Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2010 07:29:33 -0700 From: Garrett Cooper <yanefbsd@gmail.com> To: multimedia@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Buzzing snd_emu10kx enabled card with r206173 Message-ID: <q2l7d6fde3d1004120729h2d32e696g4182af399580ca01@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <p2v7d6fde3d1004060339nfdbc4cb9p9ac6e232e38b4d6@mail.gmail.com> References: <u2q7d6fde3d1004051122madc6ebb4jc3248d8c68a81333@mail.gmail.com> <x2m7d6fde3d1004051226k7a0e350bz579b899e4fedd977@mail.gmail.com> <p2v7d6fde3d1004060339nfdbc4cb9p9ac6e232e38b4d6@mail.gmail.com>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Garrett Cooper <yanefbsd@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 12:26 PM, Garrett Cooper <yanefbsd@gmail.com> wrot= e: >> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 11:22 AM, Garrett Cooper <yanefbsd@gmail.com> wro= te: >>> Hi, >>> =A0 =A0When I first installed FreeBSD on this machine, I had a heck of = a >>> time getting the soundcard's PCM channel to function properly. It >>> would buzz incessantly when I played any audio on it; I disabled the >>> onboard snd_hda enabled audio and things magically worked, until >>> today. After a kernel upgrade and a few warm boots, I'm back to where >>> I started from -- the PCM channel buzzes whenever I play audio; >>> line-in works perfectly fine however. I'm not seeing anything out of >>> the ordinary in commits over the past couple of weeks for the pcm >>> pieces (the last successful kernel I used was 2~3 weeks old). >>> =A0 =A0Are there any device_printf's I should add or a debug procedure >>> that you recommend I do to triage the situation? >>> Thanks, >>> -Garrett >>> >>> # uname -a >>> FreeBSD bayonetta.local 9.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT #1 r206173M: >>> Sun Apr =A04 19:54:22 PDT 2010 >>> root@bayonetta.local:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/BAYONETTA =A0amd64 >>> # pciconf -lv | grep -A 4 emu >>> emu10kx0@pci0:8:0:0: =A0 =A0class=3D0x040100 card=3D0x10211102 chip=3D0= x00081102 >>> rev=3D0x00 hdr=3D0x00 >>> =A0 =A0vendor =A0 =A0 =3D 'Creative Technology LTD.' >>> =A0 =A0device =A0 =A0 =3D 'sound blaster Audigy 2 (ca0108)' >>> =A0 =A0class =A0 =A0 =A0=3D multimedia >>> =A0 =A0subclass =A0 =3D audio >>> # dmesg | grep 'irq 16' >>> uhci0: <Intel 82801JI (ICH10) USB controller USB-D> port 0xa800-0xa81f >>> irq 16 at device 26.0 on pci0 >>> pcib7: <ACPI PCI-PCI bridge> irq 16 at device 28.1 on pci0 >>> emu10kx0: <Creative Audigy 4 [SB0610]> port 0xec00-0xec3f irq 16 at >>> device 0.0 on pci8 >>> # dmesg | grep 'pcm' >>> pcm0: <EMU10Kx DSP front PCM interface> on emu10kx0 >>> pcm0: <SigmaTel STAC9750/51 AC97 Codec> >>> pcm1: <EMU10Kx DSP rear PCM interface> on emu10kx0 >>> pcm2: <EMU10Kx DSP center PCM interface> on emu10kx0 >>> pcm3: <EMU10Kx DSP subwoofer PCM interface> on emu10kx0 >>> pcm4: <EMU10Kx DSP side PCM interface> on emu10kx0 >> >> Some more information: >> >> 1. snd_emu10kx and sound are both modules loaded on boot, along with >> if_re, linux, and nvidia. >> 2. Disabling nvidia -> no change. >> 3. Disabling acpi -> unbootable system because many drivers can't map >> interrupts without it (can't test unless I isolate the drivers and >> enable them one by one -- something I'll try later on). >> >> I'm at a loss right now... my hunch is that it's potentially a bad >> interaction between the snd_emu10kx driver and another driver on the >> same PCI bus (which is just the ACPI and uhci drivers), but I can't >> test these claims. There are other funky things about my system that >> have changed over the past couple of kernel versions, like front USB >> ports could charge my iPhone, and now they don't... and the fact that >> ACPI blanking via nvidia now works again... so something may have >> changed on the backend, but I'm not 100% sure on what I should isolate >> as the root cause, yet. > > Grr... it's `healed' itself again. I'll watch out for potential > catalysts to the issue in the future. Ok. Damn issue came back and here's what happened. Rebooted several times with the same kernel and slight modifications, loading and unloading snd_emu10kx and sound, testing out snd_emu10k1, and no dice. The buzz was bad and it was driving me insane. Again, line-in functioned just fine, so I didn't know what the heck was going. I was getting desperate, so I finally broke down and booted the Gentoo Linux livecd. PCM worked just fine. Then I got irritated enough and finally just built the module and the sound support directly into the kernel and everything is hunky dorey again. Does anyone have a stab in the dark as to what's going on? Is it a potential bus or interrupt conflict / race condition that gets alleviated when support is nailed into the kernel? Or are other folks as stumped as I am, s.t. I should just try emailing current@ instead to see if someone maybe knows what's going on there :(...? Thanks, -Garrett
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?q2l7d6fde3d1004120729h2d32e696g4182af399580ca01>