At Thu, 12 Feb 2009 17:19:14 +0100, Vedran Miletić wrote:
On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 12:54 AM, Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de wrote:
At Thu, 12 Feb 2009 00:41:22 +0100, Bartłomiej Holdenmayer wrote:
Dnia 2009-02-11, śro o godzinie 21:32 +0100, Takashi Iwai pisze:
At Wed, 11 Feb 2009 20:23:35 +0100, Bartłomiej Holdenmayer wrote:
I did with: sudo sh ./AlsaUpgrade-1.0.x-rev-1.16.sh -snap
What the hack this script does?
Takashi
Description in full is here: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?p=6589810
The main idea of upgrading ALSA with attached script, is the timeshift of updates through official channels in the range of up to half a year.
This is IMO not acceptable.
There is a great chance that you get your soundcard up and running or problems resolved much earlier, if you use the very lastest ALSA version. The script will get you the latest official stable ALSA release and - if available - the latest release candidate for an upcoming release.
The released or rc tarballs are way too old for debugging. Use the snapshot tarball in the URL below (not from alsa-oroject.org). ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/tiwai/snapshot/alsa-driver-snapshot.tar.gz
Takashi _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@alsa-project.org http://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel
I don' think this will be enough. If you look at lspci, there is not a single mention of HDMI device. I believe (well, at least MCP78S has it that way) that HDMI device should be listed.
No, the HDMI part doesn't always appear as an individual PCI device. It can be simply on hooked onto the audio controller together with IDT codec.
Indeed, the HP dv5 model with the same PCI SSID shows that pattern.
Takashi