1457 lines
		
	
	
		
			67 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			1457 lines
		
	
	
		
			67 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| Introduction
 | |
| ------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| This file is a collection of all the old Readme files distributed with
 | |
| OSS/Lite by Hannu Savolainen. Since the new Linux sound driver is founded
 | |
| on it I think these information may still be interesting for users that
 | |
| have to configure their sound system.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Be warned: Alan Cox is the current maintainer of the Linux sound driver so if
 | |
| you have problems with it, please contact him or the current device-specific
 | |
| driver maintainer (e.g. for aedsp16 specific problems contact me). If you have
 | |
| patches, contributions or suggestions send them to Alan: I'm sure they are
 | |
| welcome.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In this document you will find a lot of references about OSS/Lite or ossfree:
 | |
| they are gone forever. Keeping this in mind and with a grain of salt this
 | |
| document can be still interesting and very helpful.
 | |
| 
 | |
| [ File edited 17.01.1999 - Riccardo Facchetti ]
 | |
| [ Edited miroSOUND section 19.04.2001 - Robert Siemer ]
 | |
| 
 | |
| OSS/Free version 3.8 release notes
 | |
| ----------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Please read the SOUND-HOWTO (available from sunsite.unc.edu and other Linux FTP 
 | |
| sites). It gives instructions about using sound with Linux. It's bit out of
 | |
| date but still very useful. Information about bug fixes and such things
 | |
| is available from the web page (see above).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Please check http://www.opensound.com/pguide for more info about programming
 | |
| with OSS API.
 | |
| 
 | |
|    ====================================================
 | |
| -  THIS VERSION ____REQUIRES____ Linux 2.1.57 OR LATER.
 | |
|    ====================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Packages "snd-util-3.8.tar.gz" and "snd-data-0.1.tar.Z"
 | |
| contain useful utilities to be used with this driver.
 | |
| See http://www.opensound.com/ossfree/getting.html for
 | |
| download instructions.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you are looking for the installation instructions, please
 | |
| look forward into this document.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Supported sound cards
 | |
| ---------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| See below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Contributors
 | |
| ------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| This driver contains code by several contributors. In addition several other
 | |
| persons have given useful suggestions. The following is a list of major
 | |
| contributors. (I could have forgotten some names.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	Craig Metz	1/2 of the PAS16 Mixer and PCM support
 | |
| 	Rob Hooft	Volume computation algorithm for the FM synth.
 | |
| 	Mika Liljeberg	uLaw encoding and decoding routines
 | |
| 	Jeff Tranter	Linux SOUND HOWTO document
 | |
| 	Greg Lee	Volume computation algorithm for the GUS and
 | |
| 			lots of valuable suggestions.
 | |
| 	Andy Warner	ISC port
 | |
| 	Jim Lowe,
 | |
| 	Amancio Hasty Jr	FreeBSD/NetBSD port
 | |
| 	Anders Baekgaard 	Bug hunting and valuable suggestions.
 | |
| 	Joerg Schubert	SB16 DSP support (initial version).
 | |
| 	Andrew Robinson Improvements to the GUS driver
 | |
| 	Megens SA	MIDI recording for SB and SB Pro (initial version).
 | |
| 	Mikael Nordqvist  Linear volume support for GUS and
 | |
| 			  nonblocking /dev/sequencer.
 | |
| 	Ian Hartas		SVR4.2 port
 | |
| 	Markus Aroharju	and
 | |
| 	Risto Kankkunen		Major contributions to the mixer support
 | |
| 				of GUS v3.7.
 | |
| 	Hunyue Yau	Mixer support for SG NX Pro.
 | |
| 	Marc Hoffman	PSS support (initial version).
 | |
| 	Rainer Vranken	Initialization for Jazz16 (initial version).
 | |
| 	Peter Trattler	Initial version of loadable module support for Linux.
 | |
| 	JRA Gibson	16 bit mode for Jazz16 (initial version)
 | |
| 	Davor Jadrijevic MAD16 support (initial version)
 | |
| 	Gregor Hoffleit	Mozart support (initial version)
 | |
| 	Riccardo Facchetti Audio Excel DSP 16 (aedsp16) support
 | |
| 	James Hightower Spotting a tiny but important bug in CS423x support.
 | |
| 	Denis Sablic	OPTi 82C924 specific enhancements (non PnP mode)
 | |
| 	Tim MacKenzie	Full duplex support for OPTi 82C930.
 | |
| 	
 | |
| 	Please look at lowlevel/README for more contributors.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are probably many other names missing. If you have sent me some
 | |
| patches and your name is not in the above list, please inform me.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sending your contributions or patches
 | |
| -------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| First of all it's highly recommended to contact me before sending anything
 | |
| or before even starting to do any work. Tell me what you suggest to be
 | |
| changed or what you have planned to do. Also ensure you are using the
 | |
| very latest (development) version of OSS/Free since the change may already be
 | |
| implemented there. In general it's a major waste of time to try to improve a
 | |
| several months old version. Information about the latest version can be found
 | |
| from http://www.opensound.com/ossfree. In general there is no point in
 | |
| sending me patches relative to production kernels.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sponsors etc.
 | |
| -------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The following companies have greatly helped development of this driver 
 | |
| in form of a free copy of their product:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Novell, Inc.		UnixWare personal edition + SDK
 | |
| The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. 	A SCO OpenServer + SDK
 | |
| Ensoniq Corp,		a SoundScape card and extensive amount of assistance
 | |
| MediaTrix Peripherals Inc, a AudioTrix Pro card + SDK
 | |
| Acer, Inc.		a pair of AcerMagic S23 cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In addition the following companies have provided me sufficient amount
 | |
| of technical information at least some of their products (free or $$$):
 | |
| 
 | |
| Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd.
 | |
| Media Vision Inc.
 | |
| Analog Devices Inc.
 | |
| Logitech Inc.
 | |
| Aztech Labs Inc.
 | |
| Crystal Semiconductor Corporation,
 | |
| Integrated Circuit Systems Inc.
 | |
| OAK Technology
 | |
| OPTi
 | |
| Turtle Beach
 | |
| miro
 | |
| Ad Lib Inc. ($$)
 | |
| Music Quest Inc. ($$)
 | |
| Creative Labs ($$$)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have some problems
 | |
| =========================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Read the sound HOWTO (sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/docs/...?).
 | |
| Also look at the home page (http://www.opensound.com/ossfree). It may
 | |
| contain info about some recent bug fixes.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's likely that you have some problems when trying to use the sound driver
 | |
| first time. Sound cards don't have standard configuration so there are no
 | |
| good default configuration to use. Please try to use same I/O, DMA and IRQ
 | |
| values for the sound card than with DOS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you get an error message when trying to use the driver, please look
 | |
| at /var/adm/messages for more verbose error message.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The following errors are likely with /dev/dsp and /dev/audio.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	- "No such device or address".
 | |
| 	This error indicates that there are no suitable hardware for the
 | |
| 	device file or the sound driver has been compiled without support for
 | |
| 	this particular device. For example /dev/audio and /dev/dsp will not
 | |
| 	work if "digitized voice support" was not enabled during "make config".
 | |
| 	
 | |
| 	- "Device or resource busy". Probably the IRQ (or DMA) channel 
 | |
| 	required by the sound card is in use by some other device/driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	- "I/O error". Almost certainly (99%) it's an IRQ or DMA conflict.
 | |
| 	Look at the kernel messages in /var/adm/notice for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	- "Invalid argument". The application is calling ioctl()
 | |
| 	with impossible parameters. Check that the application is
 | |
| 	for sound driver version 2.X or later.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Linux installation
 | |
| ==================
 | |
| 
 | |
| IMPORTANT!	Read this if you are installing a separately
 | |
| 		distributed version of this driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		Check that your kernel version works with this
 | |
| 		release of the driver (see Readme). Also verify
 | |
| 		that your current kernel version doesn't have more
 | |
| 		recent sound driver version than this one. IT'S HIGHLY
 | |
| 		RECOMMENDED THAT YOU USE THE SOUND DRIVER VERSION THAT
 | |
| 		IS DISTRIBUTED WITH KERNEL SOURCES.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - When installing separately distributed sound driver you should first
 | |
|   read the above notice. Then try to find proper directory where and how
 | |
|   to install the driver sources. You should not try to install a separately
 | |
|   distributed driver version if you are not able to find the proper way
 | |
|   yourself (in this case use the version that is distributed with kernel
 | |
|   sources). Remove old version of linux/drivers/sound directory before
 | |
|   installing new files.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - To build the device files you need to run the enclosed shell script 
 | |
|   (see below). You need to do this only when installing sound driver
 | |
|   first time or when upgrading to much recent version than the earlier
 | |
|   one.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - Configure and compile Linux as normally (remember to include the
 | |
|   sound support during "make config"). Please refer to kernel documentation
 | |
|   for instructions about configuring and compiling kernel. File Readme.cards
 | |
|   contains card specific instructions for configuring this driver for
 | |
|   use with various sound cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Boot time configuration (using lilo and insmod) 
 | |
| -----------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| This information has been removed. Too many users didn't believe
 | |
| that it's really not necessary to use this method. Please look at
 | |
| Readme of sound driver version 3.0.1 if you still want to use this method.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Problems
 | |
| --------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Common error messages:
 | |
| 
 | |
| - /dev/???????: No such file or directory.
 | |
| Run the script at the end of this file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - /dev/???????: No such device.
 | |
| You are not running kernel which contains the sound driver. When using
 | |
| modularized sound driver this error means that the sound driver is not
 | |
| loaded.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - /dev/????: No such device or address.
 | |
| Sound driver didn't detect suitable card when initializing. Please look at
 | |
| Readme.cards for info about configuring the driver with your card. Also
 | |
| check for possible boot (insmod) time error messages in /var/adm/messages.
 | |
| 
 | |
| - Other messages or problems
 | |
| Please check http://www.opensound.com/ossfree for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring version 3.8 (for Linux) with some common sound cards
 | |
| ================================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| This document describes configuring sound cards with the freeware version of
 | |
| Open Sound Systems (OSS/Free). Information about the commercial version
 | |
| (OSS/Linux) and its configuration is available from 
 | |
| http://www.opensound.com/linux.html. Information presented here is
 | |
| not valid for OSS/Linux. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you are unsure about how to configure OSS/Free
 | |
| you can download the free evaluation version of OSS/Linux from the above
 | |
| address. There is a chance that it can autodetect your sound card. In this case
 | |
| you can use the information included in soundon.log when configuring OSS/Free.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| IMPORTANT!	This document covers only cards that were "known" when
 | |
| 		this driver version was released. Please look at
 | |
| 		http://www.opensound.com/ossfree for info about
 | |
| 		cards introduced recently.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		When configuring the sound driver, you should carefully
 | |
| 		check each sound configuration option (particularly
 | |
| 		"Support for /dev/dsp and /dev/audio"). The default values
 | |
| 		offered by these programs are not necessarily valid.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| THE BIGGEST MISTAKES YOU CAN MAKE
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| 1. Assuming that the card is Sound Blaster compatible when it's not.
 | |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The number one mistake is to assume that your card is compatible with
 | |
| Sound Blaster. Only the cards made by Creative Technology or which have
 | |
| one or more chips labeled by Creative are SB compatible. In addition there
 | |
| are few sound chipsets which are SB compatible in Linux such as ESS1688 or
 | |
| Jazz16. Note that SB compatibility in DOS/Windows does _NOT_ mean anything
 | |
| in Linux. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| IF YOU REALLY ARE 150% SURE YOU HAVE A SOUND BLASTER YOU CAN SKIP THE REST OF
 | |
| THIS CHAPTER.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For most other "supposed to be SB compatible" cards you have to use other
 | |
| than SB drivers (see below).  It is possible to get most sound cards to work
 | |
| in SB mode but in general it's a complete waste of time. There are several
 | |
| problems which you will encounter by using SB mode with cards that are not
 | |
| truly SB compatible:
 | |
| 
 | |
| - The SB emulation is at most SB Pro (DSP version 3.x) which means that 
 | |
| you get only 8 bit audio (there is always an another ("native") mode which
 | |
| gives the 16 bit capability). The 8 bit only operation is the reason why
 | |
| many users claim that sound quality in Linux is much worse than in DOS.
 | |
| In addition some applications require 16 bit mode and they produce just
 | |
| noise with a 8 bit only device.
 | |
| - The card may work only in some cases but refuse to work most of the
 | |
| time. The SB compatible mode always requires special initialization which is 
 | |
| done by the DOS/Windows drivers. This kind of cards work in Linux after
 | |
| you have warm booted it after DOS but they don't work after cold boot
 | |
| (power on or reset).
 | |
| - You get the famous "DMA timed out" messages. Usually all SB clones have
 | |
| software selectable IRQ and DMA settings. If the (power on default) values
 | |
| currently used by the card don't match configuration of the driver you will
 | |
| get the above error message whenever you try to record or play. There are
 | |
| few other reasons to the DMA timeout message but using the SB mode seems
 | |
| to be the most common cause.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 2. Trying to use a PnP (Plug & Play) card just like an ordinary sound card
 | |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Plug & Play is a protocol defined by Intel and Microsoft. It lets operating
 | |
| systems to easily identify and reconfigure I/O ports, IRQs and DMAs of ISA
 | |
| cards. The problem with PnP cards is that the standard Linux doesn't currently
 | |
| (versions 2.1.x and earlier) don't support PnP. This means that you will have
 | |
| to use some special tricks (see later) to get a PnP card alive. Many PnP cards
 | |
| work after they have been initialized but this is not always the case.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are sometimes both PnP and non-PnP versions of the same sound card.
 | |
| The non-PnP version is the original model which usually has been discontinued
 | |
| more than an year ago. The PnP version has the same name but with "PnP"
 | |
| appended to it (sometimes not). This causes major confusion since the non-PnP
 | |
| model works with Linux but the PnP one doesn't.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You should carefully check if "Plug & Play" or "PnP" is mentioned in the name
 | |
| of the card or in the documentation or package that came with the card. 
 | |
| Everything described in the rest of this document is not necessarily valid for
 | |
| PnP models of sound cards even you have managed to wake up the card properly.
 | |
| Many PnP cards are simply too different from their non-PnP ancestors which are
 | |
| covered by this document.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Cards that are not (fully) supported by this driver
 | |
| ===================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| See http://www.opensound.com/ossfree for information about sound cards 
 | |
| to be supported in future. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| How to use sound without recompiling kernel and/or sound driver
 | |
| ===============================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| There is a commercial sound driver which comes in precompiled form and doesn't
 | |
| require recompiling of the kernel. See http://www.4Front-tech.com/oss.html for
 | |
| more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring PnP cards
 | |
| =====================
 | |
| 
 | |
| New versions of most sound cards use the so-called ISA PnP protocol for
 | |
| soft configuring their I/O, IRQ, DMA and shared memory resources.
 | |
| Currently at least cards made by Creative Technology (SB32 and SB32AWE
 | |
| PnP), Gravis (GUS PnP and GUS PnP Pro), Ensoniq (Soundscape PnP) and
 | |
| Aztech (some Sound Galaxy models) use PnP technology. The CS4232/4236 audio
 | |
| chip by Crystal Semiconductor (Intel Atlantis, HP Pavilion and many other
 | |
| motherboards) is also based on PnP technology but there is a "native" driver
 | |
| available for it (see information about CS4232 later in this document).
 | |
| 
 | |
| PnP sound cards (as well as most other PnP ISA cards) are not supported
 | |
| by this version of the driver . Proper
 | |
| support for them should be released during 97 once the kernel level
 | |
| PnP support is available.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There is a method to get most of the PnP cards to work. The basic method
 | |
| is the following:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 1) Boot DOS so the card's DOS drivers have a chance to initialize it.
 | |
| 2) _Cold_ boot to Linux by using "loadlin.exe".  Hitting ctrl-alt-del
 | |
| works with older machines but causes a hard reset of all cards on recent
 | |
| (Pentium) machines.
 | |
| 3) If you have the sound driver in Linux configured properly, the card should
 | |
| work now. "Proper" means that I/O, IRQ and DMA settings are the same as in
 | |
| DOS. The hard part is to find which settings were used. See the documentation of
 | |
| your card for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Windows 95 could work as well as DOS but running loadlin may be difficult.
 | |
| Probably you should "shut down" your machine to MS-DOS mode before running it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some machines have a BIOS utility for setting PnP resources. This is a good
 | |
| way to configure some cards. In this case you don't need to boot DOS/Win95
 | |
| before starting Linux.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Another way to initialize PnP cards without DOS/Win95 is a Linux based
 | |
| PnP isolation tool. When writing this there is a pre alpha test version
 | |
| of such a tool available from ftp://ftp.demon.co.uk/pub/unix/linux/utils. The
 | |
| file is called isapnptools-*. Please note that this tool is just a temporary
 | |
| solution which may be incompatible with future kernel versions having proper
 | |
| support for PnP cards. There are bugs in setting DMA channels in earlier
 | |
| versions of isapnptools so at least version 1.6 is required with sound cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Yet another way to use PnP cards is to use (commercial) OSS/Linux drivers.  See
 | |
| http://www.opensound.com/linux.html for more info. This is probably the way you
 | |
| should do it if you don't want to spend time recompiling the kernel and 
 | |
| required tools.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Read this before trying to configure the driver
 | |
| ===============================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are currently many cards that work with this driver. Some of the cards
 | |
| have native support while others work since they emulate some other
 | |
| card (usually SB, MSS/WSS and/or MPU401). The following cards have native
 | |
| support in the driver. Detailed instructions for configuring these cards
 | |
| will be given later in this document.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Pro Audio Spectrum 16 (PAS16) and compatibles:
 | |
| 	Pro Audio Spectrum 16
 | |
| 	Pro Audio Studio 16
 | |
| 	Logitech Sound Man 16
 | |
| 	NOTE! The original Pro Audio Spectrum as well as the PAS+ are not
 | |
| 	      and will not be supported by the driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Media Vision Jazz16 based cards
 | |
| 	Pro Sonic 16
 | |
| 	Logitech SoundMan Wave
 | |
| 	(Other Jazz based cards should work but I don't have any reports
 | |
| 	about them).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound Blasters
 | |
| 	SB 1.0 to 2.0
 | |
| 	SB Pro
 | |
| 	SB 16
 | |
| 	SB32/64/AWE
 | |
| 		Configure SB32/64/AWE just like SB16. See lowlevel/README.awe
 | |
| 		for information about using the wave table synth.
 | |
| 	        NOTE! AWE63/Gold and 16/32/AWE "PnP" cards need to be activated
 | |
| 		      using isapnptools before they work with OSS/Free.
 | |
| 	SB16 compatible cards by other manufacturers than Creative.
 | |
| 		You have been fooled since there are _no_ SB16 compatible
 | |
| 		cards on the market (as of May 1997). It's likely that your card
 | |
| 		is compatible just with SB Pro but there is also a non-SB-
 | |
| 		compatible 16 bit mode. Usually it's MSS/WSS but it could also
 | |
| 		be a proprietary one like MV Jazz16 or ESS ES688. OPTi
 | |
| 		MAD16 chips are very common in so called "SB 16 bit cards"
 | |
| 		(try with the MAD16 driver).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	======================================================================
 | |
| 	"Supposed to be SB compatible" cards.
 | |
| 		Forget the SB compatibility and check for other alternatives
 | |
| 		first. The only cards that work with the SB driver in
 | |
| 		Linux have been made by Creative Technology (there is at least
 | |
| 		one chip on the card with "CREATIVE" printed on it). The
 | |
| 		only other SB compatible chips are ESS and Jazz16 chips
 | |
| 		(maybe ALSxxx chips too but they probably don't work).
 | |
| 		Most other "16 bit SB compatible" cards such as "OPTi/MAD16" or
 | |
| 		"Crystal" are _NOT_ SB compatible in Linux.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		Practically all sound cards have some kind of SB emulation mode
 | |
| 		in addition to their native (16 bit) mode. In most cases this
 | |
| 		(8 bit only) SB compatible mode doesn't work with Linux. If
 | |
| 		you get it working it may cause problems with games and
 | |
| 		applications which require 16 bit audio. Some 16 bit only
 | |
| 		applications don't check if the card actually supports 16 bits.
 | |
| 		They just dump 16 bit data to a 8 bit card which produces just
 | |
| 		noise.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		In most cases the 16 bit native mode is supported by Linux.
 | |
| 		Use the SB mode with "clones" only if you don't find anything
 | |
| 		better from the rest of this doc.
 | |
| 	======================================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Gravis Ultrasound (GUS)
 | |
| 	GUS
 | |
| 	GUS + the 16 bit option
 | |
| 	GUS MAX
 | |
| 	GUS ACE (No MIDI port and audio recording)
 | |
| 	GUS PnP (with RAM)
 | |
| 
 | |
| MPU-401	and compatibles
 | |
| 	The driver works both with the full (intelligent mode) MPU-401
 | |
| 	cards (such as MPU IPC-T and MQX-32M) and with the UART only
 | |
| 	dumb MIDI ports. MPU-401 is currently the most common MIDI
 | |
| 	interface. Most sound cards are compatible with it. However,
 | |
| 	don't enable MPU401 mode blindly. Many cards with native support
 | |
| 	in the driver have their own MPU401 driver. Enabling the standard one
 | |
| 	will cause a conflict with these cards. So check if your card is
 | |
| 	in the list of supported cards before enabling MPU401.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Windows Sound System (MSS/WSS)
 | |
| 	Even when Microsoft has discontinued their own Sound System card 
 | |
| 	they managed to make it a standard. MSS compatible cards are based on 
 | |
| 	a codec chip which is easily available from at least two manufacturers
 | |
| 	(AD1848 by Analog Devices and CS4231/CS4248 by Crystal Semiconductor).
 | |
| 	Currently most sound cards are based on one of the MSS compatible codec
 | |
| 	chips. The CS4231 is used in the high quality cards such as GUS MAX,
 | |
| 	MediaTrix AudioTrix Pro and TB Tropez (GUS MAX is not MSS compatible). 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	Having a AD1848, CS4248 or CS4231 codec chip on the card is a good
 | |
| 	sign. Even if the card is not MSS compatible, it could be easy to write
 | |
| 	support for it. Note also that most MSS compatible cards
 | |
| 	require special boot time initialization which may not be present
 | |
| 	in the driver. Also, some MSS compatible cards have native support.
 | |
| 	Enabling the MSS support with these cards is likely to
 | |
| 	cause a conflict. So check if your card is listed in this file before
 | |
| 	enabling the MSS support.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Yamaha FM synthesizers (OPL2, OPL3 (not OPL3-SA) and OPL4)
 | |
| 	Most sound cards have a FM synthesizer chip. The OPL2 is a 2
 | |
| 	operator chip used in the original AdLib card. Currently it's used
 | |
| 	only in the cheapest (8 bit mono) cards. The OPL3 is a 4 operator 
 | |
| 	FM chip which provides better sound quality and/or more available 
 | |
| 	voices than the OPL2. The OPL4 is a new chip that has an OPL3 and
 | |
| 	a wave table synthesizer packed onto the same chip. The driver supports
 | |
| 	just the OPL3 mode directly. Most cards with an OPL4 (like
 | |
| 	SM Wave and AudioTrix Pro) support the OPL4 mode using MPU401
 | |
| 	emulation. Writing a native OPL4 support is difficult
 | |
| 	since Yamaha doesn't give information about their sample ROM chip.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	Enable the generic OPL2/OPL3 FM synthesizer support if your
 | |
| 	card has a FM chip made by Yamaha. Don't enable it if your card
 | |
| 	has a software (TRS) based FM emulator.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	----------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| 	NOTE! OPL3-SA is different chip than the ordinary OPL3. In addition
 | |
| 	to the FM synth this chip has also digital audio (WSS) and
 | |
| 	MIDI (MPU401) capabilities. Support for OPL3-SA is described below.
 | |
| 	----------------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Yamaha OPL3-SA1
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	Yamaha OPL3-SA1 (YMF701) is an audio controller chip used on some
 | |
| 	(Intel) motherboards and on cheap sound cards. It should not be
 | |
| 	confused with the original OPL3 chip (YMF278) which is entirely
 | |
|         different chip. OPL3-SA1 has support for MSS, MPU401 and SB Pro
 | |
| 	(not used in OSS/Free) in addition to the OPL3 FM synth.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	There are also chips called OPL3-SA2, OPL3-SA3, ..., OPL3SA-N. They
 | |
| 	are PnP chips and will not work with the OPL3-SA1 driver. You should 
 | |
| 	use the standard MSS, MPU401 and OPL3 options with these chips and to
 | |
| 	activate the card using isapnptools.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 4Front Technologies SoftOSS
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	SoftOSS is a software based wave table emulation which works with
 | |
| 	any 16 bit stereo sound card. Due to its nature a fast CPU is
 | |
| 	required (P133 is minimum). Although SoftOSS does _not_ use MMX
 | |
| 	instructions it has proven out that recent processors (which appear
 | |
| 	to have MMX) perform significantly better with SoftOSS than earlier
 | |
| 	ones. For example a P166MMX beats a PPro200. SoftOSS should not be used
 | |
| 	on 486 or 386 machines.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	The amount of CPU load caused by SoftOSS can be controlled by
 | |
| 	selecting the CONFIG_SOFTOSS_RATE and CONFIG_SOFTOSS_VOICES
 | |
| 	parameters properly (they will be prompted by make config). It's
 | |
| 	recommended to set CONFIG_SOFTOSS_VOICES to 32. If you have a
 | |
| 	P166MMX or faster (PPro200 is not faster) you can set
 | |
| 	CONFIG_SOFTOSS_RATE to 44100 (kHz). However with slower systems it
 | |
| 	recommended to use sampling rates around 22050 or even 16000 kHz.
 | |
| 	Selecting too high values for these parameters may hang your
 | |
| 	system when playing MIDI files with hight degree of polyphony
 | |
| 	(number of concurrently playing notes). It's also possible to
 | |
| 	decrease CONFIG_SOFTOSS_VOICES. This makes it possible to use
 | |
| 	higher sampling rates. However using fewer voices decreases
 | |
| 	playback quality more than decreasing the sampling rate.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	SoftOSS keeps the samples loaded on the system's RAM so much RAM is
 | |
| 	required. SoftOSS should never be used on machines with less than 16 MB
 | |
| 	of RAM since this is potentially dangerous (you may accidentally run out
 | |
| 	of memory which probably crashes the machine). 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	SoftOSS implements the wave table API originally designed for GUS. For
 | |
| 	this reason all applications designed for GUS should work (at least
 | |
| 	after minor modifications). For example gmod/xgmod and playmidi -g are
 | |
| 	known to work.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	To work SoftOSS will require GUS compatible
 | |
| 	patch files to be installed on the system (in /dos/ultrasnd/midi). You
 | |
| 	can use the public domain MIDIA patchset available from several ftp
 | |
| 	sites.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         *********************************************************************
 | |
| 	IMPORTANT NOTICE! The original patch set distributed with the Gravis 
 | |
| 	Ultrasound card is not in public domain (even though it's available from
 | |
| 	some FTP sites). You should contact Voice Crystal (www.voicecrystal.com)
 | |
| 	if you like to use these patches with SoftOSS included in OSS/Free.
 | |
|         *********************************************************************
 | |
| 
 | |
| PSS based cards (AD1848 + ADSP-2115 + Echo ESC614 ASIC)
 | |
| 	Analog Devices and Echo Speech have together defined a sound card
 | |
| 	architecture based on the above chips. The DSP chip is used
 | |
| 	for emulation of SB Pro, FM and General MIDI/MT32.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	There are several cards based on this architecture. The most known
 | |
| 	ones are Orchid SW32 and Cardinal DSP16. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	The driver supports downloading DSP algorithms to these cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	NOTE! You will have to use the "old" config script when configuring
 | |
| 	PSS cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| MediaTrix AudioTrix Pro
 | |
| 	The ATP card is built around a CS4231 codec and an OPL4 synthesizer
 | |
| 	chips. The OPL4 mode is supported by a microcontroller running a
 | |
| 	General MIDI emulator. There is also a SB 1.5 compatible playback mode.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Ensoniq SoundScape and compatibles
 | |
| 	Ensoniq has designed a sound card architecture based on the
 | |
| 	OTTO synthesizer chip used in their professional MIDI synthesizers.
 | |
| 	Several companies (including Ensoniq, Reveal and Spea) are selling
 | |
| 	cards based on this architecture.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	NOTE! The SoundScape PnP is not supported by OSS/Free. Ensoniq VIVO and
 | |
| 	VIVO90 cards are not compatible with Soundscapes so the Soundscape
 | |
|         driver will not work with them. You may want to use OSS/Linux with these
 | |
|         cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| OPTi MAD16 and Mozart based cards
 | |
| 	The Mozart (OAK OTI-601), MAD16 (OPTi 82C928), MAD16 Pro (OPTi 82C929),
 | |
| 	OPTi 82C924/82C925 (in _non_ PnP mode) and OPTi 82C930 interface
 | |
| 	chips are used in many different sound cards, including some
 | |
| 	cards by Reveal miro and Turtle Beach (Tropez). The purpose of these
 | |
| 	chips is to connect other audio components to the PC bus. The
 | |
| 	interface chip performs address decoding for the other chips.
 | |
| 	NOTE! Tropez Plus is not MAD16 but CS4232 based.
 | |
| 	NOTE! MAD16 PnP cards (82C924, 82C925, 82C931) are not MAD16 compatible
 | |
| 	in the PnP mode. You will have to use them in MSS mode after having
 | |
| 	initialized them using isapnptools or DOS. 82C931 probably requires
 | |
| 	initialization using DOS/Windows (running isapnptools is not enough).
 | |
| 	It's possible to use 82C931 with OSS/Free by jumpering it to non-PnP
 | |
| 	mode (provided that the card has a jumper for this). In non-PnP mode
 | |
| 	82C931 is compatible with 82C930 and should work with the MAD16 driver
 | |
| 	(without need to use isapnptools or DOS to initialize it). All OPTi
 | |
| 	chips are supported by OSS/Linux (both in PnP and non-PnP modes).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Audio Excel DSP16 
 | |
| 	Support for this card was written by Riccardo Faccetti
 | |
| 	(riccardo@cdc8g5.cdc.polimi.it). The AEDSP16 driver included in
 | |
| 	the lowlevel/ directory. To use it you should enable the
 | |
| 	"Additional low level drivers" option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Crystal CS4232 and CS4236 based cards such as AcerMagic S23, TB Tropez _Plus_ and 
 | |
| 	many PC motherboards (Compaq, HP, Intel, ...)
 | |
| 	CS4232 is a PnP multimedia chip which contains a CS3231A codec,
 | |
| 	SB and MPU401 emulations. There is support for OPL3 too.
 | |
| 	Unfortunately the MPU401 mode doesn't work (I don't know how to
 | |
| 	initialize it). CS4236 is an enhanced (compatible) version of CS4232.
 | |
| 	NOTE! Don't ever try to use isapnptools with CS4232 since this will just
 | |
| 	freeze your machine (due to chip bugs). If you have problems in getting
 | |
| 	CS4232 working you could try initializing it with DOS (CS4232C.EXE) and
 | |
| 	then booting Linux using loadlin. CS4232C.EXE loads a secret firmware
 | |
| 	patch which is not documented by Crystal.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Turtle Beach Maui and Tropez "classic"
 | |
| 	This driver version supports sample, patch and program loading commands
 | |
| 	described in the Maui/Tropez User's manual. 
 | |
| 	There is now full initialization support too. The audio side of
 | |
| 	the Tropez is based on the MAD16 chip (see above).
 | |
| 	NOTE! Tropez Plus is different card than Tropez "classic" and will not
 | |
| 	work fully in Linux. You can get audio features working by configuring
 | |
| 	the card as a CS4232 based card (above).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Jumpers and software configuration
 | |
| ==================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some of the earliest sound cards were jumper configurable. You have to
 | |
| configure the driver use I/O, IRQ and DMA settings
 | |
| that match the jumpers. Just few 8 bit cards are fully jumper 
 | |
| configurable (SB 1.x/2.x, SB Pro and clones).
 | |
| Some cards made by Aztech have an EEPROM which contains the 
 | |
| config info. These cards behave much like hardware jumpered cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Most cards have jumper for the base I/O address but other parameters
 | |
| are software configurable. Sometimes there are few other jumpers too.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Latest cards are fully software configurable or they are PnP ISA
 | |
| compatible. There are no jumpers on the board.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The driver handles software configurable cards automatically. Just configure
 | |
| the driver to use I/O, IRQ and DMA settings which are known to work.
 | |
| You could usually use the same values than with DOS and/or Windows.
 | |
| Using different settings is possible but not recommended since it may cause
 | |
| some trouble (for example when warm booting from an OS to another or
 | |
| when installing new hardware to the machine).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound driver sets the soft configurable parameters of the card automatically
 | |
| during boot. Usually you don't need to run any extra initialization
 | |
| programs when booting Linux but there are some exceptions. See the
 | |
| card-specific instructions below for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The drawback of software configuration is that the driver needs to know
 | |
| how the card must be initialized. It cannot initialize unknown cards
 | |
| even if they are otherwise compatible with some other cards (like SB,
 | |
| MPU401 or Windows Sound System).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| What if your card was not listed above?
 | |
| =======================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| The first thing to do is to look at the major IC chips on the card.
 | |
| Many of the latest sound cards are based on some standard chips. If you
 | |
| are lucky, all of them could be supported by the driver. The most common ones
 | |
| are the OPTi MAD16, Mozart, SoundScape (Ensoniq) and the PSS architectures
 | |
| listed above. Also look at the end of this file for list of unsupported
 | |
| cards and the ones which could be supported later.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The last resort is to send _exact_ name and model information of the card
 | |
| to me together with a list of the major IC chips (manufactured, model) to 
 | |
| me. I could then try to check if your card looks like something familiar.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are many more cards in the world than listed above. The first thing to
 | |
| do with these cards is to check if they emulate some other card or interface
 | |
| such as SB, MSS and/or MPU401. In this case there is a chance to get the
 | |
| card to work by booting DOS before starting Linux (boot DOS, hit ctrl-alt-del
 | |
| and boot Linux without hard resetting the machine). In this method the
 | |
| DOS based driver initializes the hardware to use known I/O, IRQ and DMA
 | |
| settings. If sound driver is configured to use the same settings, everything
 | |
| should work OK.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring sound driver (with Linux)
 | |
| =====================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| The sound driver is currently distributed as part of the Linux kernel. The 
 | |
| files are in /usr/src/linux/drivers/sound/. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| ****************************************************************************
 | |
| *	ALWAYS USE THE SOUND DRIVER VERSION WHICH IS DISTRIBUTED WITH	   *
 | |
| *	THE KERNEL SOURCE PACKAGE YOU ARE USING. SOME ALPHA AND BETA TEST  *
 | |
| *	VERSIONS CAN BE INSTALLED FROM A SEPARATELY DISTRIBUTED PACKAGE	   *
 | |
| *	BUT CHECK THAT THE PACKAGE IS NOT MUCH OLDER (OR NEWER) THAN THE   *
 | |
| *	KERNEL YOU ARE USING. IT'S POSSIBLE THAT THE KERNEL/DRIVER 	   *
 | |
| *	INTERFACE CHANGES BETWEEN KERNEL RELEASES WHICH MAY CAUSE SOME	   *
 | |
| *	INCOMPATIBILITY PROBLEMS.					   *
 | |
| *									   *
 | |
| *	IN CASE YOU INSTALL A SEPARATELY DISTRIBUTED SOUND DRIVER VERSION, *
 | |
| *	BE SURE TO REMOVE OR RENAME THE OLD SOUND DRIVER DIRECTORY BEFORE  *
 | |
| *	INSTALLING THE NEW ONE. LEAVING OLD FILES TO THE SOUND DRIVER	   *
 | |
| *	DIRECTORY _WILL_ CAUSE PROBLEMS WHEN THE DRIVER IS USED OR	   *
 | |
| *	COMPILED.							   *
 | |
| ****************************************************************************
 | |
| 
 | |
| To configure the driver, run "make config" in the kernel source directory
 | |
| (/usr/src/linux). Answer "y" or "m" to the question about Sound card support
 | |
| (after the questions about mouse, CD-ROM, ftape, etc. support).  Questions
 | |
| about options for sound will then be asked.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After configuring the kernel and sound driver and compile the kernel 
 | |
| following instructions in the kernel README.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The sound driver configuration dialog
 | |
| -------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound configuration starts by making some yes/no questions. Be careful
 | |
| when answering to these questions since answering y to a question may
 | |
| prevent some later ones from being asked. For example don't answer y to
 | |
| the first question (PAS16) if you don't really have a PAS16. Don't enable
 | |
| more cards than you really need since they just consume memory. Also
 | |
| some drivers (like MPU401) may conflict with your SCSI controller and
 | |
| prevent kernel from booting. If you card was in the list of supported
 | |
| cards (above), please look at the card specific config instructions
 | |
| (later in this file) before starting to configure. Some cards must be
 | |
| configured in way which is not obvious.
 | |
| 
 | |
| So here is the beginning of the config dialog. Answer 'y' or 'n' to these
 | |
| questions. The default answer is shown so that (y/n) means 'y' by default and
 | |
| (n/y) means 'n'. To use the default value, just hit ENTER. But be careful
 | |
| since using the default _doesn't_ guarantee anything.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note also that all questions may not be asked. The configuration program
 | |
| may disable some questions depending on the earlier choices. It may also
 | |
| select some options automatically as well.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   "ProAudioSpectrum 16 support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y'_ONLY_ if you have a Pro Audio Spectrum _16_,
 | |
| 	  Pro Audio Studio 16 or Logitech SoundMan 16 (be sure that
 | |
| 	  you read the above list correctly). Don't answer 'y' if you
 | |
| 	  have some other card made by Media Vision or Logitech since they
 | |
| 	  are not PAS16 compatible.
 | |
| 	  NOTE! Since 3.5-beta10 you need to enable SB support (next question)
 | |
| 	  if you want to use the SB emulation of PAS16. It's also possible to
 | |
|    	  the emulation if you want to use a true SB card together with PAS16
 | |
| 	  (there is another question about this that is asked later).
 | |
|   "Sound Blaster support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if you have an original SB card made by Creative Labs
 | |
| 	  or a full 100% hardware compatible clone (like Thunderboard or
 | |
| 	  SM Games). If your card was in the list of supported cards (above),
 | |
| 	  please look at the card specific instructions later in this file
 | |
| 	  before answering this question. For an unknown card you may answer 
 | |
| 	  'y' if the card claims to be SB compatible.
 | |
| 	 Enable this option also with PAS16 (changed since v3.5-beta9).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	 Don't enable SB if you have a MAD16 or Mozart compatible card.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   "Generic OPL2/OPL3 FM synthesizer support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if your card has a FM chip made by Yamaha (OPL2/OPL3/OPL4).
 | |
| 	  Answering 'y' is usually a safe and recommended choice. However some
 | |
| 	  cards may have software (TSR) FM emulation. Enabling FM support
 | |
| 	  with these cards may cause trouble. However I don't currently know
 | |
| 	  such cards.
 | |
|   "Gravis Ultrasound support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if you have GUS or GUS MAX. Answer 'n' if you don't
 | |
| 	  have GUS since the GUS driver consumes much memory.
 | |
| 	  Currently I don't have experiences with the GUS ACE so I don't
 | |
| 	  know what to answer with it.
 | |
|   "MPU-401 support (NOT for SB16)",
 | |
| 	- Be careful with this question. The MPU401 interface is supported
 | |
| 	  by almost any sound card today. However some natively supported cards
 | |
| 	  have their own driver for MPU401. Enabling the MPU401 option with
 | |
| 	  these cards will cause a conflict. Also enabling MPU401 on a system
 | |
| 	  that doesn't really have a MPU401 could cause some trouble. If your
 | |
| 	  card was in the list of supported cards (above), please look at
 | |
| 	  the card specific instructions later in this file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	  In MOST cases this MPU401 driver should only be used with "true"
 | |
| 	  MIDI-only MPU401 professional cards. In most other cases there
 | |
| 	  is another way to get the MPU401 compatible interface of a
 | |
| 	  sound card to work.
 | |
| 	  Support for the MPU401 compatible MIDI port of SB16, ESS1688
 | |
| 	  and MV Jazz16 cards is included in the SB driver. Use it instead
 | |
| 	  of this separate MPU401 driver with these cards. As well 
 | |
| 	  Soundscape, PSS and Maui drivers include their own MPU401
 | |
| 	  options.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	  It's safe to answer 'y' if you have a true MPU401 MIDI interface
 | |
| 	  card. 
 | |
|   "6850 UART Midi support",
 | |
| 	- It's safe to answer 'n' to this question in all cases. The 6850
 | |
| 	  UART interface is so rarely used.
 | |
|   "PSS (ECHO-ADI2111) support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' only if you have Orchid SW32, Cardinal DSP16 or some
 | |
| 	  other card based on the PSS chipset (AD1848 codec + ADSP-2115
 | |
| 	  DSP chip + Echo ESC614 ASIC CHIP).
 | |
|   "16 bit sampling option of GUS (_NOT_ GUS MAX)",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if you have installed the 16 bit sampling daughtercard
 | |
| 	  to your GUS. Answer 'n' if you have GUS MAX. Enabling this option
 | |
| 	  disables GUS MAX support.
 | |
|   "GUS MAX support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' only if you have a GUS MAX.
 | |
|   "Microsoft Sound System support",
 | |
| 	- Again think carefully before answering 'y' to this question. It's
 | |
| 	  safe to answer 'y' in case you have the original Windows Sound 
 | |
| 	  System card made by Microsoft or Aztech SG 16 Pro (or NX16 Pro).
 | |
| 	  Also you may answer 'y' in case your card was not listed earlier
 | |
| 	  in this file. For cards having native support in the driver, consult
 | |
| 	  the card specific instructions later in this file. Some drivers
 | |
| 	  have their own MSS support and enabling this option will cause a
 | |
| 	  conflict. 
 | |
| 	  Note! The MSS driver permits configuring two DMA channels. This is a
 | |
| 	  "nonstandard" feature and works only with very few cards (if any).
 | |
| 	  In most cases the second DMA channel should be disabled or set to
 | |
| 	  the same channel than the first one. Trying to configure two separate
 | |
| 	  channels with cards that don't support this feature will prevent
 | |
| 	  audio (at least recording) from working.
 | |
|   "Ensoniq Soundscape support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if you have a sound card based on the Ensoniq SoundScape
 | |
| 	  chipset. Such cards are being manufactured at least by Ensoniq,
 | |
| 	  Spea and Reveal (note that Reveal makes other cards also).  The oldest
 | |
| 	  cards made by Spea don't work properly with Linux. 
 | |
| 	  Soundscape PnP as well as Ensoniq VIVO work only with the commercial
 | |
| 	  OSS/Linux version.
 | |
|   "MediaTrix AudioTrix Pro support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' if you have the AudioTrix Pro.
 | |
|   "Support for MAD16 and/or Mozart based cards",
 | |
| 	- Answer y if your card has a Mozart (OAK OTI-601) or MAD16
 | |
| 	  (OPTi 82C928, 82C929, 82C924/82C925 or 82C930) audio interface chip. 
 | |
| 	  These chips are
 | |
| 	  currently quite common so it's possible that many no-name cards
 | |
| 	  have one of them. In addition the MAD16 chip is used in some
 | |
| 	  cards made by known manufacturers such as Turtle Beach (Tropez),
 | |
| 	  Reveal (some models) and Diamond (some recent models).
 | |
| 	  Note OPTi 82C924 and 82C925 are MAD16 compatible only in non PnP
 | |
| 	  mode (jumper selectable on many cards).
 | |
|   "Support for TB Maui"
 | |
| 	- This enables TB Maui specific initialization. Works with TB Maui
 | |
| 	and TB Tropez (may not work with Tropez Plus).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Then the configuration program asks some y/n questions about the higher
 | |
| level services. It's recommended to answer 'y' to each of these questions.
 | |
| Answer 'n' only if you know you will not need the option.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   "MIDI interface support",
 | |
| 	- Answering 'n' disables /dev/midi## devices and access to any
 | |
| 	  MIDI ports using /dev/sequencer and /dev/music. This option
 | |
| 	  also affects any MPU401 and/or General MIDI compatible devices.
 | |
|   "FM synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support",
 | |
| 	- Answer 'y' here.
 | |
|   "/dev/sequencer support",
 | |
| 	- Answering 'n' disables /dev/sequencer and /dev/music.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Entering the I/O, IRQ and DMA config parameters
 | |
| -----------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| After the above questions the configuration program prompts for the
 | |
| card specific configuration information. Usually just a set of
 | |
| I/O address, IRQ and DMA numbers are asked. With some cards the program
 | |
| asks for some files to be used during initialization of the card. For example
 | |
| many cards have a DSP chip or microprocessor which must be initialized by
 | |
| downloading a program (microcode) file to the card.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Instructions for answering these questions are given in the next section.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Card specific information
 | |
| =========================
 | |
| 
 | |
| This section gives additional instructions about configuring some cards.
 | |
| Please refer manual of your card for valid I/O, IRQ and DMA numbers. Using
 | |
| the same settings with DOS/Windows and Linux is recommended. Using
 | |
| different values could cause some problems when switching between
 | |
| different operating systems.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound Blasters (the original ones by Creative)
 | |
| ---------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE! Check if you have a PnP Sound Blaster (cards sold after summer 1995
 | |
|       are almost certainly PnP ones). With PnP cards you should use isapnptools
 | |
|       to activate them (see above).
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's possible to configure these cards to use different I/O, IRQ and
 | |
| DMA settings. Since the possible/default settings have changed between various
 | |
| models, you have to consult manual of your card for the proper ones. It's
 | |
| a good idea to use the same values than with DOS/Windows. With SB and SB Pro
 | |
| it's the only choice. SB16 has software selectable IRQ and DMA channels but
 | |
| using different values with DOS and Linux is likely to cause troubles. The
 | |
| DOS driver is not able to reset the card properly after warm boot from Linux
 | |
| if Linux has used different IRQ or DMA values.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The original (steam) Sound Blaster (versions 1.x and 2.x) use always
 | |
| DMA1. There is no way to change it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The SB16 needs two DMA channels. A 8 bit one (1 or 3) is required for
 | |
| 8 bit operation and a 16 bit one (5, 6 or 7) for the 16 bit mode. In theory
 | |
| it's possible to use just one (8 bit) DMA channel by answering the 8 bit
 | |
| one when the configuration program asks for the 16 bit one. This may work
 | |
| in some systems but is likely to cause terrible noise on some other systems.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's possible to use two SB16/32/64 at the same time. To do this you should
 | |
| first configure OSS/Free for one card. Then edit local.h manually and define
 | |
| SB2_BASE, SB2_IRQ, SB2_DMA and SB2_DMA2 for the second one. You can't get
 | |
| the OPL3, MIDI and EMU8000 devices of the second card to work. If you are
 | |
| going to use two PnP Sound Blasters, ensure that they are of different model
 | |
| and have different PnP IDs. There is no way to get two cards with the same
 | |
| card ID and serial number to work. The easiest way to check this is trying 
 | |
| if isapnptools can see both cards or just one.
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE!	Don't enable the SM Games option (asked by the configuration program)
 | |
| 	if you are not 101% sure that your card is a Logitech Soundman Games
 | |
| 	(not a SM Wave or SM16).
 | |
| 
 | |
| SB Clones
 | |
| ---------
 | |
| 
 | |
| First of all: There are no SB16 clones. There are SB Pro clones with a
 | |
| 16 bit mode which is not SB16 compatible. The most likely alternative is that
 | |
| the 16 bit mode means MSS/WSS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are just a few fully 100% hardware SB or SB Pro compatible cards.
 | |
| I know just Thunderboard and SM Games. Other cards require some kind of
 | |
| hardware initialization before they become SB compatible. Check if your card
 | |
| was listed in the beginning of this file. In this case you should follow
 | |
| instructions for your card later in this file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For other not fully SB clones you may try initialization using DOS in
 | |
| the following way:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	- Boot DOS so that the card specific driver gets run.
 | |
| 	- Hit ctrl-alt-del (or use loadlin) to boot Linux. Don't
 | |
| 	  switch off power or press the reset button.
 | |
| 	- If you use the same I/O, IRQ and DMA settings in Linux, the
 | |
| 	  card should work.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If your card is both SB and MSS compatible, I recommend using the MSS mode.
 | |
| Most cards of this kind are not able to work in the SB and the MSS mode 
 | |
| simultaneously. Using the MSS mode provides 16 bit recording and playback.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ProAudioSpectrum 16 and compatibles
 | |
| -----------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| PAS16 has a SB emulation chip which can be used together with the native
 | |
| (16 bit) mode of the card. To enable this emulation you should configure 
 | |
| the driver to have SB support too (this has been changed since version
 | |
| 3.5-beta9 of this driver).
 | |
| 
 | |
| With current driver versions it's also possible to use PAS16 together with 
 | |
| another SB compatible card. In this case you should configure SB support
 | |
| for the other card and to disable the SB emulation of PAS16 (there is a
 | |
| separate questions about this).
 | |
| 
 | |
| With PAS16 you can use two audio device files at the same time. /dev/dsp (and
 | |
| /dev/audio) is connected to the 8/16 bit native codec and the /dev/dsp1 (and
 | |
| /dev/audio1) is connected to the SB emulation (8 bit mono only).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Gravis Ultrasound
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are many different revisions of the Ultrasound card (GUS). The
 | |
| earliest ones (pre 3.7) don't have a hardware mixer. With these cards
 | |
| the driver uses a software emulation for synth and pcm playbacks. It's
 | |
| also possible to switch some of the inputs (line in, mic) off by setting
 | |
| mixer volume of the channel level below 10%. For recording you have
 | |
| to select the channel as a recording source and to use volume above 10%.
 | |
| 
 | |
| GUS 3.7 has a hardware mixer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| GUS MAX and the 16 bit sampling daughtercard have a CS4231 codec chip which 
 | |
| also contains a mixer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring GUS is simple. Just enable the GUS support and GUS MAX or
 | |
| the 16 bit daughtercard if you have them. Note that enabling the daughter
 | |
| card disables GUS MAX driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE for owners of the 16 bit daughtercard: By default the daughtercard
 | |
| uses /dev/dsp (and /dev/audio). Command "ln -sf /dev/dsp1 /dev/dsp"
 | |
| selects the daughter card as the default device.
 | |
| 
 | |
| With just the standard GUS enabled the configuration program prompts
 | |
| for the I/O, IRQ and DMA numbers for the card. Use the same values than
 | |
| with DOS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| With the daughter card option enabled you will be prompted for the I/O,
 | |
| IRQ and DMA numbers for the daughter card. You have to use different I/O
 | |
| and DMA values than for the standard GUS. The daughter card permits
 | |
| simultaneous recording and playback. Use /dev/dsp (the daughtercard) for
 | |
| recording and /dev/dsp1 (GUS GF1) for playback.
 | |
| 
 | |
| GUS MAX uses the same I/O address and IRQ settings than the original GUS
 | |
| (GUS MAX = GUS + a CS4231 codec). In addition an extra DMA channel may be used.
 | |
| Using two DMA channels permits simultaneous playback using two devices
 | |
| (dev/dsp0 and /dev/dsp1). The second DMA channel is required for
 | |
| full duplex audio.
 | |
| To enable the second DMA channels, give a valid DMA channel when the config
 | |
| program asks for the GUS MAX DMA (entering -1 disables the second DMA).
 | |
| Using 16 bit DMA channels (5,6 or 7) is recommended.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have problems in recording with GUS MAX, you could try to use
 | |
| just one 8 bit DMA channel. Recording will not work with one DMA
 | |
| channel if it's a 16 bit one.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Microphone input of GUS MAX is connected to mixer in little bit nonstandard
 | |
| way. There is actually two microphone volume controls. Normal "mic" controls
 | |
| only recording level. Mixer control "speaker" is used to control volume of
 | |
| microphone signal connected directly to line/speaker out. So just decrease
 | |
| volume of "speaker" if you have problems with microphone feedback.
 | |
| 
 | |
| GUS ACE works too but any attempt to record or to use the MIDI port
 | |
| will fail.
 | |
| 
 | |
| GUS PnP (with RAM) is partially supported but it needs to be initialized using
 | |
| DOS or isapnptools before starting the driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| MPU401 and Windows Sound System
 | |
| -------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Again. Don't enable these options in case your card is listed
 | |
| somewhere else in this file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring these cards is obvious (or it should be). With MSS
 | |
| you should probably enable the OPL3 synth also since
 | |
| most MSS compatible cards have it. However check that this is true
 | |
| before enabling OPL3.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound driver supports more than one MPU401 compatible cards at the same time
 | |
| but the config program asks config info for just the first of them.
 | |
| Adding the second or third MPU interfaces must be done manually by
 | |
| editing sound/local.h (after running the config program). Add defines for
 | |
| MPU2_BASE & MPU2_IRQ (and MPU3_BASE & MPU3_IRQ) to the file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| CAUTION!
 | |
| 
 | |
| The default I/O base of Adaptec AHA-1542 SCSI controller is 0x330 which
 | |
| is also the default of the MPU401 driver. Don't configure the sound driver to
 | |
| use 0x330 as the MPU401 base if you have a AHA1542. The kernel will not boot
 | |
| if you make this mistake.
 | |
| 
 | |
| PSS
 | |
| ---
 | |
| 
 | |
| Even the PSS cards are compatible with SB, MSS and MPU401, you must not
 | |
| enable these options when configuring the driver. The configuration
 | |
| program handles these options itself. (You may use the SB, MPU and MSS options
 | |
| together with PSS if you have another card on the system).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The PSS driver enables MSS and MPU401 modes of the card. SB is not enabled 
 | |
| since it doesn't work concurrently with MSS. The driver loads also a
 | |
| DSP algorithm which is used to for the general MIDI emulation. The
 | |
| algorithm file (.ld) is read by the config program and written to a
 | |
| file included when the pss.c is compiled. For this reason the config
 | |
| program asks if you want to download the file. Use the genmidi.ld file
 | |
| distributed with the DOS/Windows drivers of the card (don't use the mt32.ld).
 | |
| With some cards the file is called 'synth.ld'. You must have access to
 | |
| the file when configuring the driver. The easiest way is to mount the DOS
 | |
| partition containing the file with Linux. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's possible to load your own DSP algorithms and run them with the card.
 | |
| Look at the directory pss_test of snd-util-3.0.tar.gz for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| AudioTrix Pro
 | |
| -------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| You have to enable the OPL3 and SB (not SB Pro or SB16) drivers in addition
 | |
| to the native AudioTrix driver. Don't enable MSS or MPU drivers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Configuring ATP is little bit tricky since it uses so many I/O, IRQ and
 | |
| DMA numbers. Using the same values than with DOS/Win is a good idea. Don't
 | |
| attempt to use the same IRQ or DMA channels twice.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The SB mode of ATP is implemented so the ATP driver just enables SB
 | |
| in the proper address. The SB driver handles the rest. You have to configure
 | |
| both the SB driver and the SB mode of ATP to use the same IRQ, DMA and I/O
 | |
| settings.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Also the ATP has a microcontroller for the General MIDI emulation (OPL4).
 | |
| For this reason the driver asks for the name of a file containing the
 | |
| microcode (TRXPRO.HEX). This file is usually located in the directory
 | |
| where the DOS drivers were installed. You must have access to this file
 | |
| when configuring the driver. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have the effects daughtercard, it must be initialized by running
 | |
| the setfx program of snd-util-3.0.tar.gz package. This step is not required
 | |
| when using the (future) binary distribution version of the driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Ensoniq SoundScape
 | |
| ------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE!	The new PnP SoundScape is not supported yet. Soundscape compatible
 | |
| 	cards made by Reveal don't work with Linux. They use older revision
 | |
| 	of the Soundscape chipset which is not fully compatible with
 | |
| 	newer cards made by Ensoniq.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The SoundScape driver handles initialization of MSS and MPU supports
 | |
| itself so you don't need to enable other drivers than SoundScape
 | |
| (enable also the /dev/dsp, /dev/sequencer and MIDI supports).
 | |
| 
 | |
| !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!                                                                   !!!!
 | |
| !!!!! NOTE! Before version 3.5-beta6 there WERE two sets of audio 	!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!       device files (/dev/dsp0 and /dev/dsp1). The first one WAS   !!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    used only for card initialization and the second for audio  !!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    purposes. It WAS required to change /dev/dsp (a symlink) to !!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    point to /dev/dsp1.						!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!                                                                   !!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    This is not required with OSS versions 3.5-beta6 and later	!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    since there is now just one audio device file. Please 	!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    change /dev/dsp to point back to /dev/dsp0 if you are	!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    upgrading from an earlier driver version using		!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!	    (cd /dev;rm dsp;ln -s dsp0 dsp).				!!!!
 | |
| !!!!!                                                                   !!!!
 | |
| !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 | |
| 
 | |
| The configuration program asks one DMA channel and two interrupts. One IRQ
 | |
| and one DMA is used by the MSS codec. The second IRQ is required for the
 | |
| MPU401 mode (you have to use different IRQs for both purposes).
 | |
| There were earlier two DMA channels for SoundScape but the current driver
 | |
| version requires just one.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The SoundScape card has a Motorola microcontroller which must initialized
 | |
| _after_ boot (the driver doesn't initialize it during boot).
 | |
| The initialization is done by running the 'ssinit' program which is
 | |
| distributed in the snd-util-3.0.tar.gz package. You have to edit two
 | |
| defines in the ssinit.c and then compile the program. You may run ssinit 
 | |
| manually (after each boot) or add it to /etc/rc.d/rc.local.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The ssinit program needs the microcode file that comes with the DOS/Windows
 | |
| driver of the card. You will need to use version 1.30.00 or later
 | |
| of the microcode file (sndscape.co0 or sndscape.co1 depending on
 | |
| your card model). THE OLD sndscape.cod WILL NOT WORK. IT WILL HANG YOUR
 | |
| MACHINE. The only way to get the new microcode file is to download
 | |
| and install the DOS/Windows driver from ftp://ftp.ensoniq.com/pub.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Then you have to select the proper microcode file to use: soundscape.co0
 | |
| is the right one for most cards and sndscape.co1 is for few (older) cards
 | |
| made by Reveal and/or Spea. The driver has capability to detect the card
 | |
| version during boot. Look at the boot log messages in /var/adm/messages
 | |
| and locate the sound driver initialization message for the SoundScape
 | |
| card. If the driver displays string <Ensoniq Soundscape (old)>, you have
 | |
| an old card and you will need to use sndscape.co1. For other cards use
 | |
| soundscape.co0. New Soundscape revisions such as Elite and PnP use
 | |
| code files with higher numbers (.co2, .co3, etc.).
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE!	Ensoniq Soundscape VIVO is not compatible with other Soundscape cards.
 | |
| 	Currently it's possible to use it in Linux only with OSS/Linux
 | |
| 	drivers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Check /var/adm/messages after running ssinit. The driver prints
 | |
| the board version after downloading the microcode file. That version
 | |
| number must match the number in the name of the microcode file (extension).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Running ssinit with a wrong version of the sndscape.co? file is not
 | |
| dangerous as long as you don't try to use a file called sndscape.cod.
 | |
| If you have initialized the card using a wrong microcode file (sounds
 | |
| are terrible), just modify ssinit.c to use another microcode file and try
 | |
| again. It's possible to use an earlier version of sndscape.co[01] but it
 | |
| may sound weird.
 | |
| 
 | |
| MAD16 (Pro) and Mozart
 | |
| ----------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| You need to enable just the MAD16 /Mozart support when configuring
 | |
| the driver. _Don't_ enable SB, MPU401 or MSS. However you will need the
 | |
| /dev/audio, /dev/sequencer and MIDI supports.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Mozart and OPTi 82C928 (the original MAD16) chips don't support
 | |
| MPU401 mode so enter just 0 when the configuration program asks the
 | |
| MPU/MIDI I/O base. The MAD16 Pro (OPTi 82C929) and 82C930 chips have MPU401
 | |
| mode.
 | |
| 
 | |
| TB Tropez is based on the 82C929 chip. It has two MIDI ports.
 | |
| The one connected to the MAD16 chip is the second one (there is a second
 | |
| MIDI connector/pins somewhere??). If you have not connected the second MIDI
 | |
| port, just disable the MIDI port of MAD16. The 'Maui' compatible synth of
 | |
| Tropez is jumper configurable and not connected to the MAD16 chip (the
 | |
| Maui driver can be used with it).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some MAD16 based cards may cause feedback, whistle or terrible noise if the
 | |
| line3 mixer channel is turned too high. This happens at least with Shuttle
 | |
| Sound System. Current driver versions set volume of line3 low enough so
 | |
| this should not be a problem.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have a MAD16 card which have an OPL4 (FM + Wave table) synthesizer
 | |
| chip (_not_ an OPL3), you have to append a line containing #define MAD16_OPL4
 | |
| to the file linux/drivers/sound/local.h (after running make config).
 | |
| 
 | |
| MAD16 cards having a CS4231 codec support full duplex mode. This mode
 | |
| can be enabled by configuring the card to use two DMA channels. Possible
 | |
| DMA channel pairs are: 0&1, 1&0 and 3&0.
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE! Cards having an OPTi 82C924/82C925 chip work with OSS/Free only in
 | |
| non-PnP mode (usually jumper selectable). The PnP mode is supported only
 | |
| by OSS/Linux.
 | |
| 
 | |
| MV Jazz (ProSonic)
 | |
| ------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Jazz16 driver is just a hack made to the SB Pro driver. However it works
 | |
| fairly well. You have to enable SB, SB Pro (_not_ SB16) and MPU401 supports
 | |
| when configuring the driver. The configuration program asks later if you
 | |
| want support for MV Jazz16 based cards (after asking SB base address). Answer
 | |
| 'y' here and the driver asks the second (16 bit) DMA channel.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Jazz16 driver uses the MPU401 driver in a way which will cause
 | |
| problems if you have another MPU401 compatible card. In this case you must
 | |
| give address of the Jazz16 based MPU401 interface when the config
 | |
| program prompts for the MPU401 information. Then look at the MPU401
 | |
| specific section for instructions about configuring more than one MPU401 cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Logitech Soundman Wave
 | |
| ----------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Read the above MV Jazz specific instructions first.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Logitech SoundMan Wave (don't confuse this with the SM16 or SM Games) is
 | |
| a MV Jazz based card which has an additional OPL4 based wave table
 | |
| synthesizer. The OPL4 chip is handled by an on board microcontroller
 | |
| which must be initialized during boot. The config program asks if
 | |
| you have a SM Wave immediately after asking the second DMA channel of jazz16.
 | |
| If you answer 'y', the config program will ask name of the file containing
 | |
| code to be loaded to the microcontroller. The file is usually called
 | |
| MIDI0001.BIN and it's located in the DOS/Windows driver directory. The file
 | |
| may also be called as TSUNAMI.BIN or something else (older cards?).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The OPL4 synth will be inaccessible without loading the microcontroller code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Also remember to enable SB MPU401 support if you want to use the OPL4 mode.
 | |
| (Don't enable the 'normal' MPU401 device as with some earlier driver
 | |
| versions (pre 3.5-alpha8)).
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE!	Don't answer 'y' when the driver asks about SM Games support
 | |
| 	(the next question after the MIDI0001.BIN name). However
 | |
| 	answering 'y' doesn't cause damage your computer so don't panic. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sound Galaxies
 | |
| --------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are many different Sound Galaxy cards made by Aztech. The 8 bit
 | |
| ones are fully SB or SB Pro compatible and there should be no problems
 | |
| with them. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The older 16 bit cards (SG Pro16, SG NX Pro16, Nova and Lyra) have
 | |
| an EEPROM chip for storing the configuration data. There is a microcontroller
 | |
| which initializes the card to match the EEPROM settings when the machine
 | |
| is powered on. These cards actually behave just like they have jumpers
 | |
| for all of the settings. Configure driver for MSS, MPU, SB/SB Pro  and OPL3 
 | |
| supports with these cards. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are some new Sound Galaxies in the market. I have no experience with
 | |
| them so read the card's manual carefully.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ESS ES1688 and ES688 'AudioDrive' based cards
 | |
| ---------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Support for these two ESS chips is embedded in the SB driver.
 | |
| Configure these cards just like SB. Enable the 'SB MPU401 MIDI port'
 | |
| if you want to use MIDI features of ES1688. ES688 doesn't have MPU mode
 | |
| so you don't need to enable it (the driver uses normal SB MIDI automatically
 | |
| with ES688).
 | |
| 
 | |
| NOTE! ESS cards are not compatible with MSS/WSS so don't worry if MSS support
 | |
| of OSS doesn't work with it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are some ES1688/688 based sound cards and (particularly) motherboards
 | |
| which use software configurable I/O port relocation feature of the chip.
 | |
| This ESS proprietary feature is supported only by OSS/Linux.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are ES1688 based cards which use different interrupt pin assignment than
 | |
| recommended by ESS (5, 7, 9/2 and 10). In this case all IRQs don't work.
 | |
| At least a card called (Pearl?) Hypersound 16 supports IRQ 15 but it doesn't
 | |
| work.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ES1868 is a PnP chip which is (supposed to be) compatible with ESS1688
 | |
| probably works with OSS/Free after initialization using isapnptools.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Reveal cards
 | |
| ------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are several different cards made/marketed by Reveal. Some of them
 | |
| are compatible with SoundScape and some use the MAD16 chip. You may have
 | |
| to look at the card and try to identify its origin.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Diamond
 | |
| -------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The oldest (Sierra Aria based) sound cards made by Diamond are not supported
 | |
| (they may work if the card is initialized using DOS). The recent (LX?)
 | |
| models are based on the MAD16 chip which is supported by the driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Audio Excel DSP16
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Support for this card is currently not functional. A new driver for it
 | |
| should be available later this year.
 | |
| 
 | |
| PCMCIA cards
 | |
| ------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Sorry, can't help. Some cards may work and some don't.
 | |
| 
 | |
| TI TM4000M notebooks
 | |
| --------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| These computers have a built in sound support based on the Jazz chipset.
 | |
| Look at the instructions for MV Jazz (above). It's also important to note
 | |
| that there is something wrong with the mouse port and sound at least on
 | |
| some TM models. Don't enable the "C&T 82C710 mouse port support" when
 | |
| configuring Linux. Having it enabled is likely to cause mysterious problems
 | |
| and kernel failures when sound is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| miroSOUND
 | |
| ---------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The miroSOUND PCM1-pro, PCM12 and PCM20 radio has been used
 | |
| successfully. These cards are based on the MAD16, OPL4, and CS4231A chips
 | |
| and everything said in the section about MAD16 cards applies here,
 | |
| too. The only major difference between the PCMxx and other MAD16 cards
 | |
| is that instead of the mixer in the CS4231 codec a separate mixer
 | |
| controlled by an on-board 80C32 microcontroller is used. Control of
 | |
| the mixer takes place via the ACI (miro's audio control interface)
 | |
| protocol that is implemented in a separate lowlevel driver. Make sure
 | |
| you compile this ACI driver together with the normal MAD16 support
 | |
| when you use a miroSOUND PCMxx card. The ACI mixer is controlled by
 | |
| /dev/mixer and the CS4231 mixer by /dev/mixer1 (depends on load
 | |
| time). Only in special cases you want to change something regularly on
 | |
| the CS4231 mixer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The miroSOUND PCM12 and PCM20 radio is capable of full duplex
 | |
| operation (simultaneous PCM replay and recording), which allows you to
 | |
| implement nice real-time signal processing audio effect software and
 | |
| network telephones. The ACI mixer has to be switched into the "solo"
 | |
| mode for duplex operation in order to avoid feedback caused by the
 | |
| mixer (input hears output signal). You can de-/activate this mode
 | |
| through toggleing the record button for the wave controller with an
 | |
| OSS-mixer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The PCM20 contains a radio tuner, which is also controlled by
 | |
| ACI. This radio tuner is supported by the ACI driver together with the
 | |
| miropcm20.o module. Also the 7-band equalizer is integrated
 | |
| (limited by the OSS-design). Developement has started and maybe
 | |
| finished for the RDS decoder on this card, too. You will be able to
 | |
| read RadioText, the Programme Service name, Programme TYpe and
 | |
| others. Even the v4l radio module benefits from it with a refined
 | |
| strength value. See aci.[ch] and miropcm20*.[ch] for more details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The following configuration parameters have worked fine for the PCM12
 | |
| in Markus Kuhn's system, many other configurations might work, too:
 | |
| CONFIG_MAD16_BASE=0x530, CONFIG_MAD16_IRQ=11, CONFIG_MAD16_DMA=3, 
 | |
| CONFIG_MAD16_DMA2=0, CONFIG_MAD16_MPU_BASE=0x330, CONFIG_MAD16_MPU_IRQ=10,
 | |
| DSP_BUFFSIZE=65536, SELECTED_SOUND_OPTIONS=0x00281000.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bas van der Linden is using his PCM1-pro with a configuration that
 | |
| differs in: CONFIG_MAD16_IRQ=7, CONFIG_MAD16_DMA=1, CONFIG_MAD16_MPU_IRQ=9
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compaq Deskpro XL
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The builtin sound hardware of Compaq Deskpro XL is now supported. 
 | |
| You need to configure the driver with MSS and OPL3 supports enabled.
 | |
| In addition you need to manually edit linux/drivers/sound/local.h and
 | |
| to add a line containing "#define DESKPROXL" if you used 
 | |
| make menuconfig/xconfig.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Others?
 | |
| -------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since there are so many different sound cards, it's likely that I have 
 | |
| forgotten to mention many of them. Please inform me if you know yet another
 | |
| card which works with Linux, please inform me (or is anybody else
 | |
| willing to maintain a database of supported cards (just like in XF86)?).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Cards not supported yet
 | |
| =======================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Please check the version of sound driver you are using before 
 | |
| complaining that your card is not supported. It's possible you are 
 | |
| using a driver version which was released months before your card was
 | |
| introduced.
 | |
| 
 | |
| First of all, there is an easy way to make most sound cards work with Linux.
 | |
| Just use the DOS based driver to initialize the card to a known state, then use
 | |
| loadlin.exe to boot Linux. If Linux is configured to use the same I/O, IRQ and
 | |
| DMA numbers as DOS, the card could work.
 | |
| (ctrl-alt-del can be used in place of loadlin.exe but it doesn't work with
 | |
| new motherboards). This method works also with all/most PnP sound cards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Don't get fooled with SB compatibility. Most cards are compatible with
 | |
| SB but that may require a TSR which is not possible with Linux. If
 | |
| the card is compatible with MSS, it's a better choice. Some cards
 | |
| don't work in the SB and MSS modes at the same time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Then there are cards which are no longer manufactured and/or which
 | |
| are relatively rarely used (such as the 8 bit ProAudioSpectrum
 | |
| models). It's extremely unlikely that such cards ever get supported.
 | |
| Adding support for a new card requires much work and increases time
 | |
| required in maintaining the driver (some changes need to be done
 | |
| to all low level drivers and be tested too, maybe with multiple
 | |
| operating systems). For this reason I have made a decision to not support
 | |
| obsolete cards. It's possible that someone else makes a separately 
 | |
| distributed driver (diffs) for the card. 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Writing a driver for a new card is not possible if there are no 
 | |
| programming information available about the card. If you don't
 | |
| find your new card from this file, look from the home page 
 | |
| (http://www.opensound.com/ossfree). Then please contact
 | |
| manufacturer of the card and ask if they have (or are willing to)
 | |
| released technical details of the card. Do this before contacting me. I
 | |
| can only answer 'no' if there are no programming information available.
 | |
| 
 | |
| I have made decision to not accept code based on reverse engineering
 | |
| to the driver. There are three main reasons: First I don't want to break
 | |
| relationships to sound card manufacturers. The second reason is that
 | |
| maintaining and supporting a driver without any specs will be a pain.
 | |
| The third reason is that companies have freedom to refuse selling their
 | |
| products to other than Windows users.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some companies don't give low level technical information about their
 | |
| products to public or at least their require signing a NDA. It's not
 | |
| possible to implement a freeware driver for them. However it's possible
 | |
| that support for such cards become available in the commercial version
 | |
| of this driver (see http://www.4Front-tech.com/oss.html for more info).
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are some common audio chipsets that are not supported yet. For example
 | |
| Sierra Aria and IBM Mwave. It's possible that these architectures
 | |
| get some support in future but I can't make any promises. Just look
 | |
| at the home page (http://www.opensound.com/ossfree/new_cards.html)
 | |
| for latest info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Information about unsupported sound cards and chipsets is welcome as well
 | |
| as free copies of sound cards, SDKs and operating systems.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have any corrections and/or comments, please contact me.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Hannu Savolainen
 | |
| hannu@opensound.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| Personal home page:	   http://www.compusonic.fi/~hannu
 | |
| home page of OSS/Free: http://www.opensound.com/ossfree
 | |
| 
 | |
| home page of commercial OSS
 | |
| (Open Sound System) drivers: http://www.opensound.com/oss.html
 |