, 2006-07-31 at 17:29 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
On 7/31/06, Lee Revell
<rlrevell(a)joe-job.com> wrote:
On Mon, 2006-07-31 at 17:08 -0700, Mark Knecht
wrote:
On 7/31/06, Lee Revell
<rlrevell(a)joe-job.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 2006-07-31 at 07:43 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > Thanks for responding. I *think* this was my problem. It seemed
> > that alsaconf didn't find the card until I actually built the driver.
>
> Why are you even using alsaconf for a PCI device? It's only needed for
> old ISA stuff. hotplug/udev/whatever should automagically load the
> right driver for a PCI card on boot.
>
> Lee
Lee,
Sometimes I don't get where you are coming from with these strong
statements...
Sorry, I just got back into town and was going through 1000s of emails,
and rattled that off too quickly. I did not mean to be rude but
obviously I was. Apologies.
Lee
Happily accepted. Thanks.
No problem.
For future reference, I think you could have built and installed the
driver, then restarted udev (/etc/init.d/udev restart on my system) and
it would have loaded the correct driver.
Lee
Lee,
OK, I'll play along. I'm a new user setting up a new machine. I
don't know what driver to build. How do I find out without resorting
to joining lists or doing long, boring web searches. I looked at the
alsa-project.org sound card lists didn't show it. It only listed the
intel8x0 driver which was all I built before I started writing emails.
Next, what do you mean by 'built and installed the driver'? Since
nothing tells me to use the Intel HDA driver the only way I think this
logic holds up is if I build every single driver offered by the kernel
and hope for the best. I'm sure you're not really suggesting that
path...
And alsaconf worked just fine, but only once the driver was built.
My original thought, which seemed innocent enough, was that alsaconf
understood all the PCI IDs and then determined what driver to put in
modprobe.conf from that. Apparently not.
Cheers,
Mark