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.
Or you might avoid the kernal stability and latency problems that some
people have with the nvidia drivers by sticking with the nv X driver,
and installing the version of the OpenGL shared library that does all
the 3D magic in software and thus won't ask the X server to do it. It
is probably in another RPM package, at least, that's the way SuSE has
handled this.
I tried this but it was extremely slow. I didn't mess with it to see if
I could get it to work better because I had no problems with the
Nvidia drivers.
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.
Reuben Martin is confused as to which list he is responding to.
Oops. Sorry 'bout that. I tend to jump around reading from different
lists and forget which one I'm on. My apologies.
Reuben and all,
Thanks for the replies and suggestions. I am now on the track of a
solution.
Frank