On 10/02/2013 04:13 AM, Yuval Levy wrote:
On 10/01/2013 02:28 AM, David Henningsson wrote:
Ok. If things work without extra drivers from Sony or Realtek, then it should be possible to get things working in Linux too without extra information from these parties...
I have added this information to the bug report https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1228689 where I also post my comments so that they are more persistent and available to other users with similar issues.
Ok - given that 0x21 works as expected you should only need to do this for pin 0x18.
All my testing was with doing this for both pins. I only noticed now that I do not need to do this for pin 0x18. I will try to o this only for pin 0x21 and reboot tomorrow.
Ok, cool. Notice that I wrote "do this for pin 0x18 only, not for pin 0x21", where as you replied "I'll do this for pin 0x21 only, not for pin 0x18".
0x18 is for input switching, 0x21 is for output switching. If you remove jack detection, like you did, you will need to do this switching manually, e g in pavucontrol or gnome sound settings. That is, when you plug your headphone in, you need to manually select "Headphone" too, if you don't, the result will probably be that you hear sound in both headphones and speakers.
Anyway, let's guess that the high pitched sound, as well as the lack of headset microphone input, is because your headset is OMTP and that the Vaio only supports CTIA. That's my *guess*, but it could be wrong, and it would be good to have this confirmed with a CTIA headset.