Re: Broken sound?
From: Jerry Quinn <hidden>
Date: 1999-07-20 14:23:11
quoted
"Paul" == Paul Mackerras [off-list ref] writes:
Paul> Jerry Quinn [off-list ref] wrote: >> Hmm, junk.au started out as a wav file from Gnome. I originally was >> trying to get the wav files working and then figured I'd try converting >> with sox to au. Paul> The .wav reader in KDE had an endianness problem in how it read the Paul> header. That problem is fixed in the rpms that Franz Sirl put up. Paul> Maybe the .wav reader in gnome has the same problem. Apparently. So I now know that I've got an application problem on my hands to track down. Of course, I should have assumed that >> How is playing of other sound formats handled? How is the sample rate and >> stereo set? Paul> Ioctls on /dev/dsp or /dev/audio. The only difference between them is Paul> that with /dev/dsp you get whatever was last set (or 8kHz linear 8-bit Paul> mono at startup), whereas with /dev/audio it gets set to 8kHz mu-law Paul> 8-bit mono on the open. There is documentation at www.opensound.com. Thanks for the pointer. That helps a lot. I think that some basic documentation on the devices will be helpful. I guess they would need to be part of the man-pages package. Projects, projects ... Paul> You should have a /dev/dsp (char device 14,3). /dev/audio1 and Paul> /dev/dsp1 would correspond to a second sound card, which you don't Paul> have. Powermacs have one (stereo) sound output channel which can be Paul> routed to the speaker and/or the headphone. After some kernel browsing and guessing, I came to the same conclusion. I used MAKEDEV to recreate the missing /dev/dsp. Paul> Paul. Thanks for all the info. Jerry [[ This message was sent via the linuxppc-dev mailing list. Replies are ]] [[ not forced back to the list, so be sure to Cc linuxppc-dev if your ]] [[ reply is of general interest. Please check http://lists.linuxppc.org/ ]] [[ and http://www.linuxppc.org/ for useful information before posting. ]]