On Dec 9, 2007 4:09 PM, Paulo Cavalcanti <promac@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I would seriously suggest removing pulseaudio, as many folks have had > problems > > with it, including myself, whereas sound was working on previous Fedora > > versions. You can always reinstall alsa-plugins-pulseaudio once you get > the > > sound working again. > > > > There is no need to remove pulseaudio. > > Just create a file ~/.asoundrc with > the contents below, and pulseaudio will > no longer be the default. No need to reboot > or logout. Just restart any application (e.g., xmms). > > By the way, the default is set in /etc/alsa/pulse- default.conf, > and this is why pulseaudio is a global default. > > > pcm.!default { > type hw > card 0 > } > > ctl.!default { > type hw > card 0 > } > > > By the way, I like pulseaudio very much, but I have two sound cards. > With pulse, I can control my cards on the fly without having to change > my .asoundrc (how I used to do before). > > - > Paulo Roma Cavalcanti > LCG - UFRJ > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > Frank, I've been playing around and found something interesting. After I logon to Gnome, I try aplay -l I get aplay: device_list:205: no soundcards found... Now if I switch to a virtual console (Alt-Ctl-F2) and login. If I try, aplay -l I get **** List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices **** card 0: Live [SBLive! Value [CT4832]], device 0: emu10k1 [ADC Capture/Standard PCM Playback] Subdevices: 32/32 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 Subdevice #1: subdevice #1 Subdevice #2: subdevice #2 Subdevice #3: subdevice #3 Subdevice #4: subdevice #4 Subdevice #5: subdevice #5 Subdevice #6: subdevice #6 Subdevice #7: subdevice #7 Subdevice #8: subdevice #8 Subdevice #9: subdevice #9 Subdevice #10: subdevice #10 Subdevice #11: subdevice #11 Subdevice #12: subdevice #12 Subdevice #13: subdevice #13 Subdevice #14: subdevice #14 Subdevice #15: subdevice #15 Subdevice #16: subdevice #16 Subdevice #17: subdevice #17 Subdevice #18: subdevice #18 Subdevice #19: subdevice #19 Subdevice #20: subdevice #20 Subdevice #21: subdevice #21 Subdevice #22: subdevice #22 Subdevice #23: subdevice #23 Subdevice #24: subdevice #24 Subdevice #25: subdevice #25 Subdevice #26: subdevice #26 Subdevice #27: subdevice #27 Subdevice #28: subdevice #28 Subdevice #29: subdevice #29 Subdevice #30: subdevice #30 Subdevice #31: subdevice #31 card 0: Live [SBLive! Value [CT4832]], device 2: emu10k1 efx [Multichannel Capture/PT Playback] Subdevices: 8/8 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 Subdevice #1: subdevice #1 Subdevice #2: subdevice #2 Subdevice #3: subdevice #3 Subdevice #4: subdevice #4 Subdevice #5: subdevice #5 Subdevice #6: subdevice #6 Subdevice #7: subdevice #7 card 0: Live [SBLive! Value [CT4832]], device 3: emu10k1 [Multichannel Playback] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 If I try, aplay -Dplughw:0,0 /usr/share/sounds/shutdown.wav I hear it play. Anybody have any idea why it doesn't work under Gnome? Frank