First of all, the hardware mute led was turned off, so I was sure it was not a problem of the hardware muting button.
However, just as a last resort, I tried to piush the keyboard volume increase button, that displayed "Volume 99%" on the screen, and suddenly the speakers start to play both web...
So far, I always had a look at rc scripts to see variables, but I think that something more like OpeNBSD's rcctl could be useful (no flame intended):
% doas rcctl getdef postgresql
postgresql_class=daemon
postgresql_flags=-D /var/postgresql/data -w -l /var/postgresql/logfile
postgresql_logger=...
I've already tried this many times, withous any luck. Is there a chance I'm missing something else, like codecs or so, because as I wrote I'm unable to listen (even in the headphones) to a local mp3.
Yes, I see from the man page that it has been added in not so old versions of FreeBSD.
I may have explained myself not very well: I was interested in "knowing" all possible variables of a service without having to manually look at it. For example, say I would see what can be tuned with...
Shame on me, I missed in the SEE ALSO section of rc.
Anyway, I don't see a clear way to inspect a single service variables, except for sysrc -a and a grep, is there a smarter approach?
After years of manually editing /etc/rc.conf I realized that there could be some tool to get/set rcvars, but I don't know if there is any. I know service has a rcvars option to retrieve variables, but I cannot figure out if there is a tool to edit them in place.
Any suggestion?
Battling again with my old T410, running FreeBSD 13. I've seen that the functional key to turnj on the keyboard light, as well as dimming the screen light, work out of the box. Volume and video output does not.
Is there a way to catch the functional keys and "remap" so they can work as expected?
I know there are proprietary Linux drivers and software for the HP Envy Pro 6000 multifunctional prnter and scanner. I did not have any luck in macking the drivers working for Linux, and I was thinking if anyone has successfully used such a printer with FreeBSD.
Not sure if this was clear or not, however, headphones are working always!
I mean, even if I do
% doas cat /dev/sndstat
Installed devices:
pcm0: <Conexant CX20585 (Right Analog)> (play/rec)
pcm1: <Conexant CX20585 (Internal Analog)> (play/rec) default
pcm2: <Intel Ibex Peak (HDMI/DP 8ch)>...
I was a sudo fan, then I discovered doas and I like the idea. However, I tend to install both because my fingers are often used to type the wrong command and other users are not used to doas[(/cmd] and, sometimes, don't understand the change.
I must have scrwed up the mixer output, by means of doing something nasty on my devices.
Here's what appear after the boot:
% mixer
Mixer vol is currently set to 61:61
Mixer pcm is currently set to 100:100
Mixer rec is currently set to 0:0
Mixer monitor is currently set to...
Is this the right place to submit this wrong message?
I see two problems in the post-install instructions:
1) the module name is fusefs
2) the kldload command must be run as root, therefore the '$' prompt is not the appropriate shell prompt here.
On my FreeBSD 13 I've just installed fusefs and the post install instructions state that:
=====
Message from fusefs-libs-2.9.9_2:
--
Install the FUSE kernel module (kldload fusefs) to use this port.
=====
Message from veracrypt-1.24_4:
--
Veracrypt was installed
1) Veracrypt needs...
No luck! Even after a reboot, these settings did not change anything.
If that matters, here's the output of mixer, that as far as I understand states the volume level is at its maximum:
% mixer
Mixer rec is currently set to 100:100
Mixer monitor is currently set to 42:42
Recording...
I don't have such setting in my Firefox 93, I've media.cubeb.loggin_level, media.cubeb.sandbox which is boolean, and media.cubeb.output_voice_routing, which is a boolean too. Is the fact that is missing the media.cubeb.backend a symptom of the problem?
I've rebooted the whole computer, and checked that /dev/sndstat lists pcm1 as default. Yet not sound at all.
However, I've tried to issue pulseaudio -k and the result could lead to some problem:
% sudo pulseaudio -k
E: [(null)] main.c: Failed to kill daemon: No such process
The package is...
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