What init system are you running?Īnd thanks. But trying to run openrc is a learning endeavor for me. I think that I wouldn't be seeing these issues with a default Manjaro install. In case I didn't mention it above, for this install I opted out of systemd for openrc using the Manjaro Architect installer, and these issues are likely a result of that. You can just add snd-seq to nf, but this really ought to be automatic on your distro. You can often refer to them by name instead of index, like hw:Intel instead of hw:0. Options snd-hda-intel model=auto,auto index=0,1 id=Intel,NVidiaĪlso if you look at the first column in /proc/asound/cards you get a name for each card. What file to edit and where it's placed might vary, but on my system it's in /etc/modprobe.d/nf which contains the following: IMO it's best to lock this down, which can be done by configuring modprobe. I haven't had enough time to tinker with it yet, though.Īlso, hopefully reaper support for alsa midi is in the not too distant future. For now I'm using pale moon browser, but there is something called apulse which is supposed to emulate pulse audio for alsa. The last one so far is that Firefox has dropped support for alsa (lame!). Manually loading snd-seq is needed for MIDI with Jack, which isn't automatically loaded at boot. I suppose that should be added to a script, too. Saving and loading defaults for alsamixer (because alsamixer doesn't do it automatically):Īlsactl -file ~/.config/asound.state storeĪlsactl -file ~/.config/asound.state restore Had to create ~/.asoundrc and add a couple of lines (the card number can change at boot.something to keep in mind):īut since device order can change at boot (usb can be 0 or 1 and onboard can be 0 or 1), I may need a script to find out which card is which at boot. Setting my usb audio device as the system default. Anyone here running without pulse audio? I'm testing the waters on it at the moment in Manjaro.
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