(please, do not top post!)
On April 29, 2014 6:53:36 PM WAT, Andrew Reyes dsreyes1014@gmail.com wrote:
Daniel it turns out with a brand new UMC204 it still does it on my linux box. I'm at a loss.
Try that one on Windows as well. Uf it doesn't work there either, send tge hardqare back and get a different model. If the hardware has such severe bugs, there nothing the Linux driver can do to fix it up.
Daniel
On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 9:14 AM, Andrew Reyes dsreyes1014@gmail.com wrote:
Daniel I got my hands on Windows 7 PC and installed the drivers from
the
website and it does the samething. So now I'm leaning toward a
defective
soundcard. I'm sending it back for a new one.
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 11:18 AM, Andrew Reyes
dsreyes1014@gmail.comwrote:
Ok I got the two different logs and I don't what I'm looking for
lol.
It's just raw data. My last option is to try using it on Windows or
Mac
just to make sure it's not the interface.
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 10:40 AM, Andrew Reyes
dsreyes1014@gmail.comwrote:
I can just give you a few more ideas to debug this, but that
includes
more action from your side.
- First of all, try the same device on a different computer,
and/or a
different USB port, especially if you're using an XHCI (USB3) port.
- Try the device on Mac OS X, without installing a driver and see
if
you have the same problem here.
- Use usbmon and analyze the data stream when a pop occurs.
Compare
that with settings that don't produce pops. There's good
documentation on
usbmon in Documentation/usb/ in the Linux kernel.
Ok cool. I'll get right on that. I did try the first suggestion on
four
different computers and different ports and it's the same issue but
just to
be thorough I'll check again.
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Daniel Mack daniel@zonque.org
wrote:
On April 23, 2014 4:40:07 PM CEST, Andrew Reyes
wrote:
Is there something else I could do to get to the problem?
I can just give you a few more ideas to debug this, but that
includes
more action from your side.
- First of all, try the same device on a different computer,
and/or a
different USB port, especially if you're using an XHCI (USB3)
port.
- Try the device on Mac OS X, without installing a driver and see
if
you have the same problem here.
- Use usbmon and analyze the data stream when a pop occurs.
Compare
that with settings that don't produce pops. There's good
documentation on
usbmon in Documentation/usb/ in the Linux kernel.
Best regards, Daniel
-- Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my
brevity.