/dev/cdrom question: resolved (partially)
C Toews
toewsc at hotmail.com
Sun Mar 20 16:55:35 UTC 2005
Many thanks to all who responded. Jonathan, I followed your advise, cranked
up xmms, and using digital playback got bona fide sound. I was very
happy--thanks again. I'm still investigating why the other players don't
work, or (perhaps equivalently) what goes wrong in analog mode--I'll post my
finding if I discover a solution.
Best regards,
Carl
>From: Jonathan Berry <berryja at gmail.com>
>Reply-To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list at redhat.com>
>To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list at redhat.com>
>Subject: Re: /dev/cdrom question
>Date: Sat, 19 Mar 2005 16:05:31 -0600
>
>On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 20:35:38 +0000, C Toews <toewsc at hotmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Jonathan,
> >
> > Thanks very much for the help. Your description of the device files was
> > very helpful. I followed the directions on the links you gave me and
> > succeeded in generating a symbolic link between /dev/cdrom and /dev/hdc.
> > When I crank up the cd player (I'm using gnome-cd), it now at least
>looks
> > like its playing the disc (i.e. it shows the tracks, and when I push
>play,
> > the seconds tick by, etc.)
>
>Cool, that is progress.
>
> > Still no sound, unfortunately. I've tried messing with the volume
>settings,
> > all to no avail. I know its not a matter of a missing cable, since
>audio
> > plays fine on the Windows side (I'm running this on a laptop, by the
>way,
> > for whatever its worth.) I'm a little confused about which volume
>settings
>
>Well, there are two ways of playing audio CDs. On a desktop system,
>there is the cable that goes from the CD drive to the soundcard and
>then there is the IDE cable. I do not know if there is an equivalent
>cable to the former in a laptop, but either way, you certainly cannot
>add it then : ). Playing through one is analog (the soundcard cable)
>and through the other is digital (the IDE cable).
>
> > to adjust: there seem to be three volume settings of relevance, one
>being
> > the volume bar on the player itself, one being the volume icon in the
>tray
> > (I'm running gnome) and the third being the large sound panel with lots
>of
> > different option I can access from the sound and video menu. I've tried
>
>Right click on the volume icon in the tray and click Open Volume
>Control. This will bring up the gnome-volume-control program that
>can contol all of the volumes in the system. The other simply modify
>one of the different levels available there. The CD sliders should
>control the analog CD audio output.
>
> > unmuting everything via the latter and putting all other volume settings
>on
> > all other volume bars up to max. Of course, with so many volume bars,
>it is
> > hard to know if there might not be some particular combination of ups,
> > downs, mutings, etc. that leads to sounds, but this seems to me
>improbable.
> > I do get sound when I do the sound check, so the system knows about the
> > sound card. The difficulty seems to be connecting the sound card to the
> > player. I've tried other players (in particular, Grip) with the same
>silent
> > results.... ;-(
>
>Can you play sound files on the hard disk? Like MP3s? You'll need to
>grab an MP3 plugin from Livna or Dag or some other repo since RedHat
>cannot ship them with Fedora because of legal issues.
>
> > Argh. I'll keep plugging away and see what happens. Thanks again for
>your
> > help--if you have any more ideas, I'd be very pleased to hear them.
> >
> > Best,
> > Carl
>
>Try using xmms to play the CD. If you do not have it run "yum install
>xmms" as root. It will show up as Menu->Sound & Video->Audio Player
>in the gnome menu. Right click on the player and select
>Options->Preferences. In input plugins, select the CD Audio Player
>and click the Configure button. Under Drive 1 tab you should put
>Device: /dev/cdrom (assuming you have the symlink) and under
>Directory: you should put the mount point. Run "ls /media/" and "cat
>/etc/fstab" to figure out what to put (it is /media/cdrecorder in my
>system). Click Check drive... button and if you get OK on both, the
>it is setup correctly. Click Ok to dismiss the dialog. Make sure
>your Output pligin is set to where you can play and hear sound files.
>There are wav files in /usr/share/sounds/ if you need some to try.
>Click Ok to close the Prefs dialog. Right click on xmms again and
>select Play Directory. Navigate to the mount point you found before
>(/media/something) and click Ok. If you cannot hear sound (make sure
>both PCM and CD in your volume control are unmuted and turned up), go
>back to the CD Audio Player Configuration dialog and change the Play
>mode: from Analog to Digital audio extraction. I would think the
>digital should work. Let us know how it goes.
>
>Jonathan
>
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