ALSA

From Alpine Linux
Revision as of 09:24, 20 August 2024 by Prabuanand (talk | contribs)

Install

First you will need to install the Alsa packages, Linux sound driver and volume adjuster.

# apk add alsa-utils alsaconf

Setup

Then you will need to add all your users (including root) to the audio group.

# addgroup $USER audio # addgroup root audio

Find the default sound card.

# alsamixer

The default sound card will show up. Try turning up the volume of Master and the device(s) such as speakers or microphones that you need, and audio should work (F1 - help, M - toggle mute, ...)

If there are no volume controls visible, try hitting F6 on your keyboard and toggling between the sound cards (which all might have the same name in the context menu that pops up except for the numbers next to and before the names).

Once you've found the sound card name that gives you volume controls, set the unique number that showed up in the F6 context menu as your default soundcard.

# nano /usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf

Scroll down until you find the lines that start with defaults.ctl.card and defaults.pcm.card and put the number (you found in the F6 context menu of the alsamixer command for the soundcard you want as your default) at the end of those lines separated by a space for each. For example, if the default sound card you want is "1".

Contents of /usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf

... defaults.ctl.card 1 defaults.pcm.card 1 ...

Save your nano work by pressing Ctrl+O and confirm the changes by pressing Enter. Then exit nano by pressing Ctrl+X.

Try turning up the volume of Master and the device(s) such as speakers or microphones that you need with the alsamixer command, and audio should work.

Alsa service is not started on install, you need to start it and to add it on OpenRC.

rc-service alsa start rc-update add alsa

Gstreamer can now catch the device and the audio mixer is working.