On Wed, 2008-07-09 at 11:25 -0700, nate wrote: > William L. Maltby wrote: > > > > > I'll see if I can ID a plugin in the next pass. > > The plugins themselves won't show up, in my case it just said firefox > was using it. And I recall getting audio from flash earlier in the > day so thought it still might be using it, and I happened to be right, > after disabling the plugin the lock on the device was released. > > Since nothing is using the sound device, I'm not sure what else to > check, short of permissions, at one point a few years ago it wasn't > uncommon for the permissions of devices such as sound devices etc > to get automatically changed to the person logged in. Not sure what > caused it or why, or if anything still does it anymore. But if your > user doesn't have access to the device I would think similar behavior > would occur. Well, that was involved partly. The other user owned all the devices /dev/{gpmctl,mixer,audio,adsp,snd} *and* floppies, HD, nvidia, ... So I ran find /dev -user bill -exec chown hardtolove {} \; which I really shouldn't (I know better). But that did provide a small gain. I can now open the Volume Control Panel (for a lurking friend, that is VCP ;-) I still can't open the volume slider that drops down from the little speaker icon. So something is better, something still not fixed. > > So, check permissions on /dev/snd/* and /dev/dsp, another thing I do > to test is run a command line program that generates a sound(I > use mpg123 out of habbit which plays mp3 files), and see if you > notice any permission denied type errors. Will do. Signing off to find out where I can get mpg123. I think I'll pop a CD in again first and see what I can doo-dah, doo-dah with that. BRB > > nate > <snip sig stuff> Thanks for following up! -- Bill _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos