Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2005 14:32:54 +0800 From: Muzaffar Ariff <mus.bsd@gmail.com> To: pyunyh@gmail.com Cc: freebsd-multimedia@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ESS Maestro3 no sound Message-ID: <8eb2b81050714233235ff3aad@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <20050714045121.GB8764@rndsoft.co.kr> References: <8eb2b81050628200659d338ab@mail.gmail.com> <20050629043027.GB8832@rndsoft.co.kr> <42C2B94F.2010708@samsco.org> <20050701014258.GE17058@rndsoft.co.kr> <8eb2b810507110203229b46b@mail.gmail.com> <20050711092238.GC858@rndsoft.co.kr> <8eb2b8105071217477e240667@mail.gmail.com> <20050713011018.GB4479@rndsoft.co.kr> <8eb2b81050713204179cb710c@mail.gmail.com> <20050714045121.GB8764@rndsoft.co.kr>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Ooohhh thats a whole lot of questions, I'll try my best to answer it :)
> Thanks for your report. It seems that you have other issues not
> known to me. Does the driver prints timeout message such as
> "pcm0:play:0: play interrupt timeout, channel dead"?
Nope, I checked in /var/log/messages and there is nothing wrong with
it or that line. In fact before I never had that problem.
> xmms plays songs with normal speed?(i.e. just no sound)
Yup, xmms plays my mp3s fine, its just no sound is coming out of it.
I've tried mute & unmute from the function button on the laptop and
increasing the volume, but nothing seems to happen.
> Without loading ACPI do you suffer from the same problem?
If I get you right ACPI means Adv. Configuration and Power Management
support right? I can unload an ACPI from /boot/loader.conf but there
are several ACPIs, which one you want me to unload?
> Could show me "pciconf -lv" output for your ESS card?
pcm0@pci0:8:0: class=0x040100 card=0x00b11028 chip=0x1998125d rev=0x10 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'ESS Technology'
device = 'ES1980 Maestro-3 PCI Audio Accelerator'
class = multimedia
subclass = audio
> If you can run "pciconf -lv", locate a line somthing like
> pcm0@pciX:Y:Z. Then show me output of
> "pciconf -r pciX:Y:Z 0:ff" before and after loading the drier.
After loading the driver this is what i got:
#pciconf -r pci0:8:0 0:ff
1998125d
Before (I simply recompiled and install the old maestro3.c driver) I got this:
# pciconf -r pci0:8:0 0:ff
1998125d
Both before and after looks the same. Hope thats what you want.
Regards,
--
Muzaffar Ariff
mus.bsd@gmail.com
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?8eb2b81050714233235ff3aad>
