arisstotle.54695488@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > --- gnome@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Kjetil S. Matheussen wrote: >>> david: > >>>> David Griffith wrote: >>>>> On Sun, 4 Nov 2007, ANDERSON GREGORY > wrote: >>>>>> I am looking to buy a MIDI keyboard controller but I > am >>>>>> having trouble coming up with a site that has >>>>>> compatibility > info on it. Could someone point me in the >>>>>> right direction? > >>>>> Any MIDI keyboard will work as long as you have a MIDI interface that > >>>>> works. Trickiness comes into play with USB/MIDI keyboards. Those > are >>>>> essentially USB/MIDI interfaces tucked into a keyboard. As >>>> previously-discussed here, USB/MIDI devices may or may not work with >>>>> Linux. Roland/Edirol and Korg are two brands known to work. >>>> When ALSA isn't fighting over which sound card to load in which order > on >>>> my system, the E-MU Xmidi1x1 works just fine. >>> In your > modules settings file (mine is /etc/modules.d/alsa), set: >> I don't have > an /etc/modules.d directory. I have an /etc/modprobe.d >> directory. >> > >>> alias snd-card-0 snd-<card1> >>> alias snd-card-1 snd-<card2> >>> etc. > >> I found a file called "sound" in the modprobe.d directory. It already > >> had an alias setting snd-card-0 to the intel sound driver. So I added > an >> alias to it for the snd-usb-audio. Restarting only brought up error > >> messages about usb device 2,2, and killed both the USB<>MIDI adapter and > >> my external flash card reader. So I decided to go the other way - >> > renamed the sound file to something else and restarted again. Then >> everything > came up. >> So far, audio has been working since then, but won't really > know for awhile. >> Running GNU/Debian Linux ... > > use > the vendor and product IDs from lsusb and lspci to give each alsa driver an > index number to make sure that each driver gets put in the same spot each > boot. > > in my modprobe.d/alsa file I have: > options snd-usb-audio index=1,2,3 > vid=0x08bb,0x0763,0x0c45 pid=0x2902,0x0199,0x1 > 7fd Hmmm, OK. Is that all one line in the alsa file? Not sure I understand that. lsusb -v shows me this for my one USB audio device: idVendor 0x041e Creative Technology, Ltd idProduct 0x3f07 That's pretty clear about what's what. I gather I need a line like this in the alsa file (index=2 to make it the second sound device, yes?): options snd-usb-audio index=2 vid=0x041e pid=0x3f07 On the other hand, lspci -vn shows me this for the onboard audio controller: 00:1f.5 0401: 8086:24c5 (rev 03) Subsystem: 1179:ff01 Flags: medium devsel, IRQ 11 I/O ports at 1c00 [size=256] I/O ports at 18c0 [size=64] Memory at e0100c00 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=512] Memory at e0100800 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=256] Capabilities: [50] Power Management version 2 I guess the "8086:24c5" is the two numbers I need, minus the prefatory "0x"? -- David gnome@xxxxxxxxxxxxx authenticity, honesty, community _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user