[alsa-devel] Low volume since linux 3.19
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this. Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information? Here is some output from dmesg: [ 5.853009] sound hdaudioC0D0: ALC269VB: SKU not ready 0x909701f0 [ 5.853857] sound hdaudioC0D0: autoconfig: line_outs=1 (0x21/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) type:line [ 5.853860] sound hdaudioC0D0: speaker_outs=1 (0x14/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) [ 5.853862] sound hdaudioC0D0: hp_outs=1 (0x1a/0x0/0x0/0x0/0x0) [ 5.853864] sound hdaudioC0D0: mono: mono_out=0x0 [ 5.853866] sound hdaudioC0D0: inputs: [ 5.853869] sound hdaudioC0D0: Mic=0x18 [ 5.853871] sound hdaudioC0D0: Dock Mic=0x1b [ 5.853873] sound hdaudioC0D0: Internal Mic=0x12
Thanks in advance,
jhs
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
Thx for your quick reply. I ran the script with linux 3.18.6 and 3.19.2 and attached the output in compressed form.
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 14:50 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 15:22:28 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Thx for your quick reply. I ran the script with linux 3.18.6 and 3.19.2 and attached the output in compressed form.
I guess running the following once should recover: % amixer -c0 set k 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
But still the question is who lowered it. Which PulseAudio version are you running?
Takashi
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 14:50 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
[2 alsainfo.tar.xz <application/x-xz (base64)>]
Yes, it works (only until next reboot). I assume the "k" after "set" was a typo. I ran % amixer amixer -c0 set 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
I have pulseaudio version 6.0
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 15:26 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 15:22:28 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Thx for your quick reply. I ran the script with linux 3.18.6 and 3.19.2 and attached the output in compressed form.
I guess running the following once should recover: % amixer -c0 set k 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
But still the question is who lowered it. Which PulseAudio version are you running?
Takashi
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 14:50 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
[2 alsainfo.tar.xz <application/x-xz (base64)>]
Hi,
a few weeks ago you wrote a patch for a lifebook T731 which fixed some wrong BIOS configuration concerning the headphone pin. A tried the patch with my Lifebook E753 and it worked. The Speaker+LO setting is gone. In alsamixer only 'Speaker' and 'Headphone' remain. 'Speaker' is muted when I plug in a headphone. So if I don't get something wrong this is the same issue!? If it is and you don't mind, would you add the following quirk-patch?
diff --git a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c index e2afd53..8491429 100644 --- a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c +++ b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c @@ -5119,6 +5119,7 @@ static const struct snd_pci_quirk alc269_fixup_tbl[] = { SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x104d, 0x9099, "Sony VAIO S13", ALC275_FIXUP_SONY_DISABLE_AAMIX), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1475, "Lifebook", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x15dc, "Lifebook T731", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_HP_PIN), + SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1757, "Lifebook E753", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_HP_PIN), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1845, "Lifebook U904", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_EXTMIC), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x144d, 0xc109, "Samsung Ativ book 9 (NP900X3G)", ALC269_FIXUP_INV_DMIC), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x1458, 0xfa53, "Gigabyte BXBT-2807", ALC283_FIXUP_BXBT2807_MIC),
If I got something wrong, please tell me.
Regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 16:48 GMT+01:00 Jan Hinnerk Stosch janhinnerk.stosch@gmail.com:
Yes, it works (only until next reboot). I assume the "k" after "set" was a typo. I ran % amixer amixer -c0 set 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
I have pulseaudio version 6.0
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 15:26 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 15:22:28 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Thx for your quick reply. I ran the script with linux 3.18.6 and 3.19.2 and attached the output in compressed form.
I guess running the following once should recover: % amixer -c0 set k 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
But still the question is who lowered it. Which PulseAudio version are you running?
Takashi
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 14:50 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
[2 alsainfo.tar.xz <application/x-xz (base64)>]
At Wed, 13 May 2015 18:29:29 +0200, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
a few weeks ago you wrote a patch for a lifebook T731 which fixed some wrong BIOS configuration concerning the headphone pin. A tried the patch with my Lifebook E753 and it worked. The Speaker+LO setting is gone. In alsamixer only 'Speaker' and 'Headphone' remain. 'Speaker' is muted when I plug in a headphone. So if I don't get something wrong this is the same issue!? If it is and you don't mind, would you add the following quirk-patch?
The very same fix was already queued in my tree (but for E752). It'll be included in the next pull request to Linus, so likely in 4.1-rc4 or rc5.
thanks,
Takashi
diff --git a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c index e2afd53..8491429 100644 --- a/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c +++ b/sound/pci/hda/patch_realtek.c @@ -5119,6 +5119,7 @@ static const struct snd_pci_quirk alc269_fixup_tbl[] = { SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x104d, 0x9099, "Sony VAIO S13", ALC275_FIXUP_SONY_DISABLE_AAMIX), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1475, "Lifebook", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x15dc, "Lifebook T731", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_HP_PIN),
- SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1757, "Lifebook E753",
ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_HP_PIN), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x10cf, 0x1845, "Lifebook U904", ALC269_FIXUP_LIFEBOOK_EXTMIC), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x144d, 0xc109, "Samsung Ativ book 9 (NP900X3G)", ALC269_FIXUP_INV_DMIC), SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x1458, 0xfa53, "Gigabyte BXBT-2807", ALC283_FIXUP_BXBT2807_MIC),
If I got something wrong, please tell me.
Regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 16:48 GMT+01:00 Jan Hinnerk Stosch janhinnerk.stosch@gmail.com:
Yes, it works (only until next reboot). I assume the "k" after "set" was a typo. I ran % amixer amixer -c0 set 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
I have pulseaudio version 6.0
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 15:26 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 15:22:28 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Thx for your quick reply. I ran the script with linux 3.18.6 and 3.19.2 and attached the output in compressed form.
I guess running the following once should recover: % amixer -c0 set k 'Speaker+LO' 0dB
But still the question is who lowered it. Which PulseAudio version are you running?
Takashi
regards,
jhs
2015-03-26 14:50 GMT+01:00 Takashi Iwai tiwai@suse.de:
At Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:53:30 +0100, Jan Hinnerk Stosch wrote:
Hi,
I hope this is the right place to report my issue!? Since linux 3.19 I have very low volume on my Fujitsu E753 headphone even on highest volume level. As I don't have much experience with audio configuration and it worked before I did a kernel bisect and found out, that commit "03ad6a8c93b6df2d65c305b5b5f9474068b45bfb" is "responsible" for this.
Adding David to Cc.
Is there something that I have to change in my configuration? Or do you need some further information?
Please take alsa-info.sh outputs before and after the patch. Run the script with --no-upload option, and attach two output files. (Maybe better to compress when attaching.)
The commit does basically only renaming some control elements. Possibly some volumes are set lower than before now.
thanks,
Takashi
[2 alsainfo.tar.xz <application/x-xz (base64)>]
participants (2)
-
Jan Hinnerk Stosch
-
Takashi Iwai