On Thu, Dec 31, 2009 at 12:23 PM, Robert Hancock <hancockrwd@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 12/24/2009 08:30 AM, Mark Goldberg wrote: > No. There are two different chips on the board: one is a PCI device that > implements the HDA interface (that's your ATI southbridge chip, presumably). > This is supported by snd_hda_intel (don't blacklist it!) The other chip is > the actual codec which is connected to the HDA interface over the HDA bus. > The VT1818 is the codec chip which is supported by snd_hda_codec_via. You > need both of them. I figured that out and loaded snd_hda_intel and snd_hda_codec_via. I built from alsa sources and the latest are not in the fedora 12 2.6.31 kernel. > > Some of the VIA codec support was quite recently added, I don't know if it's > in a release yet, you might need a git snapshot. You can also test a > 2.6.33-rc kernel, it should be in there as well. > Unfortunately, with the modules built from alsa 1.0.22 the chip is seen but no outputs are selectable (nothing from aplay -l or aplay -L). Interestingly using the 2.6.31 fedora 12 kernel modules, a generic HDA output is available but there are no mixer controls. I expect there still is a module parameter or two needed to select the right config. Mark ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Verizon Developer Community Take advantage of Verizon's best-in-class app development support A streamlined, 14 day to market process makes app distribution fast and easy Join now and get one step closer to millions of Verizon customers http://p.sf.net/sfu/verizon-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Alsa-user mailing list Alsa-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/alsa-user