On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 11:08:46 +0100 François Patte francois.patte@mi.parisdescartes.fr wrote:
But in /usr/lib/modprobe.d/ I have a dist-alsa.conf file with:
# ALSA Sound Support # # We want to ensure that snd-seq is always loaded for those who want to use # the sequencer interface, but we can't do this automatically through udev # at the moment...so we have this rule (just for the moment). # # Remove the following line if you don't want the sequencer.
install snd-pcm /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd-pcm && /sbin/modprobe snd-seq
Don't know what it means....
I also have that and sound works fine here. So, I would say not a problem.
In ~/.config/pulse I have: bd9a117e29a44dd4b335896e866a41d2-default-sink bd9a117e29a44dd4b335896e866a41d2-default-source
Which are empty when I log-in (in that case the config is: "sortie stéréo numérique (iec958) + entrée stéréo analogique" which does not work, no sound)
You must have run alsainfo.sh after you corrected your system because this is not what it showed. It showed that the default was pcm (analog). For some reason, at start up, your system is defaulting to the iec958 (digital) interface on your nvidia card at startup. What happens if immediately after startup you run? aplay -D plughw:0,0 [some wav file here] It has to be a wav file as there is no decoding in aplay. You should get sound without making any changes to configuration.
If I change, in the config tab, to duplex stéréo analogique (which works) and going to the "output peripheric" tab and press the button "define as alternative" these two files in ~/.config/pulse, have alsa_input.pci-0000_00_1b.0.analog-stereo inside, but these files are erased at next login/boot.
This is correct, but the erasure, I don't know where that is coming from.
It doesn't make sense that you don't have sound.
What could erase the files source/sink in my ~/.config/pulse and why does the fedora default config does not follow the man pulse-client.conf for, according to this manual, there should be a ~/.config/pulse/client.conf file or ~/.config/pulse/client.conf.d/*.conf files...
I suspect, because of the signature at the front, that those files are recreated by pulse at each start. I think *you* have to create the configuration files in your ~/.config/pulse directory.
Try this: cp the /etc/pulse/client.conf file to ~/.config/pulse. Edit the home directory file and change the line ; default-sink = to default-sink = hw:0,0
That should do the right thing at next boot.
If it doesn't work, run pulseaudio --dump-conf Then paste the output and the contents of /etc/pulse/default.pa somewhere and show the link here. That tells the settings that pulse defaults to and how it is actually running. Do the run after boot and before you make any changes.