At Mon, 30 Aug 2010 15:01:29 +0200, David Henningsson wrote:
2010-08-30 10:01, Takashi Iwai skrev:
At Sat, 28 Aug 2010 06:58:20 +0800, Raymond Yau wrote:
2010/8/28 David Henningsson david.henningsson@canonical.com
2010-08-27 17:43, Clemens Ladisch skrev:
David Henningsson wrote:
So I've discovered that my sound card has a "PCM Playback Volume" control, but changing that control does not alter the volume.
Interestingly enough, this control does not come from the HDA parser, it is added by alsactl at boot time...!
This control was created by the software volume plugin. When not using this plugin, the control does not have any effect.
To get rid of it, delete its entry from /etc/asound.state.
Hmm, I wonder if this is an Ubuntu-specific bug then? Because when I run Maverick (the upcoming Ubuntu release) from a Live-CD, the "PCM Playback Volume" control is still there (and there is no asound.state, neither in /etc or in /var/lib/alsa). When I use the plughw interface, the "PCM Playback Volume" does not affect volume output. Should I use another device string to test the softvol plugin, to see if it's there or not?
The softvol plugin it is defined in "front" device in /usr/share/alsa/cards/HDA-Intel.conf
reason is some HDA codec does not has any hardware volume control (analog)
this user-defined control only effective when the application use "front" device
Hm, but if PA opens the device with SND_PCM_NO_SOFTVOL flag, the softvol should be skipped.
But that does not apply to the mixer controls as well, does it?
It does. The mixer element is created when this kind of PCM stream is opened without SND_PCM_NO_SOFTVOL flag. Then it leaves the control for the later use, and alsactl saves/restores it. So, it's a chicken- and-egg problem.
Of course, it's possible that it wasn't PA who opened the PCM stream. But, something opened the stream and it created the mixer element. This is the correct behavior.
I think we still have a problem with PA assuming that it can change the PCM volume control to change the output volume.
PA can check whether it's a user-defined control or not.
Takashi