Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 10:10:27 +0200 From: Pierluigi Adami <pierluigi_adami@telespazio.it> To: Jan.Christian.Meyer@idi.ntnu.no Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: MIDI (and audio) on freeBSD Message-ID: <408E1573.6040800@telespazio.it> In-Reply-To: <200404232224.29282.Jan.Christian.Meyer@idi.ntnu.no> References: <4088D621.4060503@telespazio.it> <200404232224.29282.Jan.Christian.Meyer@idi.ntnu.no>
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Jan Christian Meyer ha scritto: >>After some troubles, and a Kernel recompilation with the option "device >>pcm", I found in /dev directory lots of devices related to sound. KDE >>still does not sound at all: it looks for a /dev/dsp device that does >>not exists; a /dev/dsp0.0 exists instead, but I haven't found the way to >>instruct KDE to load the right device. >> >> >... >Even if /dev/dsp does not appear when you list the contents of /dev, under >FBSD 5.X it should still magically appear when something tries to access it, >if I've understood correctly. That is how my 5.1-machines behave anyway. With >this in mind, something is apparently fishy in your sound system - without >being wizardly enough to say what is up, I would not bet on it working out >even if you reconfigure the device. > > > Thanks a lot for answering my question. I tried to instruct KDE to look for some other devices (audio0.0? dsp0.0, 0.1,0.2? There is a lot...). Nothing happened as you have foreseen. The weird thing is that it seems that GNOME sounds: it starts playing some chords, and sounds are associated with some events (clicks, open windows etc.) I cannot verify the whole sound system under Gnome yet, because FreeBSD did not install any software for playing music. The mixer is up, anyway. Pier
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