Taylor Smock wrote:
Yes; reverting the patch does fix the problem.
What if you just adjust the new volume manually without reverting the patch? Run "alsamixer -c0" (or -c1, depending on the setup). Once after the setup, run "alsactl store" as root to save as the system default volume.
The renamed volume should have been set in full volume as default by the driver, and this shouldn't matter whether PA is new or old. If the mixer adjustment isn't kept after relogin or reboot, it means that some user-space stuff overrides it.
In anyway, please give alsa-info.sh output before and after the commit.
Takashi
On Wed, 2015-04-08 at 01:56 +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote: > So it's 03ad6a8c93b6df2 ('ALSA: hda - Fix "PCM" name being > used > on > one > DAC when there are two DACs') which causes the problem? > Have > you > tried > to just revert that patch? > > git show 03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb | patch - > p1 -R > > regards, > dan carpenter >
I ran alsamixer -c0. Headphones did nothing. Speaker+L0 did change headphone volume.
Please elaborate a bit what you're testing and what you expected. When you change "Headphone" volume and mute, it did nothing for which output? "Speaker+LO" changes which output and which not?
You seem to have three outputs, one headphone jack on a laptop and one on a docking station, and there is a built-in speaker. Since your codec has only two DACs, two of three must be tied.
The bad thing is that BIOS pin configuration doesn't set the headphone pin with the associate number 0x0f but only set it to the dock headphone. Thus the driver assumes that the dock jack is the right headphone and handles the laptop headphone as a sub output. The commit you spotted took this difference more severely, and now you see the unexpected mixer assignment.
So, the right "fix" would be rather to correct the pin config. For example, try the patch below.
(BTW, what is the product of your laptop model? A more exact name can be filled in the quirk string.)
PCM also seemed to affect headphone volume.
This is a mixer element added by alsa-lib softvol plugin, and it's not what the kernel manages.
Judging from the description that this PCM volume affects, you are playing without PulseAudio but dmix, I suppose?
Takashi
diff --git a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c index 7b5c93e0e78c..9d935e5c008a 100644 --- a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c +++ b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c @@ -4429,6 +4429,7 @@ enum { ALC269_FIXUP_QUANTA_MUTE, ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK, ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_EXTMIC,
ALC269_FIXUP_FUJITSU_HP_PIN, ALC269_FIXUP_AMIC, ALC269_FIXUP_DMIC, ALC269VB_FIXUP_AMIC,
@@ -4585,6 +4586,13 @@ static const struct hda_fixup alc269_fixups[] = { { } }, },
[ALC269_FIXUP_FUJITSU_HP_PIN] = {
.type = HDA_FIXUP_PINS,
.v.pins = (const struct hda_pintbl[]) {
{ 0x21, 0x0221102f }, /* HP out */
{ }
},
},
Do you mind explaining the logic of this pin fixup as driver also change max channels from 2 to 4 ?
The parser put one headphone in the line_outs before your patch but type is still line
autoconfig for ALC269VB: line_outs=1 (0x21/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) type:line speaker_outs=1 (0x14/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) hp_outs=1 (0x1a/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) mono: mono_out=0x0 inputs: Internal Mic=0x12 Mic=0x18
the headphone and dock headphone was put in the hp_outsafter your patch
autoconfig for ALC269VB: line_outs=1 (0x14/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) type:speaker speaker_outs=0 (0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) hp_outs=2 (0x1a/0x21/0x0/0x0/0x0) mono: mono_out=0x0 inputs: Internal Mic=0x12 Mic=0x18
Do the driver need to distinguish between
notebook with headphone and Dock headphone notebook with dual headphone jacks