Hi Flo
On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 11:08 PM, Florian Faber faber@faberman.de wrote:
Martin,
The driver itself won't help you since the old user space tools don't know the io box. You wouldn't be able to upload the firmware, adjust the mixer levels etc. (unless you patch the old user space tools, of course).
I'm sorry, I'm a bit confused here. You said above that "You have IO, you can adjust the input levels, switch standby and disconnect the box. So everything works as you would expect it."
With the hdsp*-tools that are currently part of the alsa-tools suite, you cannot control the RPM. Neither can you control a lot of the other RME cards. That's going to change with a whole new set of userspace tools.
So, if you are curious, I can give you the new driver and a small command line program that enables the RPM io box (which is on bypass mode by default). Or you wait until I finished the new user space tools..
Thanks for the clarification and, yes, I'd be interested in having a look at the new driver - if you don't mind sending it to me that would be great.
Karl seemed to be patching the firmware for some reason - I don't know why. As Roman points out, the firmware is operating system independent.
I'm still a little unclear as to what actually can be done with the box at the moment. If the firmware loader (under Linux) is not ready, I'm unclear as to what the RPM can do without the firmware.
At the risk of wasting your time with my questions (and drawing you away from your work), when you say a "small command line program that enables the RPM io box (which is on bypass mode by default)", does this mean that you can plug in a mic/headphone and get them both amplified and sent/received to/from the RME PCI board? But if that's the case, I thought that was really all the RPM box did anyway??
So, when you say "everything works as you would expect it", I'm a little unclear how that would be the case without any firmware loaded??
Sorry, but it would be nice to know what can actually be done/not done as it stands at the moment.
Regards, Martin