On Tuesday 30 December 2008 20:18, Paul Smith wrote: > On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 5:39 PM, Nigel Henry > > <cave.dnb2m97pp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> After some updates, the volume of audio became too low. Any ideas? I > >> am using F10. > > > > As usual I suspect Pulseaudio as the culprit, as it can be responsible > > for low volume levels. > > > > First though, open alsamixer as user in a terminal, as below. > > > > alsamixer -D hw:0 > > > > Assuming that your card is card0, this should show all sliders for your > > soundcard. Check for ones like, Master, PCM, Front, CD, which should be > > up. > > > > If all's ok in alsamixer, try disabling Pulseaudio (unless you > > particularly want it), by removing the package, alsa-plugins-pulseaudio, > > then reboot, and see if the sound levels are any better. > > Thanks, Nigel and David. After having played a bit with alsamixer, I > got the audio back to its usual volume. I do not know how was it > changed without my intervention... > > Paul Audio on Linux can be a bit like playing with the dark arts at times. Muttering various incantions, while slaughtering a chicken, and fiddling with the alsamixer controls, all at the same time. Nice to see you've got the sounds back to how they were before the updates though. If you want to check on what the last updates were, run the command below as user. (scroll to the top of the list for the latest updates) rpm -q -a --last Perhaps I've just got it in for pulseaudio, but I'd guess there are pulseaudio updates showing there. I don't have an F10 install yet, so can't verify that. All the best. Nigel. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines