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authorTakashi Iwai2017-11-13 15:43:04 +0100
committerTakashi Iwai2017-11-13 15:43:13 +0100
commitc429bda21ffafb28f02fb2eb4055b4ab6879ed58 (patch)
tree80715bf534bfa3bcb69ef77cf1dc5f9d98919b44 /Documentation
parent75ee94b20b46459e3d29f5ac2c3af3cebdeef777 (diff)
parent9718a29d40b7e5ae4692796eb23c54f25559d35e (diff)
Merge branch 'for-next' into for-linus
Pull 4.15 updates to take over the previous urgent fixes. Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/hd-audio/models.rst2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/ALS66
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/AudioExcelDSP16101
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/CMI8330152
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/ESS34
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/ESS186855
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction459
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/MultiSound1137
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/OPL36
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/Opti218
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/PAS16162
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/PSS41
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/PSS-updates88
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS1455
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/README.modules106
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/README.ymfsb107
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/SoundPro105
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/Soundblaster53
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/Tropez+26
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/VIBRA1680
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/WaveArtist170
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/btaudio92
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/mwave185
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/oss-parameters.txt51
-rw-r--r--Documentation/sound/oss/ultrasound30
25 files changed, 2 insertions, 4979 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/hd-audio/models.rst b/Documentation/sound/hd-audio/models.rst
index 773d2bfacc6c..1fee5a4f6660 100644
--- a/Documentation/sound/hd-audio/models.rst
+++ b/Documentation/sound/hd-audio/models.rst
@@ -82,6 +82,8 @@ tpt460
Lenovo Thinkpad T460/560 setup
dual-codecs
Lenovo laptops with dual codecs
+alc700-ref
+ Intel reference board with ALC700 codec
ALC66x/67x/892
==============
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/ALS b/Documentation/sound/oss/ALS
deleted file mode 100644
index bf10bed4574b..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/ALS
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
-ALS-007/ALS-100/ALS-200 based sound cards
-=========================================
-
-Support for sound cards based around the Avance Logic
-ALS-007/ALS-100/ALS-200 chip is included. These chips are a single
-chip PnP sound solution which is mostly hardware compatible with the
-Sound Blaster 16 card, with most differences occurring in the use of
-the mixer registers. For this reason the ALS code is integrated
-as part of the Sound Blaster 16 driver (adding only 800 bytes to the
-SB16 driver).
-
-To use an ALS sound card under Linux, enable the following options as
-modules in the sound configuration section of the kernel config:
- - 100% Sound Blaster compatibles (SB16/32/64, ESS, Jazz16) support
- - FM synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support
- - standalone MPU401 support may be required for some cards; for the
- ALS-007, when using isapnptools, it is required
-Since the ALS-007/100/200 are PnP cards, ISAPnP support should probably be
-compiled in. If kernel level PnP support is not included, isapnptools will
-be required to configure the card before the sound modules are loaded.
-
-When using kernel level ISAPnP, the kernel should correctly identify and
-configure all resources required by the card when the "sb" module is
-inserted. Note that the ALS-007 does not have a 16 bit DMA channel and that
-the MPU401 interface on this card uses a different interrupt to the audio
-section. This should all be correctly configured by the kernel; if problems
-with the MPU401 interface surface, try using the standalone MPU401 module,
-passing "0" as the "sb" module's "mpu_io" module parameter to prevent the
-soundblaster driver attempting to register the MPU401 itself. The onboard
-synth device can be accessed using the "opl3" module.
-
-If isapnptools is used to wake up the sound card (as in 2.2.x), the settings
-of the card's resources should be passed to the kernel modules ("sb", "opl3"
-and "mpu401") using the module parameters. When configuring an ALS-007, be
-sure to specify different IRQs for the audio and MPU401 sections - this card
-requires they be different. For "sb", "io", "irq" and "dma" should be set
-to the same values used to configure the audio section of the card with
-isapnp. "dma16" should be explicitly set to "-1" for an ALS-007 since this
-card does not have a 16 bit dma channel; if not specified the kernel will
-default to using channel 5 anyway which will cause audio not to work.
-"mpu_io" should be set to 0. The "io" parameter of the "opl3" module should
-also agree with the setting used by isapnp. To get the MPU401 interface
-working on an ALS-007 card, the "mpu401" module will be required since this
-card uses separate IRQs for the audio and MPU401 sections and there is no
-parameter available to pass a different IRQ to the "sb" driver (whose
-inbuilt MPU401 driver would otherwise be fine). Insert the mpu401 module
-passing appropriate values using the "io" and "irq" parameters.
-
-The resulting sound driver will provide the following capabilities:
- - 8 and 16 bit audio playback
- - 8 and 16 bit audio recording
- - Software selection of record source (line in, CD, FM, mic, master)
- - Record and playback of midi data via the external MPU-401
- - Playback of midi data using inbuilt FM synthesizer
- - Control of the ALS-007 mixer via any OSS-compatible mixer programs.
- Controls available are Master (L&R), Line in (L&R), CD (L&R),
- DSP/PCM/audio out (L&R), FM (L&R) and Mic in (mono).
-
-Jonathan Woithe
-jwoithe@just42.net
-30 March 1998
-
-Modified 2000-02-26 by Dave Forrest, drf5n@virginia.edu to add ALS100/ALS200
-Modified 2000-04-10 by Paul Laufer, pelaufer@csupomona.edu to add ISAPnP info.
-Modified 2000-11-19 by Jonathan Woithe, jwoithe@just42.net
- - updated information for kernel 2.4.x.
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/AudioExcelDSP16 b/Documentation/sound/oss/AudioExcelDSP16
deleted file mode 100644
index ea8549faede9..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/AudioExcelDSP16
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,101 +0,0 @@
-Driver
-------
-
-Information about Audio Excel DSP 16 driver can be found in the source
-file aedsp16.c
-Please, read the head of the source before using it. It contain useful
-information.
-
-Configuration
--------------
-
-The Audio Excel configuration, is now done with the standard Linux setup.
-You have to configure the sound card (Sound Blaster or Microsoft Sound System)
-and, if you want it, the Roland MPU-401 (do not use the Sound Blaster MPU-401,
-SB-MPU401) in the main driver menu. Activate the lowlevel drivers then select
-the Audio Excel hardware that you want to initialize. Check the IRQ/DMA/MIRQ
-of the Audio Excel initialization: it must be the same as the SBPRO (or MSS)
-setup. If the parameters are different, correct it.
-I you own a Gallant's audio card based on SC-6600, activate the SC-6600 support.
-If you want to change the configuration of the sound board, be sure to
-check off all the configuration items before re-configure it.
-
-Module parameters
------------------
-To use this driver as a module, you must configure some module parameters, to
-set up I/O addresses, IRQ lines and DMA channels. Some parameters are
-mandatory while some others are optional. Here a list of parameters you can
-use with this module:
-
-Name Description
-==== ===========
-MANDATORY
-io I/O base address (0x220 or 0x240)
-irq irq line (5, 7, 9, 10 or 11)
-dma dma channel (0, 1 or 3)
-
-OPTIONAL
-mss_base I/O base address for activate MSS mode (default SBPRO)
- (0x530 or 0xE80)
-mpu_base I/O base address for activate MPU-401 mode
- (0x300, 0x310, 0x320 or 0x330)
-mpu_irq MPU-401 irq line (5, 7, 9, 10 or 0)
-
-A configuration file in /etc/modprobe.d/ directory will have lines like this:
-
-options opl3 io=0x388
-options ad1848 io=0x530 irq=11 dma=3
-options aedsp16 io=0x220 irq=11 dma=3 mss_base=0x530
-
-Where the aedsp16 options are the options for this driver while opl3 and
-ad1848 are the corresponding options for the MSS and OPL3 modules.
-
-Loading MSS and OPL3 needs to pre load the aedsp16 module to set up correctly
-the sound card. Installation dependencies must be written in configuration
-files under /etc/modprobe.d/ directory:
-
-softdep ad1848 pre: aedsp16
-softdep opl3 pre: aedsp16
-
-Then you must load the sound modules stack in this order:
-sound -> aedsp16 -> [ ad1848, opl3 ]
-
-With the above configuration, loading ad1848 or opl3 modules, will
-automatically load all the sound stack.
-
-Sound cards supported
----------------------
-This driver supports the SC-6000 and SC-6600 based Gallant's sound card.
-It don't support the Audio Excel DSP 16 III (try the SC-6600 code).
-I'm working on the III version of the card: if someone have useful
-information about it, please let me know.
-For all the non-supported audio cards, you have to boot MS-DOS (or WIN95)
-activating the audio card with the MS-DOS device driver, then you have to
-<ctrl>-<alt>-<del> and boot Linux.
-Follow these steps:
-
-1) Compile Linux kernel with standard sound driver, using the emulation
- you want, with the parameters of your audio card,
- e.g. Microsoft Sound System irq10 dma3
-2) Install your new kernel as the default boot kernel.
-3) Boot MS-DOS and configure the audio card with the boot time device
- driver, for MSS irq10 dma3 in our example.
-4) <ctrl>-<alt>-<del> and boot Linux. This will maintain the DOS configuration
- and will boot the new kernel with sound driver. The sound driver will find
- the audio card and will recognize and attach it.
-
-Reports on User successes
--------------------------
-
-> Date: Mon, 29 Jul 1996 08:35:40 +0100
-> From: Mr S J Greenaway <sjg95@unixfe.rl.ac.uk>
-> To: riccardo@cdc8g5.cdc.polimi.it (Riccardo Facchetti)
-> Subject: Re: Audio Excel DSP 16 initialization code
->
-> Just to let you know got my Audio Excel (emulating a MSS) working
-> with my original SB16, thanks for the driver!
-
-
-Last revised: 20 August 1998
-Riccardo Facchetti
-fizban@tin.it
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/CMI8330 b/Documentation/sound/oss/CMI8330
deleted file mode 100644
index 8a5fd1611c6f..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/CMI8330
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,152 +0,0 @@
-Documentation for CMI 8330 (SoundPRO)
--------------------------------------
-Alessandro Zummo <azummo@ita.flashnet.it>
-
-( Be sure to read Documentation/sound/oss/SoundPro too )
-
-
-This adapter is now directly supported by the sb driver.
-
- The only thing you have to do is to compile the kernel sound
-support as a module and to enable kernel ISAPnP support,
-as shown below.
-
-
-CONFIG_SOUND=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_SB=m
-
-CONFIG_PNP=y
-CONFIG_ISAPNP=y
-
-
-and optionally:
-
-
-CONFIG_SOUND_MPU401=m
-
- for MPU401 support.
-
-
-(I suggest you to use "make menuconfig" or "make xconfig"
- for a more comfortable configuration editing)
-
-
-
-Then you can do
-
- modprobe sb
-
-and everything will be (hopefully) configured.
-
-You should get something similar in syslog:
-
-sb: CMI8330 detected.
-sb: CMI8330 sb base located at 0x220
-sb: CMI8330 mpu base located at 0x330
-sb: CMI8330 mail reports to Alessandro Zummo <azummo@ita.flashnet.it>
-sb: ISAPnP reports CMI 8330 SoundPRO at i/o 0x220, irq 7, dma 1,5
-
-
-
-
-The old documentation file follows for reference
-purposes.
-
-
-How to enable CMI 8330 (SOUNDPRO) soundchip on Linux
-------------------------------------------
-Stefan Laudat <Stefan.Laudat@asit.ro>
-
-[Note: The CMI 8338 is unrelated and is supported by cmpci.o]
-
-
- In order to use CMI8330 under Linux you just have to use a proper isapnp.conf, a good isapnp and a little bit of patience. I use isapnp 1.17, but
-you may get a better one I guess at http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools/.
-
- Of course you will have to compile kernel sound support as module, as shown below:
-
-CONFIG_SOUND=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_OSS=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_SB=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_ADLIB=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_MPU401=m
-# Mikro$chaft sound system (kinda useful here ;))
-CONFIG_SOUND_MSS=m
-
- The /etc/isapnp.conf file will be:
-
-<snip below>
-
-
-(READPORT 0x0203)
-(ISOLATE PRESERVE)
-(IDENTIFY *)
-(VERBOSITY 2)
-(CONFLICT (IO FATAL)(IRQ FATAL)(DMA FATAL)(MEM FATAL)) # or WARNING
-(VERIFYLD N)
-
-
-# WSS
-
-(CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 0
-(IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x0530))
-(IO 1 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x0388))
-(INT 0 (IRQ 7 (MODE +E)))
-(DMA 0 (CHANNEL 0))
-(NAME "CMI0001/16777472[0]{CMI8330/C3D Audio Adapter}")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-# MPU
-
-(CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 1
-(IO 0 (SIZE 2) (BASE 0x0330))
-(INT 0 (IRQ 11 (MODE +E)))
-(NAME "CMI0001/16777472[1]{CMI8330/C3D Audio Adapter}")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-# Joystick
-
-(CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 2
-(IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x0200))
-(NAME "CMI0001/16777472[2]{CMI8330/C3D Audio Adapter}")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-# SoundBlaster
-
-(CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 3
-(IO 0 (SIZE 16) (BASE 0x0220))
-(INT 0 (IRQ 5 (MODE +E)))
-(DMA 0 (CHANNEL 1))
-(DMA 1 (CHANNEL 5))
-(NAME "CMI0001/16777472[3]{CMI8330/C3D Audio Adapter}")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-
-(WAITFORKEY)
-
-<end of snip>
-
- The module sequence is trivial:
-
-/sbin/insmod soundcore
-/sbin/insmod sound
-/sbin/insmod uart401
-# insert this first
-/sbin/insmod ad1848 io=0x530 irq=7 dma=0 soundpro=1
-# The sb module is an alternative to the ad1848 (Microsoft Sound System)
-# Anyhow, this is full duplex and has MIDI
-/sbin/insmod sb io=0x220 dma=1 dma16=5 irq=5 mpu_io=0x330
-
-
-
-Alma Chao <elysian@ethereal.torsion.org> suggests the following in
-a /etc/modprobe.d/*conf file:
-
-alias sound ad1848
-alias synth0 opl3
-options ad1848 io=0x530 irq=7 dma=0 soundpro=1
-options opl3 io=0x388
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS b/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS
deleted file mode 100644
index bba93b4d2def..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
-Documentation for the ESS AudioDrive chips
-
-In 2.4 kernels the SoundBlaster driver not only tries to detect an ESS chip, it
-tries to detect the type of ESS chip too. The correct detection of the chip
-doesn't always succeed however, so unless you use the kernel isapnp facilities
-(and you chip is pnp capable) the default behaviour is 2.0 behaviour which
-means: only detect ES688 and ES1688.
-
-All ESS chips now have a recording level setting. This is a need-to-have for
-people who want to use their ESS for recording sound.
-
-Every chip that's detected as a later-than-es1688 chip has a 6 bits logarithmic
-master volume control.
-
-Every chip that's detected as a ES1887 now has Full Duplex support. Made a
-little testprogram that shows that is works, haven't seen a real program that
-needs this however.
-
-For ESS chips an additional parameter "esstype" can be specified. This controls
-the (auto) detection of the ESS chips. It can have 3 kinds of values:
-
--1 Act like 2.0 kernels: only detect ES688 or ES1688.
-0 Try to auto-detect the chip (may fail for ES1688)
-688 The chip will be treated as ES688
-1688 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1688
-1868 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1868
-1869 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1869
-1788 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1788
-1887 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1887
-1888 ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ES1888
-
-Because Full Duplex is supported for ES1887 you can specify a second DMA
-channel by specifying module parameter dma16. It can be one of: 0, 1, 3 or 5.
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS1868 b/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS1868
deleted file mode 100644
index 55e922f21bc0..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/ESS1868
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,55 +0,0 @@
-Documentation for the ESS1868F AudioDrive PnP sound card
-
-The ESS1868 sound card is a PnP ESS1688-compatible 16-bit sound card.
-
-It should be automatically detected by the Linux Kernel isapnp support when you
-load the sb.o module. Otherwise you should take care of:
-
- * The ESS1868 does not allow use of a 16-bit DMA, thus DMA 0, 1, 2, and 3
- may only be used.
-
- * isapnptools version 1.14 does work with ESS1868. Earlier versions might
- not.
-
- * Sound support MUST be compiled as MODULES, not statically linked
- into the kernel.
-
-
-NOTE: this is only needed when not using the kernel isapnp support!
-
-For configuring the sound card's I/O addresses, IRQ and DMA, here is a
-sample copy of the isapnp.conf directives regarding the ESS1868:
-
-(CONFIGURE ESS1868/-1 (LD 1
-(IO 0 (BASE 0x0220))
-(IO 1 (BASE 0x0388))
-(IO 2 (BASE 0x0330))
-(DMA 0 (CHANNEL 1))
-(INT 0 (IRQ 5 (MODE +E)))
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-(for a full working isapnp.conf file, remember the
-(ISOLATE)
-(IDENTIFY *)
-at the beginning and the
-(WAITFORKEY)
-at the end.)
-
-In this setup, the main card I/O is 0x0220, FM synthesizer is 0x0388, and
-the MPU-401 MIDI port is located at 0x0330. IRQ is IRQ 5, DMA is channel 1.
-
-After configuring the sound card via isapnp, to use the card you must load
-the sound modules with the proper I/O information. Here is my setup:
-
-# ESS1868F AudioDrive initialization
-
-/sbin/modprobe sound
-/sbin/insmod uart401
-/sbin/insmod sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=-1
-/sbin/insmod mpu401 io=0x330
-/sbin/insmod opl3 io=0x388
-/sbin/insmod v_midi
-
-opl3 is the FM synthesizer
-/sbin/insmod opl3 io=0x388
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction b/Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction
deleted file mode 100644
index 42da2d8fa372..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,459 +0,0 @@
-Introduction Notes on Modular Sound Drivers and Soundcore
-Wade Hampton
-2/14/2001
-
-Purpose:
-========
-This document provides some general notes on the modular
-sound drivers and their configuration, along with the
-support modules sound.o and soundcore.o.
-
-Note, some of this probably should be added to the Sound-HOWTO!
-
-Note, soundlow.o was present with 2.2 kernels but is not
-required for 2.4.x kernels. References have been removed
-to this.
-
-
-Copying:
-========
-none
-
-
-History:
-========
-0.1.0 11/20/1998 First version, draft
-1.0.0 11/1998 Alan Cox changes, incorporation in 2.2.0
- as Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction
-1.1.0 6/30/1999 Second version, added notes on making the drivers,
- added info on multiple sound cards of similar types,]
- added more diagnostics info, added info about esd.
- added info on OSS and ALSA.
-1.1.1 19991031 Added notes on sound-slot- and sound-service.
- (Alan Cox)
-1.1.2 20000920 Modified for Kernel 2.4 (Christoph Hellwig)
-1.1.3 20010214 Minor notes and corrections (Wade Hampton)
- Added examples of sound-slot-0, etc.
-
-
-Modular Sound Drivers:
-======================
-
-Thanks to the GREAT work by Alan Cox (alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk),
-
-[And Oleg Drokin, Thomas Sailer, Andrew Veliath and more than a few
- others - not to mention Hannu's original code being designed well
- enough to cope with that kind of chopping up](Alan)
-
-the standard Linux kernels support a modular sound driver. From
-Alan's comments in linux/drivers/sound/README.FIRST:
-
- The modular sound driver patches were funded by Red Hat Software
- (www.redhat.com). The sound driver here is thus a modified version of
- Hannu's code. Please bear that in mind when considering the appropriate
- forums for bug reporting.
-
-The modular sound drivers may be loaded via insmod or modprobe.
-To support all the various sound modules, there are two general
-support modules that must be loaded first:
-
- soundcore.o: Top level handler for the sound system, provides
- a set of functions for registration of devices
- by type.
-
- sound.o: Common sound functions required by all modules.
-
-For the specific sound modules (e.g., sb.o for the Soundblaster),
-read the documentation on that module to determine what options
-are available, for example IRQ, address, DMA.
-
-Warning, the options for different cards sometime use different names
-for the same or a similar feature (dma1= versus dma16=). As a last
-resort, inspect the code (search for module_param).
-
-Notes:
-
-1. There is a new OpenSource sound driver called ALSA which is
- currently under development: http://www.alsa-project.org/
- The ALSA drivers support some newer hardware that may not
- be supported by this sound driver and also provide some
- additional features.
-
-2. The commercial OSS driver may be obtained from the site:
- http://www.opensound.com. This may be used for cards that
- are unsupported by the kernel driver, or may be used
- by other operating systems.
-
-3. The enlightenment sound daemon may be used for playing
- multiple sounds at the same time via a single card, eliminating
- some of the requirements for multiple sound card systems. For
- more information, see: http://www.tux.org/~ricdude/EsounD.html
- The "esd" program may be used with the real-player and mpeg
- players like mpg123 and x11amp. The newer real-player
- and some games even include built-in support for ESD!
-
-
-Building the Modules:
-=====================
-
-This document does not provide full details on building the
-kernel, etc. The notes below apply only to making the kernel
-sound modules. If this conflicts with the kernel's README,
-the README takes precedence.
-
-1. To make the kernel sound modules, cd to your /usr/src/linux
- directory (typically) and type make config, make menuconfig,
- or make xconfig (to start the command line, dialog, or x-based
- configuration tool).
-
-2. Select the Sound option and a dialog will be displayed.
-
-3. Select M (module) for "Sound card support".
-
-4. Select your sound driver(s) as a module. For ProAudio, Sound
- Blaster, etc., select M (module) for OSS sound modules.
- [thanks to Marvin Stodolsky <stodolsk@erols.com>]A
-
-5. Make the kernel (e.g., make bzImage), and install the kernel.
-
-6. Make the modules and install them (make modules; make modules_install).
-
-Note, for 2.5.x kernels, make sure you have the newer module-init-tools
-installed or modules will not be loaded properly. 2.5.x requires an
-updated module-init-tools.
-
-
-Plug and Play (PnP:
-===================
-
-If the sound card is an ISA PnP card, isapnp may be used
-to configure the card. See the file isapnp.txt in the
-directory one level up (e.g., /usr/src/linux/Documentation).
-
-Also the 2.4.x kernels provide PnP capabilities, see the
-file NEWS in this directory.
-
-PCI sound cards are highly recommended, as they are far
-easier to configure and from what I have read, they use
-less resources and are more CPU efficient.
-
-
-INSMOD:
-=======
-
-If loading via insmod, the common modules must be loaded in the
-order below BEFORE loading the other sound modules. The card-specific
-modules may then be loaded (most require parameters). For example,
-I use the following via a shell script to load my SoundBlaster:
-
-SB_BASE=0x240
-SB_IRQ=9
-SB_DMA=3
-SB_DMA2=5
-SB_MPU=0x300
-#
-echo Starting sound
-/sbin/insmod soundcore
-/sbin/insmod sound
-#
-echo Starting sound blaster....
-/sbin/insmod uart401
-/sbin/insmod sb io=$SB_BASE irq=$SB_IRQ dma=$SB_DMA dma16=$SB_DMA2 mpu_io=$SB_MP
-
-When using sound as a module, I typically put these commands
-in a file such as /root/soundon.sh.
-
-
-MODPROBE:
-=========
-
-If loading via modprobe, these common files are automatically loaded when
-requested by modprobe. For example, my /etc/modprobe.d/oss.conf contains:
-
-alias sound sb
-options sb io=0x240 irq=9 dma=3 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x300
-
-All you need to do to load the module is:
-
- /sbin/modprobe sb
-
-
-Sound Status:
-=============
-
-The status of sound may be read/checked by:
- cat (anyfile).au >/dev/audio
-
-[WWH: This may not work properly for SoundBlaster PCI 128 cards
-such as the es1370/1 (see the es1370/1 files in this directory)
-as they do not automatically support uLaw on /dev/audio.]
-
-The status of the modules and which modules depend on
-which other modules may be checked by:
- /sbin/lsmod
-
-/sbin/lsmod should show something like the following:
- sb 26280 0
- uart401 5640 0 [sb]
- sound 57112 0 [sb uart401]
- soundcore 1968 8 [sb sound]
-
-
-Removing Sound:
-===============
-
-Sound may be removed by using /sbin/rmmod in the reverse order
-in which you load the modules. Note, if a program has a sound device
-open (e.g., xmixer), that module (and the modules on which it
-depends) may not be unloaded.
-
-For example, I use the following to remove my Soundblaster (rmmod
-in the reverse order in which I loaded the modules):
-
-/sbin/rmmod sb
-/sbin/rmmod uart401
-/sbin/rmmod sound
-/sbin/rmmod soundcore
-
-When using sound as a module, I typically put these commands
-in a script such as /root/soundoff.sh.
-
-
-Removing Sound for use with OSS:
-================================
-
-If you get really stuck or have a card that the kernel modules
-will not support, you can get a commercial sound driver from
-http://www.opensound.com. Before loading the commercial sound
-driver, you should do the following:
-
-1. remove sound modules (detailed above)
-2. remove the sound modules from /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf
-3. move the sound modules from /lib/modules/<kernel>/misc
- (for example, I make a /lib/modules/<kernel>/misc/tmp
- directory and copy the sound module files to that
- directory).
-
-
-Multiple Sound Cards:
-=====================
-
-The sound drivers will support multiple sound cards and there
-are some great applications like multitrack that support them.
-Typically, you need two sound cards of different types. Note, this
-uses more precious interrupts and DMA channels and sometimes
-can be a configuration nightmare. I have heard reports of 3-4
-sound cards (typically I only use 2). You can sometimes use
-multiple PCI sound cards of the same type.
-
-On my machine I have two sound cards (cs4232 and Soundblaster Vibra
-16). By loading sound as modules, I can control which is the first
-sound device (/dev/dsp, /dev/audio, /dev/mixer) and which is
-the second. Normally, the cs4232 (Dell sound on the motherboard)
-would be the first sound device, but I prefer the Soundblaster.
-All you have to do is to load the one you want as /dev/dsp
-first (in my case "sb") and then load the other one
-(in my case "cs4232").
-
-If you have two cards of the same type that are jumpered
-cards or different PnP revisions, you may load the same
-module twice. For example, I have a SoundBlaster vibra 16
-and an older SoundBlaster 16 (jumpers). To load the module
-twice, you need to do the following:
-
-1. Copy the sound modules to a new name. For example
- sb.o could be copied (or symlinked) to sb1.o for the
- second SoundBlaster.
-
-2. Make a second entry in /etc/modprobe.d/*conf, for example,
- sound1 or sb1. This second entry should refer to the
- new module names for example sb1, and should include
- the I/O, etc. for the second sound card.
-
-3. Update your soundon.sh script, etc.
-
-Warning: I have never been able to get two PnP sound cards of the
-same type to load at the same time. I have tried this several times
-with the Soundblaster Vibra 16 cards. OSS has indicated that this
-is a PnP problem.... If anyone has any luck doing this, please
-send me an E-MAIL. PCI sound cards should not have this problem.a
-Since this was originally release, I have received a couple of
-mails from people who have accomplished this!
-
-NOTE: In Linux 2.4 the Sound Blaster driver (and only this one yet)
-supports multiple cards with one module by default.
-Read the file 'Soundblaster' in this directory for details.
-
-
-Sound Problems:
-===============
-
-First RTFM (including the troubleshooting section
-in the Sound-HOWTO).
-
-1) If you are having problems loading the modules (for
- example, if you get device conflict errors) try the
- following:
-
- A) If you have Win95 or NT on the same computer,
- write down what addresses, IRQ, and DMA channels
- those were using for the same hardware. You probably
- can use these addresses, IRQs, and DMA channels.
- You should really do this BEFORE attempting to get
- sound working!
-
- B) Check (cat) /proc/interrupts, /proc/ioports,
- and /proc/dma. Are you trying to use an address,
- IRQ or DMA port that another device is using?
-
- C) Check (cat) /proc/isapnp
-
- D) Inspect your /var/log/messages file. Often that will
- indicate what IRQ or IO port could not be obtained.
-
- E) Try another port or IRQ. Note this may involve
- using the PnP tools to move the sound card to
- another location. Sometimes this is the only way
- and it is more or less trial and error.
-
-2) If you get motor-boating (the same sound or part of a
- sound clip repeated), you probably have either an IRQ
- or DMA conflict. Move the card to another IRQ or DMA
- port. This has happened to me when playing long files
- when I had an IRQ conflict.
-
-3. If you get dropouts or pauses when playing high sample
- rate files such as using mpg123 or x11amp/xmms, you may
- have too slow of a CPU and may have to use the options to
- play the files at 1/2 speed. For example, you may use
- the -2 or -4 option on mpg123. You may also get this
- when trying to play mpeg files stored on a CD-ROM
- (my Toshiba T8000 PII/366 sometimes has this problem).
-
-4. If you get "cannot access device" errors, your /dev/dsp
- files, etc. may be set to owner root, mode 600. You
- may have to use the command:
- chmod 666 /dev/dsp /dev/mixer /dev/audio
-
-5. If you get "device busy" errors, another program has the
- sound device open. For example, if using the Enlightenment
- sound daemon "esd", the "esd" program has the sound device.
- If using "esd", please RTFM the docs on ESD. For example,
- esddsp <program> may be used to play files via a non-esd
- aware program.
-
-6) Ask for help on the sound list or send E-MAIL to the
- sound driver author/maintainer.
-
-7) Turn on debug in drivers/sound/sound_config.h (DEB, DDB, MDB).
-
-8) If the system reports insufficient DMA memory then you may want to
- load sound with the "dmabufs=1" option. Or in /etc/conf.modules add
-
- preinstall sound dmabufs=1
-
- This makes the sound system allocate its buffers and hang onto them.
-
- You may also set persistent DMA when building a 2.4.x kernel.
-
-
-Configuring Sound:
-==================
-
-There are several ways of configuring your sound:
-
-1) On the kernel command line (when using the sound driver(s)
- compiled in the kernel). Check the driver source and
- documentation for details.
-
-2) On the command line when using insmod or in a bash script
- using command line calls to load sound.
-
-3) In /etc/modprobe.d/*conf when using modprobe.
-
-4) Via Red Hat's GPL'd /usr/sbin/sndconfig program (text based).
-
-5) Via the OSS soundconf program (with the commercial version
- of the OSS driver.
-
-6) By just loading the module and let isapnp do everything relevant
- for you. This works only with a few drivers yet and - of course -
- only with isapnp hardware.
-
-And I am sure, several other ways.
-
-Anyone want to write a linuxconf module for configuring sound?
-
-
-Module Loading:
-===============
-
-When a sound card is first referenced and sound is modular, the sound system
-will ask for the sound devices to be loaded. Initially it requests that
-the driver for the sound system is loaded. It then will ask for
-sound-slot-0, where 0 is the first sound card. (sound-slot-1 the second and
-so on). Thus you can do
-
-alias sound-slot-0 sb
-
-To load a soundblaster at this point. If the slot loading does not provide
-the desired device - for example a soundblaster does not directly provide
-a midi synth in all cases then it will request "sound-service-0-n" where n
-is
-
- 0 Mixer
-
- 2 MIDI
-
- 3, 4 DSP audio
-
-
-For example, I use the following to load my Soundblaster PCI 128
-(ES 1371) card first, followed by my SoundBlaster Vibra 16 card,
-then by my TV card:
-
-# Load the Soundblaster PCI 128 as /dev/dsp, /dev/dsp1, /dev/mixer
-alias sound-slot-0 es1371
-
-# Load the Soundblaster Vibra 16 as /dev/dsp2, /dev/mixer1
-alias sound-slot-1 sb
-options sb io=0x240 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x330
-
-# Load the BTTV (TV card) as /dev/mixer2
-alias sound-slot-2 bttv
-alias sound-service-2-0 tvmixer
-
-pre-install bttv modprobe tuner ; modprobe tvmixer
-pre-install tvmixer modprobe msp3400; modprobe tvaudio
-options tuner debug=0 type=8
-options bttv card=0 radio=0 pll=0
-
-
-For More Information (RTFM):
-============================
-1) Information on kernel modules: manual pages for insmod and modprobe.
-
-2) Information on PnP, RTFM manual pages for isapnp.
-
-3) Sound-HOWTO and Sound-Playing-HOWTO.
-
-4) OSS's WWW site at http://www.opensound.com.
-
-5) All the files in Documentation/sound.
-
-6) The comments and code in linux/drivers/sound.
-
-7) The sndconfig and rhsound documentation from Red Hat.
-
-8) The Linux-sound mailing list: sound-list@redhat.com.
-
-9) Enlightenment documentation (for info on esd)
- http://www.tux.org/~ricdude/EsounD.html.
-
-10) ALSA home page: http://www.alsa-project.org/
-
-
-Contact Information:
-====================
-Wade Hampton: (whampton@staffnet.com)
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/MultiSound b/Documentation/sound/oss/MultiSound
deleted file mode 100644
index e4a18bb7f73a..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/MultiSound
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1137 +0,0 @@
-#! /bin/sh
-#
-# Turtle Beach MultiSound Driver Notes
-# -- Andrew Veliath <andrewtv@usa.net>
-#
-# Last update: September 10, 1998
-# Corresponding msnd driver: 0.8.3
-#
-# ** This file is a README (top part) and shell archive (bottom part).
-# The corresponding archived utility sources can be unpacked by
-# running `sh MultiSound' (the utilities are only needed for the
-# Pinnacle and Fiji cards). **
-#
-#
-# -=-=- Getting Firmware -=-=-
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# See the section `Obtaining and Creating Firmware Files' in this
-# document for instructions on obtaining the necessary firmware
-# files.
-#
-#
-# Supported Features
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# Currently, full-duplex digital audio (/dev/dsp only, /dev/audio is
-# not currently available) and mixer functionality (/dev/mixer) are
-# supported (memory mapped digital audio is not yet supported).
-# Digital transfers and monitoring can be done as well if you have
-# the digital daughterboard (see the section on using the S/PDIF port
-# for more information).
-#
-# Support for the Turtle Beach MultiSound Hurricane architecture is
-# composed of the following modules (these can also operate compiled
-# into the kernel):
-#
-# msnd - MultiSound base (requires soundcore)
-#
-# msnd_classic - Base audio/mixer support for Classic, Monetery and
-# Tahiti cards
-#
-# msnd_pinnacle - Base audio/mixer support for Pinnacle and Fiji cards
-#
-#
-# Important Notes - Read Before Using
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# The firmware files are not included (may change in future). You
-# must obtain these images from Turtle Beach (they are included in
-# the MultiSound Development Kits), and place them in /etc/sound for
-# example, and give the full paths in the Linux configuration. If
-# you are compiling in support for the MultiSound driver rather than
-# using it as a module, these firmware files must be accessible
-# during kernel compilation.
-#
-# Please note these files must be binary files, not assembler. See
-# the section later in this document for instructions to obtain these
-# files.
-#
-#
-# Configuring Card Resources
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# ** This section is very important, as your card may not work at all
-# or your machine may crash if you do not do this correctly. **
-#
-# * Classic/Monterey/Tahiti
-#
-# These cards are configured through the driver msnd_classic. You must
-# know the io port, then the driver will select the irq and memory resources
-# on the card. It is up to you to know if these are free locations or now,
-# a conflict can lock the machine up.
-#
-# * Pinnacle/Fiji
-#
-# The Pinnacle and Fiji cards have an extra config port, either
-# 0x250, 0x260 or 0x270. This port can be disabled to have the card
-# configured strictly through PnP, however you lose the ability to
-# access the IDE controller and joystick devices on this card when
-# using PnP. The included pinnaclecfg program in this shell archive
-# can be used to configure the card in non-PnP mode, and in PnP mode
-# you can use isapnptools. These are described briefly here.
-#
-# pinnaclecfg is not required; you can use the msnd_pinnacle module
-# to fully configure the card as well. However, pinnaclecfg can be
-# used to change the resource values of a particular device after the
-# msnd_pinnacle module has been loaded. If you are compiling the
-# driver into the kernel, you must set these values during compile
-# time, however other peripheral resource values can be changed with
-# the pinnaclecfg program after the kernel is loaded.
-#
-#
-# *** PnP mode
-#
-# Use pnpdump to obtain a sample configuration if you can; I was able
-# to obtain one with the command `pnpdump 1 0x203' -- this may vary
-# for you (running pnpdump by itself did not work for me). Then,
-# edit this file and use isapnp to uncomment and set the card values.
-# Use these values when inserting the msnd_pinnacle module. Using
-# this method, you can set the resources for the DSP and the Kurzweil
-# synth (Pinnacle). Since Linux does not directly support PnP
-# devices, you may have difficulty when using the card in PnP mode
-# when it the driver is compiled into the kernel. Using non-PnP mode
-# is preferable in this case.
-#
-# Here is an example mypinnacle.conf for isapnp that sets the card to
-# io base 0x210, irq 5 and mem 0xd8000, and also sets the Kurzweil
-# synth to 0x330 and irq 9 (may need editing for your system):
-#
-# (READPORT 0x0203)
-# (CSN 2)
-# (IDENTIFY *)
-#
-# # DSP
-# (CONFIGURE BVJ0440/-1 (LD 0
-# (INT 0 (IRQ 5 (MODE +E))) (IO 0 (BASE 0x0210)) (MEM 0 (BASE 0x0d8000))
-# (ACT Y)))
-#
-# # Kurzweil Synth (Pinnacle Only)
-# (CONFIGURE BVJ0440/-1 (LD 1
-# (IO 0 (BASE 0x0330)) (INT 0 (IRQ 9 (MODE +E)))
-# (ACT Y)))
-#
-# (WAITFORKEY)
-#
-#
-# *** Non-PnP mode
-#
-# The second way is by running the card in non-PnP mode. This
-# actually has some advantages in that you can access some other
-# devices on the card, such as the joystick and IDE controller. To
-# configure the card, unpack this shell archive and build the
-# pinnaclecfg program. Using this program, you can assign the
-# resource values to the card's devices, or disable the devices. As
-# an alternative to using pinnaclecfg, you can specify many of the
-# configuration values when loading the msnd_pinnacle module (or
-# during kernel configuration when compiling the driver into the
-# kernel).
-#
-# If you specify cfg=0x250 for the msnd_pinnacle module, it
-# automatically configure the card to the given io, irq and memory
-# values using that config port (the config port is jumper selectable
-# on the card to 0x250, 0x260 or 0x270).
-#
-# See the `msnd_pinnacle Additional Options' section below for more
-# information on these parameters (also, if you compile the driver
-# directly into the kernel, these extra parameters can be useful
-# here).
-#
-#
-# ** It is very easy to cause problems in your machine if you choose a
-# resource value which is incorrect. **
-#
-#
-# Examples
-# ~~~~~~~~
-#
-# * MultiSound Classic/Monterey/Tahiti:
-#
-# modprobe soundcore
-# insmod msnd
-# insmod msnd_classic io=0x290 irq=7 mem=0xd0000
-#
-# * MultiSound Pinnacle in PnP mode:
-#
-# modprobe soundcore
-# insmod msnd
-# isapnp mypinnacle.conf
-# insmod msnd_pinnacle io=0x210 irq=5 mem=0xd8000 <-- match mypinnacle.conf values
-#
-# * MultiSound Pinnacle in non-PnP mode (replace 0x250 with your configuration port,
-# one of 0x250, 0x260 or 0x270):
-#
-# insmod soundcore
-# insmod msnd
-# insmod msnd_pinnacle cfg=0x250 io=0x290 irq=5 mem=0xd0000
-#
-# * To use the MPU-compatible Kurzweil synth on the Pinnacle in PnP
-# mode, add the following (assumes you did `isapnp mypinnacle.conf'):
-#
-# insmod sound
-# insmod mpu401 io=0x330 irq=9 <-- match mypinnacle.conf values
-#
-# * To use the MPU-compatible Kurzweil synth on the Pinnacle in non-PnP
-# mode, add the following. Note how we first configure the peripheral's
-# resources, _then_ install a Linux driver for it:
-#
-# insmod sound
-# pinnaclecfg 0x250 mpu 0x330 9
-# insmod mpu401 io=0x330 irq=9
-#
-# -- OR you can use the following sequence without pinnaclecfg in non-PnP mode:
-#
-# insmod soundcore
-# insmod msnd
-# insmod msnd_pinnacle cfg=0x250 io=0x290 irq=5 mem=0xd0000 mpu_io=0x330 mpu_irq=9
-# insmod sound
-# insmod mpu401 io=0x330 irq=9
-#
-# * To setup the joystick port on the Pinnacle in non-PnP mode (though
-# you have to find the actual Linux joystick driver elsewhere), you
-# can use pinnaclecfg:
-#
-# pinnaclecfg 0x250 joystick 0x200
-#
-# -- OR you can configure this using msnd_pinnacle with the following:
-#
-# insmod soundcore
-# insmod msnd
-# insmod msnd_pinnacle cfg=0x250 io=0x290 irq=5 mem=0xd0000 joystick_io=0x200
-#
-#
-# msnd_classic, msnd_pinnacle Required Options
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# If the following options are not given, the module will not load.
-# Examine the kernel message log for informative error messages.
-# WARNING--probing isn't supported so try to make sure you have the
-# correct shared memory area, otherwise you may experience problems.
-#
-# io I/O base of DSP, e.g. io=0x210
-# irq IRQ number, e.g. irq=5
-# mem Shared memory area, e.g. mem=0xd8000
-#
-#
-# msnd_classic, msnd_pinnacle Additional Options
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# fifosize The digital audio FIFOs, in kilobytes. If not
-# specified, the default will be used. Increasing
-# this value will reduce the chance of a FIFO
-# underflow at the expense of increasing overall
-# latency. For example, fifosize=512 will
-# allocate 512kB read and write FIFOs (1MB total).
-# While this may reduce dropouts, a heavy machine
-# load will undoubtedly starve the FIFO of data
-# and you will eventually get dropouts. One
-# option is to alter the scheduling priority of
-# the playback process, using `nice' or some form
-# of POSIX soft real-time scheduling.
-#
-# calibrate_signal Setting this to one calibrates the ADCs to the
-# signal, zero calibrates to the card (defaults
-# to zero).
-#
-#
-# msnd_pinnacle Additional Options
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# digital Specify digital=1 to enable the S/PDIF input
-# if you have the digital daughterboard
-# adapter. This will enable access to the
-# DIGITAL1 input for the soundcard in the mixer.
-# Some mixer programs might have trouble setting
-# the DIGITAL1 source as an input. If you have
-# trouble, you can try the setdigital.c program
-# at the bottom of this document.
-#
-# cfg Non-PnP configuration port for the Pinnacle
-# and Fiji (typically 0x250, 0x260 or 0x270,
-# depending on the jumper configuration). If
-# this option is omitted, then it is assumed
-# that the card is in PnP mode, and that the
-# specified DSP resource values are already
-# configured with PnP (i.e. it won't attempt to
-# do any sort of configuration).
-#
-# When the Pinnacle is in non-PnP mode, you can use the following
-# options to configure particular devices. If a full specification
-# for a device is not given, then the device is not configured. Note
-# that you still must use a Linux driver for any of these devices
-# once their resources are setup (such as the Linux joystick driver,
-# or the MPU401 driver from OSS for the Kurzweil synth).
-#
-# mpu_io I/O port of MPU (on-board Kurzweil synth)
-# mpu_irq IRQ of MPU (on-board Kurzweil synth)
-# ide_io0 First I/O port of IDE controller
-# ide_io1 Second I/O port of IDE controller
-# ide_irq IRQ IDE controller
-# joystick_io I/O port of joystick
-#
-#
-# Obtaining and Creating Firmware Files
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# For the Classic/Tahiti/Monterey
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# Download to /tmp and unzip the following file from Turtle Beach:
-#
-# ftp://ftp.voyetra.com/pub/tbs/msndcl/msndvkit.zip
-#
-# When unzipped, unzip the file named MsndFiles.zip. Then copy the
-# following firmware files to /etc/sound (note the file renaming):
-#
-# cp DSPCODE/MSNDINIT.BIN /etc/sound/msndinit.bin
-# cp DSPCODE/MSNDPERM.REB /etc/sound/msndperm.bin
-#
-# When configuring the Linux kernel, specify /etc/sound/msndinit.bin and
-# /etc/sound/msndperm.bin for the two firmware files (Linux kernel
-# versions older than 2.2 do not ask for firmware paths, and are
-# hardcoded to /etc/sound).
-#
-# If you are compiling the driver into the kernel, these files must
-# be accessible during compilation, but will not be needed later.
-# The files must remain, however, if the driver is used as a module.
-#
-#
-# For the Pinnacle/Fiji
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# Download to /tmp and unzip the following file from Turtle Beach (be
-# sure to use the entire URL; some have had trouble navigating to the
-# URL):
-#
-# ftp://ftp.voyetra.com/pub/tbs/pinn/pnddk100.zip
-#
-# Unpack this shell archive, and run make in the created directory
-# (you need a C compiler and flex to build the utilities). This
-# should give you the executables conv, pinnaclecfg and setdigital.
-# conv is only used temporarily here to create the firmware files,
-# while pinnaclecfg is used to configure the Pinnacle or Fiji card in
-# non-PnP mode, and setdigital can be used to set the S/PDIF input on
-# the mixer (pinnaclecfg and setdigital should be copied to a
-# convenient place, possibly run during system initialization).
-#
-# To generating the firmware files with the `conv' program, we create
-# the binary firmware files by doing the following conversion
-# (assuming the archive unpacked into a directory named PINNDDK):
-#
-# ./conv < PINNDDK/dspcode/pndspini.asm > /etc/sound/pndspini.bin
-# ./conv < PINNDDK/dspcode/pndsperm.asm > /etc/sound/pndsperm.bin
-#
-# The conv (and conv.l) program is not needed after conversion and can
-# be safely deleted. Then, when configuring the Linux kernel, specify
-# /etc/sound/pndspini.bin and /etc/sound/pndsperm.bin for the two
-# firmware files (Linux kernel versions older than 2.2 do not ask for
-# firmware paths, and are hardcoded to /etc/sound).
-#
-# If you are compiling the driver into the kernel, these files must
-# be accessible during compilation, but will not be needed later.
-# The files must remain, however, if the driver is used as a module.
-#
-#
-# Using Digital I/O with the S/PDIF Port
-# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-#
-# If you have a Pinnacle or Fiji with the digital daughterboard and
-# want to set it as the input source, you can use this program if you
-# have trouble trying to do it with a mixer program (be sure to
-# insert the module with the digital=1 option, or say Y to the option
-# during compiled-in kernel operation). Upon selection of the S/PDIF
-# port, you should be able monitor and record from it.
-#
-# There is something to note about using the S/PDIF port. Digital
-# timing is taken from the digital signal, so if a signal is not
-# connected to the port and it is selected as recording input, you
-# will find PCM playback to be distorted in playback rate. Also,
-# attempting to record at a sampling rate other than the DAT rate may
-# be problematic (i.e. trying to record at 8000Hz when the DAT signal
-# is 44100Hz). If you have a problem with this, set the recording
-# input to analog if you need to record at a rate other than that of
-# the DAT rate.
-#
-#
-# -- Shell archive attached below, just run `sh MultiSound' to extract.
-# Contains Pinnacle/Fiji utilities to convert firmware, configure
-# in non-PnP mode, and select the DIGITAL1 input for the mixer.
-#
-#
-#!/bin/sh
-# This is a shell archive (produced by GNU sharutils 4.2).
-# To extract the files from this archive, save it to some FILE, remove
-# everything before the `!/bin/sh' line above, then type `sh FILE'.
-#
-# Made on 1998-12-04 10:07 EST by <andrewtv@ztransform.velsoft.com>.
-# Source directory was `/home/andrewtv/programming/pinnacle/pinnacle'.
-#
-# Existing files will *not* be overwritten unless `-c' is specified.
-#
-# This shar contains:
-# length mode name
-# ------ ---------- ------------------------------------------
-# 2046 -rw-rw-r-- MultiSound.d/setdigital.c
-# 10235 -rw-rw-r-- MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c
-# 106 -rw-rw-r-- MultiSound.d/Makefile
-# 141 -rw-rw-r-- MultiSound.d/conv.l
-# 1472 -rw-rw-r-- MultiSound.d/msndreset.c
-#
-save_IFS="${IFS}"
-IFS="${IFS}:"
-gettext_dir=FAILED
-locale_dir=FAILED
-first_param="$1"
-for dir in $PATH
-do
- if test "$gettext_dir" = FAILED && test -f $dir/gettext \
- && ($dir/gettext --version >/dev/null 2>&1)
- then
- set `$dir/gettext --version 2>&1`
- if test "$3" = GNU
- then
- gettext_dir=$dir
- fi
- fi
- if test "$locale_dir" = FAILED && test -f $dir/shar \
- && ($dir/shar --print-text-domain-dir >/dev/null 2>&1)
- then
- locale_dir=`$dir/shar --print-text-domain-dir`
- fi
-done
-IFS="$save_IFS"
-if test "$locale_dir" = FAILED || test "$gettext_dir" = FAILED
-then
- echo=echo
-else
- TEXTDOMAINDIR=$locale_dir
- export TEXTDOMAINDIR
- TEXTDOMAIN=sharutils
- export TEXTDOMAIN
- echo="$gettext_dir/gettext -s"
-fi
-touch -am 1231235999 $$.touch >/dev/null 2>&1
-if test ! -f 1231235999 && test -f $$.touch; then
- shar_touch=touch
-else
- shar_touch=:
- echo
- $echo 'WARNING: not restoring timestamps. Consider getting and'
- $echo "installing GNU \`touch', distributed in GNU File Utilities..."
- echo
-fi
-rm -f 1231235999 $$.touch
-#
-if mkdir _sh01426; then
- $echo 'x -' 'creating lock directory'
-else
- $echo 'failed to create lock directory'
- exit 1
-fi
-# ============= MultiSound.d/setdigital.c ==============
-if test ! -d 'MultiSound.d'; then
- $echo 'x -' 'creating directory' 'MultiSound.d'
- mkdir 'MultiSound.d'
-fi
-if test -f 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' && test "$first_param" != -c; then
- $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' '(file already exists)'
-else
- $echo 'x -' extracting 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' '(text)'
- sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' &&
-/*********************************************************************
-X *
-X * setdigital.c - sets the DIGITAL1 input for a mixer
-X *
-X * Copyright (C) 1998 Andrew Veliath
-X *
-X * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-X * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-X * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-X * (at your option) any later version.
-X *
-X * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-X * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-X * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-X * GNU General Public License for more details.
-X *
-X * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-X * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-X * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-X *
-X ********************************************************************/
-X
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <unistd.h>
-#include <fcntl.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <sys/stat.h>
-#include <sys/ioctl.h>
-#include <sys/soundcard.h>
-X
-int main(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int fd;
-X unsigned long recmask, recsrc;
-X
-X if (argc != 2) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "usage: setdigital <mixer device>\n");
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if ((fd = open(argv[1], O_RDWR)) < 0) {
-X perror(argv[1]);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if (ioctl(fd, SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECMASK, &recmask) < 0) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: ioctl read recording mask failed\n");
-X perror("ioctl");
-X close(fd);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if (!(recmask & SOUND_MASK_DIGITAL1)) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: cannot find DIGITAL1 device in mixer\n");
-X close(fd);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if (ioctl(fd, SOUND_MIXER_READ_RECSRC, &recsrc) < 0) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: ioctl read recording source failed\n");
-X perror("ioctl");
-X close(fd);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X recsrc |= SOUND_MASK_DIGITAL1;
-X
-X if (ioctl(fd, SOUND_MIXER_WRITE_RECSRC, &recsrc) < 0) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: ioctl write recording source failed\n");
-X perror("ioctl");
-X close(fd);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X close(fd);
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-SHAR_EOF
- $shar_touch -am 1204092598 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' &&
- chmod 0664 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' ||
- $echo 'restore of' 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c' 'failed'
- if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then
- md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- || $echo 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c:' 'MD5 check failed'
-e87217fc3e71288102ba41fd81f71ec4 MultiSound.d/setdigital.c
-SHAR_EOF
- else
- shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c'`"
- test 2046 -eq "$shar_count" ||
- $echo 'MultiSound.d/setdigital.c:' 'original size' '2046,' 'current size' "$shar_count!"
- fi
-fi
-# ============= MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c ==============
-if test -f 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' && test "$first_param" != -c; then
- $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' '(file already exists)'
-else
- $echo 'x -' extracting 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' '(text)'
- sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' &&
-/*********************************************************************
-X *
-X * pinnaclecfg.c - Pinnacle/Fiji Device Configuration Program
-X *
-X * This is for NON-PnP mode only. For PnP mode, use isapnptools.
-X *
-X * This is Linux-specific, and must be run with root permissions.
-X *
-X * Part of the Turtle Beach MultiSound Sound Card Driver for Linux
-X *
-X * Copyright (C) 1998 Andrew Veliath
-X *
-X * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-X * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-X * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-X * (at your option) any later version.
-X *
-X * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-X * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-X * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-X * GNU General Public License for more details.
-X *
-X * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-X * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-X * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-X *
-X ********************************************************************/
-X
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include <string.h>
-#include <errno.h>
-#include <unistd.h>
-#include <asm/io.h>
-#include <asm/types.h>
-X
-#define IREG_LOGDEVICE 0x07
-#define IREG_ACTIVATE 0x30
-#define LD_ACTIVATE 0x01
-#define LD_DISACTIVATE 0x00
-#define IREG_EECONTROL 0x3F
-#define IREG_MEMBASEHI 0x40
-#define IREG_MEMBASELO 0x41
-#define IREG_MEMCONTROL 0x42
-#define IREG_MEMRANGEHI 0x43
-#define IREG_MEMRANGELO 0x44
-#define MEMTYPE_8BIT 0x00
-#define MEMTYPE_16BIT 0x02
-#define MEMTYPE_RANGE 0x00
-#define MEMTYPE_HIADDR 0x01
-#define IREG_IO0_BASEHI 0x60
-#define IREG_IO0_BASELO 0x61
-#define IREG_IO1_BASEHI 0x62
-#define IREG_IO1_BASELO 0x63
-#define IREG_IRQ_NUMBER 0x70
-#define IREG_IRQ_TYPE 0x71
-#define IRQTYPE_HIGH 0x02
-#define IRQTYPE_LOW 0x00
-#define IRQTYPE_LEVEL 0x01
-#define IRQTYPE_EDGE 0x00
-X
-#define HIBYTE(w) ((BYTE)(((WORD)(w) >> 8) & 0xFF))
-#define LOBYTE(w) ((BYTE)(w))
-#define MAKEWORD(low,hi) ((WORD)(((BYTE)(low))|(((WORD)((BYTE)(hi)))<<8)))
-X
-typedef __u8 BYTE;
-typedef __u16 USHORT;
-typedef __u16 WORD;
-X
-static int config_port = -1;
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg(int cfg, int reg, int value)
-{
-X outb(reg, cfg);
-X outb(value, cfg + 1);
-X if (value != inb(cfg + 1)) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: msnd_write_cfg: I/O error\n");
-X return -EIO;
-X }
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg(int cfg, int reg)
-{
-X outb(reg, cfg);
-X return inb(cfg + 1);
-}
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg_io0(int cfg, int num, WORD io)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO0_BASEHI, HIBYTE(io)))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO0_BASELO, LOBYTE(io)))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg_io0(int cfg, int num, WORD *io)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X
-X *io = MAKEWORD(msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO0_BASELO),
-X msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO0_BASEHI));
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg_io1(int cfg, int num, WORD io)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO1_BASEHI, HIBYTE(io)))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO1_BASELO, LOBYTE(io)))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg_io1(int cfg, int num, WORD *io)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X
-X *io = MAKEWORD(msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO1_BASELO),
-X msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_IO1_BASEHI));
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg_irq(int cfg, int num, WORD irq)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IRQ_NUMBER, LOBYTE(irq)))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_IRQ_TYPE, IRQTYPE_EDGE))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg_irq(int cfg, int num, WORD *irq)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X
-X *irq = msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_IRQ_NUMBER);
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg_mem(int cfg, int num, int mem)
-{
-X WORD wmem;
-X
-X mem >>= 8;
-X mem &= 0xfff;
-X wmem = (WORD)mem;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_MEMBASEHI, HIBYTE(wmem)))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_MEMBASELO, LOBYTE(wmem)))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (wmem && msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_MEMCONTROL, (MEMTYPE_HIADDR | MEMTYPE_16BIT)))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg_mem(int cfg, int num, int *mem)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X
-X *mem = MAKEWORD(msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_MEMBASELO),
-X msnd_read_cfg(cfg, IREG_MEMBASEHI));
-X *mem <<= 8;
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_activate_logical(int cfg, int num)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_ACTIVATE, LD_ACTIVATE))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_write_cfg_logical(int cfg, int num, WORD io0, WORD io1, WORD irq, int mem)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg_io0(cfg, num, io0))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg_io1(cfg, num, io1))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg_irq(cfg, num, irq))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_write_cfg_mem(cfg, num, mem))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_activate_logical(cfg, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int msnd_read_cfg_logical(int cfg, int num, WORD *io0, WORD *io1, WORD *irq, int *mem)
-{
-X if (msnd_write_cfg(cfg, IREG_LOGDEVICE, num))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_read_cfg_io0(cfg, num, io0))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_read_cfg_io1(cfg, num, io1))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_read_cfg_irq(cfg, num, irq))
-X return -EIO;
-X if (msnd_read_cfg_mem(cfg, num, mem))
-X return -EIO;
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static void usage(void)
-{
-X fprintf(stderr,
-X "\n"
-X "pinnaclecfg 1.0\n"
-X "\n"
-X "usage: pinnaclecfg <config port> [device config]\n"
-X "\n"
-X "This is for use with the card in NON-PnP mode only.\n"
-X "\n"
-X "Available devices (not all available for Fiji):\n"
-X "\n"
-X " Device Description\n"
-X " -------------------------------------------------------------------\n"
-X " reset Reset all devices (i.e. disable)\n"
-X " show Display current device configurations\n"
-X "\n"
-X " dsp <io> <irq> <mem> Audio device\n"
-X " mpu <io> <irq> Internal Kurzweil synth\n"
-X " ide <io0> <io1> <irq> On-board IDE controller\n"
-X " joystick <io> Joystick port\n"
-X "\n");
-X exit(1);
-}
-X
-static int cfg_reset(void)
-{
-X int i;
-X
-X for (i = 0; i < 4; ++i)
-X msnd_write_cfg_logical(config_port, i, 0, 0, 0, 0);
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int cfg_show(void)
-{
-X int i;
-X int count = 0;
-X
-X for (i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
-X WORD io0, io1, irq;
-X int mem;
-X msnd_read_cfg_logical(config_port, i, &io0, &io1, &irq, &mem);
-X switch (i) {
-X case 0:
-X if (io0 || irq || mem) {
-X printf("dsp 0x%x %d 0x%x\n", io0, irq, mem);
-X ++count;
-X }
-X break;
-X case 1:
-X if (io0 || irq) {
-X printf("mpu 0x%x %d\n", io0, irq);
-X ++count;
-X }
-X break;
-X case 2:
-X if (io0 || io1 || irq) {
-X printf("ide 0x%x 0x%x %d\n", io0, io1, irq);
-X ++count;
-X }
-X break;
-X case 3:
-X if (io0) {
-X printf("joystick 0x%x\n", io0);
-X ++count;
-X }
-X break;
-X }
-X }
-X
-X if (count == 0)
-X fprintf(stderr, "no devices configured\n");
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-X
-static int cfg_dsp(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int io, irq, mem;
-X
-X if (argc < 3 ||
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &io) != 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[1], "%d", &irq) != 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[2], "0x%x", &mem) != 1)
-X usage();
-X
-X if (!(io == 0x290 ||
-X io == 0x260 ||
-X io == 0x250 ||
-X io == 0x240 ||
-X io == 0x230 ||
-X io == 0x220 ||
-X io == 0x210 ||
-X io == 0x3e0)) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: io must be one of "
-X "210, 220, 230, 240, 250, 260, 290, or 3E0\n");
-X usage();
-X }
-X
-X if (!(irq == 5 ||
-X irq == 7 ||
-X irq == 9 ||
-X irq == 10 ||
-X irq == 11 ||
-X irq == 12)) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: irq must be one of "
-X "5, 7, 9, 10, 11 or 12\n");
-X usage();
-X }
-X
-X if (!(mem == 0xb0000 ||
-X mem == 0xc8000 ||
-X mem == 0xd0000 ||
-X mem == 0xd8000 ||
-X mem == 0xe0000 ||
-X mem == 0xe8000)) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: mem must be one of "
-X "0xb0000, 0xc8000, 0xd0000, 0xd8000, 0xe0000 or 0xe8000\n");
-X usage();
-X }
-X
-X return msnd_write_cfg_logical(config_port, 0, io, 0, irq, mem);
-}
-X
-static int cfg_mpu(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int io, irq;
-X
-X if (argc < 2 ||
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &io) != 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[1], "%d", &irq) != 1)
-X usage();
-X
-X return msnd_write_cfg_logical(config_port, 1, io, 0, irq, 0);
-}
-X
-static int cfg_ide(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int io0, io1, irq;
-X
-X if (argc < 3 ||
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &io0) != 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &io1) != 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[1], "%d", &irq) != 1)
-X usage();
-X
-X return msnd_write_cfg_logical(config_port, 2, io0, io1, irq, 0);
-}
-X
-static int cfg_joystick(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int io;
-X
-X if (argc < 1 ||
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &io) != 1)
-X usage();
-X
-X return msnd_write_cfg_logical(config_port, 3, io, 0, 0, 0);
-}
-X
-int main(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X char *device;
-X int rv = 0;
-X
-X --argc; ++argv;
-X
-X if (argc < 2)
-X usage();
-X
-X sscanf(argv[0], "0x%x", &config_port);
-X if (config_port != 0x250 && config_port != 0x260 && config_port != 0x270) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: <config port> must be 0x250, 0x260 or 0x270\n");
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X if (ioperm(config_port, 2, 1)) {
-X perror("ioperm");
-X fprintf(stderr, "note: pinnaclecfg must be run as root\n");
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X device = argv[1];
-X
-X argc -= 2; argv += 2;
-X
-X if (strcmp(device, "reset") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_reset();
-X else if (strcmp(device, "show") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_show();
-X else if (strcmp(device, "dsp") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_dsp(argc, argv);
-X else if (strcmp(device, "mpu") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_mpu(argc, argv);
-X else if (strcmp(device, "ide") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_ide(argc, argv);
-X else if (strcmp(device, "joystick") == 0)
-X rv = cfg_joystick(argc, argv);
-X else {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: unknown device %s\n", device);
-X usage();
-X }
-X
-X if (rv)
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: device configuration failed\n");
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-SHAR_EOF
- $shar_touch -am 1204092598 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' &&
- chmod 0664 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' ||
- $echo 'restore of' 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c' 'failed'
- if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then
- md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- || $echo 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c:' 'MD5 check failed'
-366bdf27f0db767a3c7921d0a6db20fe MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c
-SHAR_EOF
- else
- shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c'`"
- test 10235 -eq "$shar_count" ||
- $echo 'MultiSound.d/pinnaclecfg.c:' 'original size' '10235,' 'current size' "$shar_count!"
- fi
-fi
-# ============= MultiSound.d/Makefile ==============
-if test -f 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' && test "$first_param" != -c; then
- $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' '(file already exists)'
-else
- $echo 'x -' extracting 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' '(text)'
- sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' &&
-CC = gcc
-CFLAGS = -O
-PROGS = setdigital msndreset pinnaclecfg conv
-X
-all: $(PROGS)
-X
-clean:
-X rm -f $(PROGS)
-SHAR_EOF
- $shar_touch -am 1204092398 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' &&
- chmod 0664 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' ||
- $echo 'restore of' 'MultiSound.d/Makefile' 'failed'
- if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then
- md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- || $echo 'MultiSound.d/Makefile:' 'MD5 check failed'
-76ca8bb44e3882edcf79c97df6c81845 MultiSound.d/Makefile
-SHAR_EOF
- else
- shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'MultiSound.d/Makefile'`"
- test 106 -eq "$shar_count" ||
- $echo 'MultiSound.d/Makefile:' 'original size' '106,' 'current size' "$shar_count!"
- fi
-fi
-# ============= MultiSound.d/conv.l ==============
-if test -f 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' && test "$first_param" != -c; then
- $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' '(file already exists)'
-else
- $echo 'x -' extracting 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' '(text)'
- sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' &&
-%%
-[ \n\t,\r]
-\;.*
-DB
-[0-9A-Fa-f]+H { int n; sscanf(yytext, "%xH", &n); printf("%c", n); }
-%%
-int yywrap() { return 1; }
-main() { yylex(); }
-SHAR_EOF
- $shar_touch -am 0828231798 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' &&
- chmod 0664 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' ||
- $echo 'restore of' 'MultiSound.d/conv.l' 'failed'
- if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then
- md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- || $echo 'MultiSound.d/conv.l:' 'MD5 check failed'
-d2411fc32cd71a00dcdc1f009e858dd2 MultiSound.d/conv.l
-SHAR_EOF
- else
- shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'MultiSound.d/conv.l'`"
- test 141 -eq "$shar_count" ||
- $echo 'MultiSound.d/conv.l:' 'original size' '141,' 'current size' "$shar_count!"
- fi
-fi
-# ============= MultiSound.d/msndreset.c ==============
-if test -f 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' && test "$first_param" != -c; then
- $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' '(file already exists)'
-else
- $echo 'x -' extracting 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' '(text)'
- sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' &&
-/*********************************************************************
-X *
-X * msndreset.c - resets the MultiSound card
-X *
-X * Copyright (C) 1998 Andrew Veliath
-X *
-X * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-X * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-X * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-X * (at your option) any later version.
-X *
-X * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-X * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-X * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-X * GNU General Public License for more details.
-X *
-X * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-X * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-X * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-X *
-X ********************************************************************/
-X
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <unistd.h>
-#include <fcntl.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <sys/stat.h>
-#include <sys/ioctl.h>
-#include <sys/soundcard.h>
-X
-int main(int argc, char *argv[])
-{
-X int fd;
-X
-X if (argc != 2) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "usage: msndreset <mixer device>\n");
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if ((fd = open(argv[1], O_RDWR)) < 0) {
-X perror(argv[1]);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X if (ioctl(fd, SOUND_MIXER_PRIVATE1, 0) < 0) {
-X fprintf(stderr, "error: msnd ioctl reset failed\n");
-X perror("ioctl");
-X close(fd);
-X exit(1);
-X }
-X
-X close(fd);
-X
-X return 0;
-}
-SHAR_EOF
- $shar_touch -am 1204100698 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' &&
- chmod 0664 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' ||
- $echo 'restore of' 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c' 'failed'
- if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then
- md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \
- || $echo 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c:' 'MD5 check failed'
-c52f876521084e8eb25e12e01dcccb8a MultiSound.d/msndreset.c
-SHAR_EOF
- else
- shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c'`"
- test 1472 -eq "$shar_count" ||
- $echo 'MultiSound.d/msndreset.c:' 'original size' '1472,' 'current size' "$shar_count!"
- fi
-fi
-rm -fr _sh01426
-exit 0
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/OPL3 b/Documentation/sound/oss/OPL3
deleted file mode 100644
index 2468ff827688..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/OPL3
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
-A pure OPL3 card is nice and easy to configure. Simply do
-
-insmod opl3 io=0x388
-
-Change the I/O address in the very unlikely case this card is differently
-configured
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/Opti b/Documentation/sound/oss/Opti
deleted file mode 100644
index 4cd5d9ab3580..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/Opti
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,218 +0,0 @@
-Support for the OPTi 82C931 chip
---------------------------------
-Note: parts of this README file apply also to other
-cards that use the mad16 driver.
-
-Some items in this README file are based on features
-added to the sound driver after Linux-2.1.91 was out.
-By the time of writing this I do not know which official
-kernel release will include these features.
-Please do not report inconsistencies on older Linux
-kernels.
-
-The OPTi 82C931 is supported in its non-PnP mode.
-Usually you do not need to set jumpers, etc. The sound driver
-will check the card status and if it is required it will
-force the card into a mode in which it can be programmed.
-
-If you have another OS installed on your computer it is recommended
-that Linux and the other OS use the same resources.
-
-Also, it is recommended that resources specified in /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf
-and resources specified in /etc/isapnp.conf agree.
-
-Compiling the sound driver
---------------------------
-I highly recommend that you build a modularized sound driver.
-This document does not cover a sound-driver which is built in
-the kernel.
-
-Sound card support should be enabled as a module (chose m).
-Answer 'm' for these items:
- Generic OPL2/OPL3 FM synthesizer support (CONFIG_SOUND_ADLIB)
- Microsoft Sound System support (CONFIG_SOUND_MSS)
- Support for OPTi MAD16 and/or Mozart based cards (CONFIG_SOUND_MAD16)
- FM synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support (CONFIG_SOUND_YM3812)
-
-The configuration menu may ask for addresses, IRQ lines or DMA
-channels. If the card is used as a module the module loading
-options will override these values.
-
-For the OPTi 931 you can answer 'n' to:
- Support MIDI in older MAD16 based cards (requires SB) (CONFIG_SOUND_MAD16_OLDCARD)
-If you do need MIDI support in a Mozart or C928 based card you
-need to answer 'm' to the above question. In that case you will
-also need to answer 'm' to:
- '100% Sound Blaster compatibles (SB16/32/64, ESS, Jazz16) support' (CONFIG_SOUND_SB)
-
-Go on and compile your kernel and modules. Install the modules. Run depmod -a.
-
-Using isapnptools
------------------
-In most systems with a PnP BIOS you do not need to use isapnp. The
-initialization provided by the BIOS is sufficient for the driver
-to pick up the card and continue initialization.
-
-If that fails, or if you have other PnP cards, you need to use isapnp
-to initialize the card.
-This was tested with isapnptools-1.11 but I recommend that you use
-isapnptools-1.13 (or newer). Run pnpdump to dump the information
-about your PnP cards. Then edit the resulting file and select
-the options of your choice. This file is normally installed as
-/etc/isapnp.conf.
-
-The driver has one limitation with respect to I/O port resources:
-IO3 base must be 0x0E0C. Although isapnp allows other ports, this
-address is hard-coded into the driver.
-
-Using kmod and autoloading the sound driver
--------------------------------------------
-Config files in '/etc/modprobe.d/' are used as below:
-
-alias mixer0 mad16
-alias audio0 mad16
-alias midi0 mad16
-alias synth0 opl3
-options sb mad16=1
-options mad16 irq=10 dma=0 dma16=1 io=0x530 joystick=1 cdtype=0
-options opl3 io=0x388
-install mad16 /sbin/modprobe -i mad16 && /sbin/ad1848_mixer_reroute 14 8 15 3 16 6
-
-If you have an MPU daughtercard or onboard MPU you will want to add to the
-"options mad16" line - eg
-
-options mad16 irq=5 dma=0 dma16=3 io=0x530 mpu_io=0x330 mpu_irq=9
-
-To set the I/O and IRQ of the MPU.
-
-
-Explain:
-
-alias mixer0 mad16
-alias audio0 mad16
-alias midi0 mad16
-alias synth0 opl3
-
-When any sound device is opened the kernel requests auto-loading
-of char-major-14. There is a built-in alias that translates this
-request to loading the main sound module.
-
-The sound module in its turn will request loading of a sub-driver
-for mixer, audio, midi or synthesizer device. The first 3 are
-supported by the mad16 driver. The synth device is supported
-by the opl3 driver.
-
-There is currently no way to autoload the sound device driver
-if more than one card is installed.
-
-options sb mad16=1
-
-This is left for historical reasons. If you enable the
-config option 'Support MIDI in older MAD16 based cards (requires SB)'
-or if you use an older mad16 driver it will force loading of the
-SoundBlaster driver. This option tells the SB driver not to look
-for a SB card but to wait for the mad16 driver.
-
-options mad16 irq=10 dma=0 dma16=1 io=0x530 joystick=1 cdtype=0
-options opl3 io=0x388
-
-post-install mad16 /sbin/ad1848_mixer_reroute 14 8 15 3 16 6
-
-This sets resources and options for the mad16 and opl3 drivers.
-I use two DMA channels (only one is required) to enable full duplex.
-joystick=1 enables the joystick port. cdtype=0 disables the cd port.
-You can also set mpu_io and mpu_irq in the mad16 options for the
-uart401 driver.
-
-This tells modprobe to run /sbin/ad1848_mixer_reroute after
-mad16 is successfully loaded and initialized. The source
-for ad1848_mixer_reroute is appended to the end of this readme
-file. It is impossible for the sound driver to know the actual
-connections to the mixer. The 3 inputs intended for cd, synth
-and line-in are mapped to the generic inputs line1, line2 and
-line3. This program reroutes these mixer channels to their
-right names (note the right mapping depends on the actual sound
-card that you use).
-The numeric parameters mean:
- 14=line1 8=cd - reroute line1 to the CD input.
- 15=line2 3=synth - reroute line2 to the synthesizer input.
- 16=line3 6=line - reroute line3 to the line input.
-For reference on other input names look at the file
-/usr/include/linux/soundcard.h.
-
-Using a joystick
------------------
-You must enable a joystick in the mad16 options. (also
-in /etc/isapnp.conf if you use it).
-Tested with regular analog joysticks.
-
-A CDROM drive connected to the sound card
------------------------------------------
-The 82C931 chip has support only for secondary ATAPI cdrom.
-(cdtype=8). Loading the mad16 driver resets the C931 chip
-and if a cdrom was already mounted it may cause a complete
-system hang. Do not use the sound card if you have an alternative.
-If you do use the sound card it is important that you load
-the mad16 driver (use "modprobe mad16" to prevent auto-unloading)
-before the cdrom is accessed the first time.
-
-Using the sound driver built-in to the kernel may help here, but...
-Most new systems have a PnP BIOS and also two IDE controllers.
-The IDE controller on the sound card may be needed only on older
-systems (which have only one IDE controller) but these systems
-also do not have a PnP BIOS - requiring isapnptools and a modularized
-driver.
-
-Known problems
---------------
-1. See the section on "A CDROM drive connected to the sound card".
-
-2. On my system the codec cannot capture companded sound samples.
- (eg., recording from /dev/audio). When any companded capture is
- requested I get stereo-16 bit samples instead. Playback of
- companded samples works well. Apparently this problem is not common
- to all C931 based cards. I do not know how to identify cards that
- have this problem.
-
-Source for ad1848_mixer_reroute.c
----------------------------------
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <fcntl.h>
-#include <linux/soundcard.h>
-
-static char *mixer_names[SOUND_MIXER_NRDEVICES] =
- SOUND_DEVICE_LABELS;
-
-int
-main(int argc, char **argv) {
- int val, from, to;
- int i, fd;
-
- fd = open("/dev/mixer", O_RDWR);
- if(fd < 0) {
- perror("/dev/mixer");
- return 1;
- }
-
- for(i = 2; i < argc; i += 2) {
- from = atoi(argv[i-1]);
- to = atoi(argv[i]);
-
- if(to == SOUND_MIXER_NONE)
- fprintf(stderr, "%s: turning off mixer %s\n",
- argv[0], mixer_names[to]);
- else
- fprintf(stderr, "%s: rerouting mixer %s to %s\n",
- argv[0], mixer_names[from], mixer_names[to]);
-
- val = from << 8 | to;
-
- if(ioctl(fd, SOUND_MIXER_PRIVATE2, &val)) {
- perror("AD1848 mixer reroute");
- return 1;
- }
- }
-
- return 0;
-}
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/PAS16 b/Documentation/sound/oss/PAS16
deleted file mode 100644
index 5c27229eec8c..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/PAS16
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,162 +0,0 @@
-Pro Audio Spectrum 16 for 2.3.99 and later
-=========================================
-by Thomas Molina (tmolina@home.com)
-last modified 3 Mar 2001
-Acknowledgement to Axel Boldt (boldt@math.ucsb.edu) for stuff taken
-from Configure.help, Riccardo Facchetti for stuff from README.OSS,
-and others whose names I could not find.
-
-This documentation is relevant for the PAS16 driver (pas2_card.c and
-friends) under kernel version 2.3.99 and later. If you are
-unfamiliar with configuring sound under Linux, please read the
-Sound-HOWTO, Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction and other
-relevant docs first.
-
-The following information is relevant information from README.OSS
-and legacy docs for the Pro Audio Spectrum 16 (PAS16):
-==================================================================
-
-The pas2_card.c driver supports the following cards --
-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.
-
-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 question about (PAS16) if you don't really have a PAS16. Sound
-configuration may also be made modular by answering m to configuration
-options presented.
-
-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).
-
- "Generic OPL2/OPL3 FM synthesizer support",
- - Answer 'y' if your card has a FM chip made by Yamaha (OPL2/OPL3/OPL4).
- The PAS16 has an OPL3-compatible FM chip.
-
-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).
-
-
-The new stuff for 2.3.99 and later
-============================================================================
-The following configuration options are relevant to configuring the PAS16:
-
-Sound card support
-CONFIG_SOUND
- If you have a sound card in your computer, i.e. if it can say more
- than an occasional beep, say Y. Be sure to have all the information
- about your sound card and its configuration down (I/O port,
- interrupt and DMA channel), because you will be asked for it.
-
- You want to read the Sound-HOWTO, available from
- http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto . General information
- about the modular sound system is contained in the files
- Documentation/sound/oss/Introduction. The file
- Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS contains some slightly outdated but
- still useful information as well.
-
-OSS sound modules
-CONFIG_SOUND_OSS
- OSS is the Open Sound System suite of sound card drivers. They make
- sound programming easier since they provide a common API. Say Y or M
- here (the module will be called sound.o) if you haven't found a
- driver for your sound card above, then pick your driver from the
- list below.
-
-Persistent DMA buffers
-CONFIG_SOUND_DMAP
- Linux can often have problems allocating DMA buffers for ISA sound
- cards on machines with more than 16MB of RAM. This is because ISA
- DMA buffers must exist below the 16MB boundary and it is quite
- possible that a large enough free block in this region cannot be
- found after the machine has been running for a while. If you say Y
- here the DMA buffers (64Kb) will be allocated at boot time and kept
- until the shutdown. This option is only useful if you said Y to
- "OSS sound modules", above. If you said M to "OSS sound modules"
- then you can get the persistent DMA buffer functionality by passing
- the command-line argument "dmabuf=1" to the sound.o module.
-
- Say y here for PAS16.
-
-ProAudioSpectrum 16 support
-CONFIG_SOUND_PAS
- Answer Y only if you have a Pro Audio Spectrum 16, ProAudio Studio
- 16 or Logitech SoundMan 16 sound card. Don't answer Y if you have
- some other card made by Media Vision or Logitech since they are not
- PAS16 compatible. It is not necessary to enable the separate
- Sound Blaster support; it is included in the PAS driver.
-
- If you compile the driver into the kernel, you have to add
- "pas2=<io>,<irq>,<dma>,<dma2>,<sbio>,<sbirq>,<sbdma>,<sbdma2>
- to the kernel command line.
-
-FM Synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support
-CONFIG_SOUND_YM3812
- 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 (I don't currently know of any such
- cards, however).
- Please read the file Documentation/sound/oss/OPL3 if your card has an
- OPL3 chip.
- If you compile the driver into the kernel, you have to add
- "opl3=<io>" to the kernel command line.
-
- If you compile your drivers into the kernel, you MUST configure
- OPL3 support as a module for PAS16 support to work properly.
- You can then get OPL3 functionality by issuing the command:
- insmod opl3
- In addition, you must either add the following line to
- /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf:
- options opl3 io=0x388
- or else add the following line to /etc/lilo.conf:
- opl3=0x388
-
-
-EXAMPLES
-===================================================================
-To use the PAS16 in my computer I have enabled the following sound
-configuration options:
-
-CONFIG_SOUND=y
-CONFIG_SOUND_OSS=y
-CONFIG_SOUND_TRACEINIT=y
-CONFIG_SOUND_DMAP=y
-CONFIG_SOUND_PAS=y
-CONFIG_SOUND_SB=n
-CONFIG_SOUND_YM3812=m
-
-I have also included the following append line in /etc/lilo.conf:
-append="pas2=0x388,10,3,-1,0x220,5,1,-1 sb=0x220,5,1,-1 opl3=0x388"
-
-The io address of 0x388 is default configuration on the PAS16. The
-irq of 10 and dma of 3 may not match your installation. The above
-configuration enables PAS16, 8-bit Soundblaster and OPL3
-functionality. If Soundblaster functionality is not desired, the
-following line would be appropriate:
-append="pas2=0x388,10,3,-1,0,-1,-1,-1 opl3=0x388"
-
-If sound is built totally modular, the above options may be
-specified in /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf for pas2, sb and opl3
-respectively.
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS b/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS
deleted file mode 100644
index 187b9525e1f6..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
-The PSS cards and other ECHO based cards provide an onboard DSP with
-downloadable programs and also has an AD1848 "Microsoft Sound System"
-device. The PSS driver enables MSS and MPU401 modes of the card. SB
-is not enabled since it doesn't work concurrently with MSS.
-
-If you build this driver as a module then the driver takes the following
-parameters
-
-pss_io. The I/O base the PSS card is configured at (normally 0x220
- or 0x240)
-
-mss_io The base address of the Microsoft Sound System interface.
- This is normally 0x530, but may be 0x604 or other addresses.
-
-mss_irq The interrupt assigned to the Microsoft Sound System
- emulation. IRQ's 3,5,7,9,10,11 and 12 are available. If you
- get IRQ errors be sure to check the interrupt is set to
- "ISA/Legacy" in the BIOS on modern machines.
-
-mss_dma The DMA channel used by the Microsoft Sound System.
- This can be 0, 1, or 3. DMA 0 is not available on older
- machines and will cause a crash on them.
-
-mpu_io The MPU emulation base address. This sets the base of the
- synthesizer. It is typically 0x330 but can be altered.
-
-mpu_irq The interrupt to use for the synthesizer. It must differ
- from the IRQ used by the Microsoft Sound System port.
-
-
-The mpu_io/mpu_irq fields are optional. If they are not specified the
-synthesizer parts are not configured.
-
-When the module is loaded it looks for a file called
-/etc/sound/pss_synth. This is the firmware file from the DOS install disks.
-This fil holds a general MIDI emulation. The file expected is called
-genmidi.ld on newer DOS driver install disks and synth.ld on older ones.
-
-You can also load alternative DSP algorithms into the card if you wish. One
-alternative driver can be found at http://www.mpg123.de/
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS-updates b/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS-updates
deleted file mode 100644
index 11914a1dc7e7..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/PSS-updates
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,88 +0,0 @@
- This file contains notes for users of PSS sound cards who wish to use the
-newly added features of the newest version of this driver.
-
- The major enhancements present in this new revision of this driver is the
-addition of two new module parameters that allow you to take full advantage of
-all the features present on your PSS sound card. These features include the
-ability to enable both the builtin CDROM and joystick ports.
-
-pss_enable_joystick
-
- This parameter is basically a flag. A 0 will leave the joystick port
-disabled, while a non-zero value would enable the joystick port. The default
-setting is pss_enable_joystick=0 as this keeps this driver fully compatible
-with systems that were using previous versions of this driver. If you wish to
-enable the joystick port you will have to add pss_enable_joystick=1 as an
-argument to the driver. To actually use the joystick port you will then have
-to load the joystick driver itself. Just remember to load the joystick driver
-AFTER the pss sound driver.
-
-pss_cdrom_port
-
- This parameter takes a port address as its parameter. Any available port
-address can be specified to enable the CDROM port, except for 0x0 and -1 as
-these values would leave the port disabled. Like the joystick port, the cdrom
-port will require that an appropriate CDROM driver be loaded before you can make
-use of the newly enabled CDROM port. Like the joystick port option above,
-remember to load the CDROM driver AFTER the pss sound driver. While it may
-differ on some PSS sound cards, all the PSS sound cards that I have seen have a
-builtin Wearnes CDROM port. If this is the case with your PSS sound card you
-should load aztcd with the appropriate port option that matches the port you
-assigned to the CDROM port when you loaded your pss sound driver. (ex.
-modprobe pss pss_cdrom_port=0x340 && modprobe aztcd aztcd=0x340) The default
-setting of this parameter leaves the CDROM port disabled to maintain full
-compatibility with systems using previous versions of this driver.
-
- Other options have also been added for the added convenience and utility
-of the user. These options are only available if this driver is loaded as a
-module.
-
-pss_no_sound
-
- This module parameter is a flag that can be used to tell the driver to
-just configure non-sound components. 0 configures all components, a non-0
-value will only attempt to configure the CDROM and joystick ports. This
-parameter can be used by a user who only wished to use the builtin joystick
-and/or CDROM port(s) of his PSS sound card. If this driver is loaded with this
-parameter and with the parameter below set to true then a user can safely unload
-this driver with the following command "rmmod pss && rmmod ad1848 && rmmod
-mpu401 && rmmod sound && rmmod soundcore" and retain the full functionality of
-his CDROM and/or joystick port(s) while gaining back the memory previously used
-by the sound drivers. This default setting of this parameter is 0 to retain
-full behavioral compatibility with previous versions of this driver.
-
-pss_keep_settings
-
- This parameter can be used to specify whether you want the driver to reset
-all emulations whenever its unloaded. This can be useful for those who are
-sharing resources (io ports, IRQ's, DMA's) between different ISA cards. This
-flag can also be useful in that future versions of this driver may reset all
-emulations by default on the driver's unloading (as it probably should), so
-specifying it now will ensure that all future versions of this driver will
-continue to work as expected. The default value of this parameter is 1 to
-retain full behavioral compatibility with previous versions of this driver.
-
-pss_firmware
-
- This parameter can be used to specify the file containing the firmware
-code so that a user could tell the driver where that file is located instead
-of having to put it in a predefined location with a predefined name. The
-default setting of this parameter is "/etc/sound/pss_synth" as this was the
-path and filename the hardcoded value in the previous versions of this driver.
-
-Examples:
-
-# Normal PSS sound card system, loading of drivers.
-# Should be specified in an rc file (ex. Slackware uses /etc/rc.d/rc.modules).
-
-/sbin/modprobe pss pss_io=0x220 mpu_io=0x338 mpu_irq=9 mss_io=0x530 mss_irq=10 mss_dma=1 pss_cdrom_port=0x340 pss_enable_joystick=1
-/sbin/modprobe aztcd aztcd=0x340
-/sbin/modprobe joystick
-
-# System using the PSS sound card just for its CDROM and joystick ports.
-# Should be specified in an rc file (ex. Slackware uses /etc/rc.d/rc.modules).
-
-/sbin/modprobe pss pss_io=0x220 pss_cdrom_port=0x340 pss_enable_joystick=1 pss_no_sound=1
-/sbin/rmmod pss && /sbin/rmmod ad1848 && /sbin/rmmod mpu401 && /sbin/rmmod sound && /sbin/rmmod soundcore # This line not needed, but saves memory.
-/sbin/modprobe aztcd aztcd=0x340
-/sbin/modprobe joystick
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS b/Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS
deleted file mode 100644
index a085ea3611a1..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1455 +0,0 @@
-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/ 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 toggling 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). Development 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/)
-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
-
-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
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.modules b/Documentation/sound/oss/README.modules
deleted file mode 100644
index cdc039421a46..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.modules
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,106 +0,0 @@
-Building a modular sound driver
-================================
-
- The following information is current as of linux-2.1.85. Check the other
-readme files, especially README.OSS, for information not specific to
-making sound modular.
-
- First, configure your kernel. This is an idea of what you should be
-setting in the sound section:
-
-<M> Sound card support
-
-<M> 100% Sound Blaster compatibles (SB16/32/64, ESS, Jazz16) support
-
- I have SoundBlaster. Select your card from the list.
-
-<M> Generic OPL2/OPL3 FM synthesizer support
-<M> FM synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support
-
- If you don't set these, you will probably find you can play .wav files
-but not .midi. As the help for them says, set them unless you know your
-card does not use one of these chips for FM support.
-
- Once you are configured, make zlilo, modules, modules_install; reboot.
-Note that it is no longer necessary or possible to configure sound in the
-drivers/sound dir. Now one simply configures and makes one's kernel and
-modules in the usual way.
-
- Then, add to your /etc/modprobe.d/oss.conf something like:
-
-alias char-major-14-* sb
-install sb /sbin/modprobe -i sb && /sbin/modprobe adlib_card
-options sb io=0x220 irq=7 dma=1 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x330
-options adlib_card io=0x388 # FM synthesizer
-
- Alternatively, if you have compiled in kernel level ISAPnP support:
-
-alias char-major-14 sb
-softdep sb post: adlib_card
-options adlib_card io=0x388
-
- The effect of this is that the sound driver and all necessary bits and
-pieces autoload on demand, assuming you use kerneld (a sound choice) and
-autoclean when not in use. Also, options for the device drivers are
-set. They will not work without them. Change as appropriate for your card.
-If you are not yet using the very cool kerneld, you will have to "modprobe
--k sb" yourself to get things going. Eventually things may be fixed so
-that this kludgery is not necessary; for the time being, it seems to work
-well.
-
- Replace 'sb' with the driver for your card, and give it the right
-options. To find the filename of the driver, look in
-/lib/modules/<kernel-version>/misc. Mine looks like:
-
-adlib_card.o # This is the generic OPLx driver
-opl3.o # The OPL3 driver
-sb.o # <<The SoundBlaster driver. Yours may differ.>>
-sound.o # The sound driver
-uart401.o # Used by sb, maybe other cards
-
- Whichever card you have, try feeding it the options that would be the
-default if you were making the driver wired, not as modules. You can
-look at function referred to by module_init() for the card to see what
-args are expected.
-
- Note that at present there is no way to configure the io, irq and other
-parameters for the modular drivers as one does for the wired drivers.. One
-needs to pass the modules the necessary parameters as arguments, either
-with /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf or with command-line args to modprobe, e.g.
-
-modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=7 dma=1 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x330
-modprobe adlib_card io=0x388
-
- recommend using /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf.
-
-Persistent DMA Buffers:
-
-The sound modules normally allocate DMA buffers during open() and
-deallocate them during close(). Linux can often have problems allocating
-DMA buffers for ISA cards on machines with more than 16MB RAM. This is
-because ISA DMA buffers must exist below the 16MB boundary and it is quite
-possible that we can't find a large enough free block in this region after
-the machine has been running for any amount of time. The way to avoid this
-problem is to allocate the DMA buffers during module load and deallocate
-them when the module is unloaded. For this to be effective we need to load
-the sound modules right after the kernel boots, either manually or by an
-init script, and keep them around until we shut down. This is a little
-wasteful of RAM, but it guarantees that sound always works.
-
-To make the sound driver use persistent DMA buffers we need to pass the
-sound.o module a "dmabuf=1" command-line argument. This is normally done
-in /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf files like so:
-
-options sound dmabuf=1
-
-If you have 16MB or less RAM or a PCI sound card, this is wasteful and
-unnecessary. It is possible that machine with 16MB or less RAM will find
-this option useful, but if your machine is so memory-starved that it
-cannot find a 64K block free, you will be wasting even more RAM by keeping
-the sound modules loaded and the DMA buffers allocated when they are not
-needed. The proper solution is to upgrade your RAM. But you do also have
-this improper solution as well. Use it wisely.
-
- I'm afraid I know nothing about anything but my setup, being more of a
-text-mode guy anyway. If you have options for other cards or other helpful
-hints, send them to me, Jim Bray, jb@as220.org, http://as220.org/jb.
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.ymfsb b/Documentation/sound/oss/README.ymfsb
deleted file mode 100644
index b6b77906b58d..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/README.ymfsb
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,107 +0,0 @@
-Legacy audio driver for YMF7xx PCI cards.
-
-
-FIRST OF ALL
-============
-
- This code references YAMAHA's sample codes and data sheets.
- I respect and thank for all people they made open the information
- about YMF7xx cards.
-
- And this codes heavily based on Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@pobox.com>'s
- old VIA 82Cxxx driver (via82cxxx.c). I also respect him.
-
-
-DISCLIMER
-=========
-
- This driver is currently at early ALPHA stage. It may cause serious
- damage to your computer when used.
- PLEASE USE IT AT YOUR OWN RISK.
-
-
-ABOUT THIS DRIVER
-=================
-
- This code enables you to use your YMF724[A-F], YMF740[A-C], YMF744, YMF754
- cards. When enabled, your card acts as "SoundBlaster Pro" compatible card.
- It can only play 22.05kHz / 8bit / Stereo samples, control external MIDI
- port.
- If you want to use your card as recent "16-bit" card, you should use
- Alsa or OSS/Linux driver. Of course you can write native PCI driver for
- your cards :)
-
-
-USAGE
-=====
-
- # modprobe ymfsb (options)
-
-
-OPTIONS FOR MODULE
-==================
-
- io : SB base address (0x220, 0x240, 0x260, 0x280)
- synth_io : OPL3 base address (0x388, 0x398, 0x3a0, 0x3a8)
- dma : DMA number (0,1,3)
- master_volume: AC'97 PCM out Vol (0-100)
- spdif_out : SPDIF-out flag (0:disable 1:enable)
-
- These options will change in future...
-
-
-FREQUENCY
-=========
-
- When playing sounds via this driver, you will hear its pitch is slightly
- lower than original sounds. Since this driver recognizes your card acts
- with 21.739kHz sample rates rather than 22.050kHz (I think it must be
- hardware restriction). So many players become tone deafness.
- To prevent this, you should express some options to your sound player
- that specify correct sample frequency. For example, to play your MP3 file
- correctly with mpg123, specify the frequency like following:
-
- % mpg123 -r 21739 foo.mp3
-
-
-SPDIF OUT
-=========
-
- With installing modules with option 'spdif_out=1', you can enjoy your
- sounds from SPDIF-out of your card (if it had).
- Its Fs is fixed to 48kHz (It never means the sample frequency become
- up to 48kHz. All sounds via SPDIF-out also 22kHz samples). So your
- digital-in capable components has to be able to handle 48kHz Fs.
-
-
-COPYING
-=======
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
- any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
- WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
- Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-
-
-TODO
-====
- * support for multiple cards
- (set the different SB_IO,MPU_IO,OPL_IO for each cards)
-
- * support for OPL (dmfm) : There will be no requirements... :-<
-
-
-AUTHOR
-======
-
- Daisuke Nagano <breeze.nagano@nifty.ne.jp>
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/SoundPro b/Documentation/sound/oss/SoundPro
deleted file mode 100644
index 9d4db1f29d3c..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/SoundPro
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,105 +0,0 @@
-Documentation for the SoundPro CMI8330 extensions in the WSS driver (ad1848.o)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-( Be sure to read Documentation/sound/oss/CMI8330 too )
-
-Ion Badulescu, ionut@cs.columbia.edu
-February 24, 1999
-
-(derived from the OPL3-SA2 documentation by Scott Murray)
-
-The SoundPro CMI8330 (ISA) is a chip usually found on some Taiwanese
-motherboards. The official name in the documentation is CMI8330, SoundPro
-is the nickname and the big inscription on the chip itself.
-
-The chip emulates a WSS as well as a SB16, but it has certain differences
-in the mixer section which require separate support. It also emulates an
-MPU401 and an OPL3 synthesizer, so you probably want to enable support
-for these, too.
-
-The chip identifies itself as an AD1848, but its mixer is significantly
-more advanced than the original AD1848 one. If your system works with
-either WSS or SB16 and you are having problems with some mixer controls
-(no CD audio, no line-in, etc), you might want to give this driver a try.
-Detection should work, but it hasn't been widely tested, so it might still
-mis-identify the chip. You can still force soundpro=1 in the modprobe
-parameters for ad1848. Please let me know if it happens to you, so I can
-adjust the detection routine.
-
-The chip is capable of doing full-duplex, but since the driver sees it as an
-AD1848, it cannot take advantage of this. Moreover, the full-duplex mode is
-not achievable through the WSS interface, b/c it needs a dma16 line which is
-assigned only to the SB16 subdevice (with isapnp). Windows documentation
-says the user must use WSS Playback and SB16 Recording for full-duplex, so
-it might be possible to do the same thing under Linux. You can try loading
-up both ad1848 and sb then use one for playback and the other for
-recording. I don't know if this works, b/c I haven't tested it. Anyway, if
-you try it, be very careful: the SB16 mixer *mostly* works, but certain
-settings can have unexpected effects. Use the WSS mixer for best results.
-
-There is also a PCI SoundPro chip. I have not seen this chip, so I have
-no idea if the driver will work with it. I suspect it won't.
-
-As with PnP cards, some configuration is required. There are two ways
-of doing this. The most common is to use the isapnptools package to
-initialize the card, and use the kernel module form of the sound
-subsystem and sound drivers. Alternatively, some BIOS's allow manual
-configuration of installed PnP devices in a BIOS menu, which should
-allow using the non-modular sound drivers, i.e. built into the kernel.
-Since in this latter case you cannot use module parameters, you will
-have to enable support for the SoundPro at compile time.
-
-The IRQ and DMA values can be any that are considered acceptable for a
-WSS. Assuming you've got isapnp all happy, then you should be able to
-do something like the following (which *must* match the isapnp/BIOS
-configuration):
-
-modprobe ad1848 io=0x530 irq=11 dma=0 soundpro=1
--and maybe-
-modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=5
-
--then-
-modprobe mpu401 io=0x330 irq=9
-modprobe opl3 io=0x388
-
-If all goes well and you see no error messages, you should be able to
-start using the sound capabilities of your system. If you get an
-error message while trying to insert the module(s), then make
-sure that the values of the various arguments match what you specified
-in your isapnp configuration file, and that there is no conflict with
-another device for an I/O port or interrupt. Checking the contents of
-/proc/ioports and /proc/interrupts can be useful to see if you're
-butting heads with another device.
-
-If you do not see the chipset version message, and none of the other
-messages present in the system log are helpful, try adding 'debug=1'
-to the ad1848 parameters, email me the syslog results and I'll do
-my best to help.
-
-Lastly, if you're using modules and want to set up automatic module
-loading with kmod, the kernel module loader, here is the section I
-currently use in my conf.modules file:
-
-# Sound
-post-install sound modprobe -k ad1848; modprobe -k mpu401; modprobe -k opl3
-options ad1848 io=0x530 irq=11 dma=0
-options sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=5
-options mpu401 io=0x330 irq=9
-options opl3 io=0x388
-
-The above ensures that ad1848 will be loaded whenever the sound system
-is being used.
-
-Good luck.
-
-Ion
-
-NOT REALLY TESTED:
-- recording
-- recording device selection
-- full-duplex
-
-TODO:
-- implement mixer support for surround, loud, digital CD switches.
-- come up with a scheme which allows recording volumes for each subdevice.
-This is a major OSS API change.
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/Soundblaster b/Documentation/sound/oss/Soundblaster
deleted file mode 100644
index b288d464ba8b..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/Soundblaster
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
-modprobe sound
-insmod uart401
-insmod sb ...
-
-This loads the driver for the Sound Blaster and assorted clones. Cards that
-are covered by other drivers should not be using this driver.
-
-The Sound Blaster module takes the following arguments
-
-io I/O address of the Sound Blaster chip (0x220,0x240,0x260,0x280)
-irq IRQ of the Sound Blaster chip (5,7,9,10)
-dma 8-bit DMA channel for the Sound Blaster (0,1,3)
-dma16 16-bit DMA channel for SB16 and equivalent cards (5,6,7)
-mpu_io I/O for MPU chip if present (0x300,0x330)
-
-sm_games=1 Set if you have a Logitech soundman games
-acer=1 Set this to detect cards in some ACER notebooks
-mwave_bug=1 Set if you are trying to use this driver with mwave (see on)
-type Use this to specify a specific card type
-
-The following arguments are taken if ISAPnP support is compiled in
-
-isapnp=0 Set this to disable ISAPnP detection (use io=0xXXX etc. above)
-multiple=0 Set to disable detection of multiple Soundblaster cards.
- Consider it a bug if this option is needed, and send in a
- report.
-pnplegacy=1 Set this to be able to use a PnP card(s) along with a single
- non-PnP (legacy) card. Above options for io, irq, etc. are
- needed, and will apply only to the legacy card.
-reverse=1 Reverses the order of the search in the PnP table.
-uart401=1 Set to enable detection of mpu devices on some clones.
-isapnpjump=n Jumps to slot n in the driver's PnP table. Use the source,
- Luke.
-
-You may well want to load the opl3 driver for synth music on most SB and
-clone SB devices
-
-insmod opl3 io=0x388
-
-Using Mwave
-
-To make this driver work with Mwave you must set mwave_bug. You also need
-to warm boot from DOS/Windows with the required firmware loaded under this
-OS. IBM are being difficult about documenting how to load this firmware.
-
-Avance Logic ALS007
-
-This card is supported; see the separate file ALS007 for full details.
-
-Avance Logic ALS100
-
-This card is supported; setup should be as for a standard Sound Blaster 16.
-The driver will identify the audio device as a "Sound Blaster 16 (ALS-100)".
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/Tropez+ b/Documentation/sound/oss/Tropez+
deleted file mode 100644
index b93a6b734fc0..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/Tropez+
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
-From: Paul Barton-Davis <pbd@op.net>
-
-Here is the configuration I use with a Tropez+ and my modular
-driver:
-
- alias char-major-14 wavefront
- alias synth0 wavefront
- alias mixer0 cs4232
- alias audio0 cs4232
- pre-install wavefront modprobe "-k" "cs4232"
- post-install wavefront modprobe "-k" "opl3"
- options wavefront io=0x200 irq=9
- options cs4232 synthirq=9 synthio=0x200 io=0x530 irq=5 dma=1 dma2=0
- options opl3 io=0x388
-
-Things to note:
-
- the wavefront options "io" and "irq" ***MUST*** match the "synthio"
- and "synthirq" cs4232 options.
-
- you can do without the opl3 module if you don't
- want to use the OPL/[34] synth on the soundcard
-
- the opl3 io parameter is conventionally not adjustable.
-
-Please see drivers/sound/README.wavefront for more details.
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/VIBRA16 b/Documentation/sound/oss/VIBRA16
deleted file mode 100644
index 68a5a46beb88..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/VIBRA16
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,80 +0,0 @@
-Sound Blaster 16X Vibra addendum
---------------------------------
-by Marius Ilioaea <mariusi@protv.ro>
- Stefan Laudat <stefan@asit.ro>
-
-Sat Mar 6 23:55:27 EET 1999
-
- Hello again,
-
- Playing with a SB Vibra 16x soundcard we found it very difficult
-to setup because the kernel reported a lot of DMA errors and wouldn't
-simply play any sound.
- A good starting point is that the vibra16x chip full-duplex facility
-is neither still exploited by the sb driver found in the linux kernel
-(tried it with a 2.2.2-ac7), nor in the commercial OSS package (it reports
-it as half-duplex soundcard). Oh, I almost forgot, the RedHat sndconfig
-failed detecting it ;)
- So, the big problem still remains, because the sb module wants a
-8-bit and a 16-bit dma, which we could not allocate for vibra... it supports
-only two 8-bit dma channels, the second one will be passed to the module
-as a 16 bit channel, the kernel will yield about that but everything will
-be okay, trust us.
- The only inconvenient you may find is that you will have
-some sound playing jitters if you have HDD dma support enabled - but this
-will happen with almost all soundcards...
-
- A fully working isapnp.conf is just here:
-
-<snip here>
-
-(READPORT 0x0203)
-(ISOLATE PRESERVE)
-(IDENTIFY *)
-(VERBOSITY 2)
-(CONFLICT (IO FATAL)(IRQ FATAL)(DMA FATAL)(MEM FATAL)) # or WARNING
-# SB 16 and OPL3 devices
-(CONFIGURE CTL00f0/-1 (LD 0
-(INT 0 (IRQ 5 (MODE +E)))
-(DMA 0 (CHANNEL 1))
-(DMA 1 (CHANNEL 3))
-(IO 0 (SIZE 16) (BASE 0x0220))
-(IO 2 (SIZE 4) (BASE 0x0388))
-(NAME "CTL00f0/-1[0]{Audio }")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-
-# Joystick device - only if you need it :-/
-
-(CONFIGURE CTL00f0/-1 (LD 1
-(IO 0 (SIZE 1) (BASE 0x0200))
-(NAME "CTL00f0/-1[1]{Game }")
-(ACT Y)
-))
-(WAITFORKEY)
-
-<end of snipping>
-
- So, after a good kernel modules compilation and a 'depmod -a kernel_ver'
-you may want to:
-
-modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=3
-
- Or, take the hard way:
-
-modprobe soundcore
-modprobe sound
-modprobe uart401
-modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=3
-# do you need MIDI?
-modprobe opl3=0x388
-
- Just in case, the kernel sound support should be:
-
-CONFIG_SOUND=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_OSS=m
-CONFIG_SOUND_SB=m
-
- Enjoy your new noisy Linux box! ;)
-
-
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/WaveArtist b/Documentation/sound/oss/WaveArtist
deleted file mode 100644
index f4f3407cd818..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/WaveArtist
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,170 +0,0 @@
-
- (the following is from the armlinux CVS)
-
- WaveArtist mixer and volume levels can be accessed via these commands:
-
- nn30 read registers nn, where nn = 00 - 09 for mixer settings
- 0a - 13 for channel volumes
- mm31 write the volume setting in pairs, where mm = (nn - 10) / 2
- rr32 write the mixer settings in pairs, where rr = nn/2
- xx33 reset all settings to default
- 0y34 select mono source, y=0 = left, y=1 = right
-
- bits
- nn 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 00 | 0 | 0 0 1 1 | left line mixer gain | left aux1 mixer gain |lmute|
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 01 | 0 | 0 1 0 1 | left aux2 mixer gain | right 2 left mic gain |mmute|
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 02 | 0 | 0 1 1 1 | left mic mixer gain | left mic | left mixer gain |dith |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 03 | 0 | 1 0 0 1 | left mixer input select |lrfg | left ADC gain |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 04 | 0 | 1 0 1 1 | right line mixer gain | right aux1 mixer gain |rmute|
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 05 | 0 | 1 1 0 1 | right aux2 mixer gain | left 2 right mic gain |test |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 06 | 0 | 1 1 1 1 | right mic mixer gain | right mic |right mixer gain |rbyps|
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 07 | 1 | 0 0 0 1 | right mixer select |rrfg | right ADC gain |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 08 | 1 | 0 0 1 1 | mono mixer gain |right ADC mux sel|left ADC mux sel |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 09 | 1 | 0 1 0 1 |loopb|left linout|loop|ADCch|TxFch|OffCD|test |loopb|loopb|osamp|
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0a | 0 | left PCM channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0b | 0 | right PCM channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0c | 0 | left FM channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0d | 0 | right FM channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0e | 0 | left wavetable channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 0f | 0 | right wavetable channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 10 | 0 | left PCM expansion channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 11 | 0 | right PCM expansion channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 12 | 0 | left FM expansion channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- 13 | 0 | right FM expansion channel volume |
-----+---+------------+-----+-----+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
-
- lmute: left mute
- mmute: mono mute
- dith: dithds
- lrfg:
- rmute: right mute
- rbyps: right bypass
- rrfg:
- ADCch:
- TxFch:
- OffCD:
- osamp:
-
- And the following diagram is derived from the description in the CVS archive:
-
- MIC L (mouthpiece)
- +------+
- -->PreAmp>-\
- +--^---+ |
- | |
- r2b4-5 | +--------+
- /----*-------------------------------->5 |
- | | |
- | /----------------------------------->4 |
- | | | |
- | | /--------------------------------->3 1of5 | +---+
- | | | | mux >-->AMP>--> ADC L
- | | | /------------------------------->2 | +-^-+
- | | | | | | |
- Line | | | | +----+ +------+ +---+ /---->1 | r3b3-0
- ------------*->mute>--> Gain >--> | | | |
- L | | | +----+ +------+ | | | *->0 |
- | | | | | | +---^----+
- Aux2 | | | +----+ +------+ | | | |
- ----------*--->mute>--> Gain >--> M | | r8b0-2
- L | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | \------\
- Aux1 | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- --------*----->mute>--> Gain >--> I | |
- L | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | |
- | +----+ +------+ | | +---+ |
- *------->mute>--> Gain >--> X >-->AMP>--*
- | +----+ +------+ | | +-^-+ |
- | | | | |
- | +----+ +------+ | | r2b1-3 |
- | /----->mute>--> Gain >--> E | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | /--->mute>--> Gain >--> R | |
- | | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | | | r9b8-9
- | | | +----+ +------+ | | | |
- | | | /->mute>--> Gain >--> | | +---v---+
- | | | | +----+ +------+ +---+ /-*->0 |
- DAC | | | | | | |
- ------------*----------------------------------->? | +----+
- L | | | | | Mux >-->mute>--> L output
- | | | | /->? | +--^-+
- | | | | | | | |
- | | | /--------->? | r0b0
- | | | | | | +-------+
- | | | | | |
- Mono | | | | | | +-------+
- ----------* | \---> | +----+
- | | | | | | Mix >-->mute>--> Mono output
- | | | | *-> | +--^-+
- | | | | | +-------+ |
- | | | | | r1b0
- DAC | | | | | +-------+
- ------------*-------------------------*--------->1 | +----+
- R | | | | | | Mux >-->mute>--> R output
- | | | | +----+ +------+ +---+ *->0 | +--^-+
- | | | \->mute>--> Gain >--> | | +---^---+ |
- | | | +----+ +------+ | | | | r5b0
- | | | | | | r6b0
- | | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | \--->mute>--> Gain >--> M | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | *----->mute>--> Gain >--> I | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | |
- | | +----+ +------+ | | +---+ |
- \------->mute>--> Gain >--> X >-->AMP>--*
- | +----+ +------+ | | +-^-+ |
- /--/ | | | |
- Aux1 | +----+ +------+ | | r6b1-3 |
- -------*------>mute>--> Gain >--> E | |
- R | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | |
- Aux2 | | +----+ +------+ | | /------/
- ---------*---->mute>--> Gain >--> R | |
- R | | | +----+ +------+ | | |
- | | | | | | +--------+
- Line | | | +----+ +------+ | | | *->0 |
- -----------*-->mute>--> Gain >--> | | | |
- R | | | | +----+ +------+ +---+ \---->1 |
- | | | | | |
- | | | \-------------------------------->2 | +---+
- | | | | Mux >-->AMP>--> ADC R
- | | \---------------------------------->3 | +-^-+
- | | | | |
- | \------------------------------------>4 | r7b3-0
- | | |
- \-----*-------------------------------->5 |
- | +---^----+
- r6b4-5 | |
- | | r8b3-5
- +--v---+ |
- -->PreAmp>-/
- +------+
- MIC R (electret mic)
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/btaudio b/Documentation/sound/oss/btaudio
deleted file mode 100644
index effdb9a3f898..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/btaudio
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,92 +0,0 @@
-
-Intro
-=====
-
-people start bugging me about this with questions, looks like I
-should write up some documentation for this beast. That way I
-don't have to answer that much mails I hope. Yes, I'm lazy...
-
-
-You might have noticed that the bt878 grabber cards have actually
-_two_ PCI functions:
-
-$ lspci
-[ ... ]
-00:0a.0 Multimedia video controller: Brooktree Corporation Bt878 (rev 02)
-00:0a.1 Multimedia controller: Brooktree Corporation Bt878 (rev 02)
-[ ... ]
-
-The first does video, it is backward compatible to the bt848. The second
-does audio. btaudio is a driver for the second function. It's a sound
-driver which can be used for recording sound (and _only_ recording, no
-playback). As most TV cards come with a short cable which can be plugged
-into your sound card's line-in you probably don't need this driver if all
-you want to do is just watching TV...
-
-
-Driver Status
-=============
-
-Still somewhat experimental. The driver should work stable, i.e. it
-should'nt crash your box. It might not work as expected, have bugs,
-not being fully OSS API compliant, ...
-
-Latest versions are available from http://bytesex.org/bttv/, the
-driver is in the bttv tarball. Kernel patches might be available too,
-have a look at http://bytesex.org/bttv/listing.html.
-
-The chip knows two different modes. btaudio registers two dsp
-devices, one for each mode. They can not be used at the same time.
-
-
-Digital audio mode
-==================
-
-The chip gives you 16 bit stereo sound. The sample rate depends on
-the external source which feeds the bt878 with digital sound via I2S
-interface. There is a insmod option (rate) to tell the driver which
-sample rate the hardware uses (32000 is the default).
-
-One possible source for digital sound is the msp34xx audio processor
-chip which provides digital sound via I2S with 32 kHz sample rate. My
-Hauppauge board works this way.
-
-The Osprey-200 reportly gives you digital sound with 44100 Hz sample
-rate. It is also possible that you get no sound at all.
-
-
-analog mode (A/D)
-=================
-
-You can tell the driver to use this mode with the insmod option "analog=1".
-The chip has three analog inputs. Consequently you'll get a mixer device
-to control these.
-
-The analog mode supports mono only. Both 8 + 16 bit. Both are _signed_
-int, which is uncommon for the 8 bit case. Sample rate range is 119 kHz
-to 448 kHz. Yes, the number of digits is correct. The driver supports
-downsampling by powers of two, so you can ask for more usual sample rates
-like 44 kHz too.
-
-With my Hauppauge I get noisy sound on the second input (mapped to line2
-by the mixer device). Others get a useable signal on line1.
-
-
-some examples
-=============
-
-* read audio data from btaudio (dsp2), send to es1730 (dsp,dsp1):
- $ sox -w -r 32000 -t ossdsp /dev/dsp2 -t ossdsp /dev/dsp
-
-* read audio data from btaudio, send to esound daemon (which might be
- running on another host):
- $ sox -c 2 -w -r 32000 -t ossdsp /dev/dsp2 -t sw - | esdcat -r 32000
- $ sox -c 1 -w -r 32000 -t ossdsp /dev/dsp2 -t sw - | esdcat -m -r 32000
-
-
-Have fun,
-
- Gerd
-
---
-Gerd Knorr <kraxel@bytesex.org>
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/mwave b/Documentation/sound/oss/mwave
deleted file mode 100644
index 5fbcb1609275..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/mwave
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,185 +0,0 @@
- How to try to survive an IBM Mwave under Linux SB drivers
-
-
-+ IBM have now released documentation of sorts and Torsten is busy
- trying to make the Mwave work. This is not however a trivial task.
-
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-OK, first thing - the IRQ problem IS a problem, whether the test is bypassed or
-not. It is NOT a Linux problem, but an MWAVE problem that is fixed with the
-latest MWAVE patches. So, in other words, don't bypass the test for MWAVES!
-
-I have Windows 95 on /dev/hda1, swap on /dev/hda2, and Red Hat 5 on /dev/hda3.
-
-The steps, then:
-
- Boot to Linux.
- Mount Windows 95 file system (assume mount point = /dos95).
- mkdir /dos95/linux
- mkdir /dos95/linux/boot
- mkdir /dos95/linux/boot/parms
-
- Copy the kernel, any initrd image, and loadlin to /dos95/linux/boot/.
-
- Reboot to Windows 95.
-
- Edit C:/msdos.sys and add or change the following:
-
- Logo=0
- BootGUI=0
-
- Note that msdos.sys is a text file but it needs to be made 'unhidden',
- readable and writable before it can be edited. This can be done with
- DOS' "attrib" command.
-
- Edit config.sys to have multiple config menus. I have one for windows 95 and
- five for Linux, like this:
-------------
-[menu]
-menuitem=W95, Windows 95
-menuitem=LINTP, Linux - ThinkPad
-menuitem=LINTP3, Linux - ThinkPad Console
-menuitem=LINDOC, Linux - Docked
-menuitem=LINDOC3, Linux - Docked Console
-menuitem=LIN1, Linux - Single User Mode
-REM menudefault=W95,10
-
-[W95]
-
-[LINTP]
-
-[LINDOC]
-
-[LINTP3]
-
-[LINDOC3]
-
-[LIN1]
-
-[COMMON]
-FILES=30
-REM Please read README.TXT in C:\MWW subdirectory before changing the DOS= statement.
-DOS=HIGH,UMB
-DEVICE=C:\MWW\MANAGER\MWD50430.EXE
-SHELL=c:\command.com /e:2048
--------------------
-
-The important things are the SHELL and DEVICE statements.
-
- Then change autoexec.bat. Basically everything in there originally should be
- done ONLY when Windows 95 is booted. Then you add new things specifically
- for Linux. Mine is as follows
-
----------------
-@ECHO OFF
-if "%CONFIG%" == "W95" goto W95
-
-REM
-REM Linux stuff
-REM
-SET MWPATH=C:\MWW\DLL;C:\MWW\MWGAMES;C:\MWW\DSP
-SET BLASTER=A220 I5 D1
-SET MWROOT=C:\MWW
-SET LIBPATH=C:\MWW\DLL
-SET PATH=C:\WINDOWS;C:\MWW\DLL;
-CALL MWAVE START NOSHOW
-c:\linux\boot\loadlin.exe @c:\linux\boot\parms\%CONFIG%.par
-
-:W95
-REM
-REM Windows 95 stuff
-REM
-c:\toolkit\guard
-SET MSINPUT=C:\MSINPUT
-SET MWPATH=C:\MWW\DLL;C:\MWW\MWGAMES;C:\MWW\DSP
-REM The following is used by DOS games to recognize Sound Blaster hardware.
-REM If hardware settings are changed, please change this line as well.
-REM See the Mwave README file for instructions.
-SET BLASTER=A220 I5 D1
-SET MWROOT=C:\MWW
-SET LIBPATH=C:\MWW\DLL
-SET PATH=C:\WINDOWS;C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND;E:\ORAWIN95\BIN;f:\msdev\bin;e:\v30\bin.dbg;v:\devt\v30\bin;c:\JavaSDK\Bin;C:\MWW\DLL;
-SET INCLUDE=f:\MSDEV\INCLUDE;F:\MSDEV\MFC\INCLUDE
-SET LIB=F:\MSDEV\LIB;F:\MSDEV\MFC\LIB
-win
-
-------------------------
-
-Now build a file in c:\linux\boot\parms for each Linux config that you have.
-
-For example, my LINDOC3 config is for a docked Thinkpad at runlevel 3 with no
-initrd image, and has a parameter file named LINDOC3.PAR in c:\linux\boot\parms:
-
------------------------
-# LOADLIN @param_file image=other_image root=/dev/other
-#
-# Linux Console in docking station
-#
-c:\linux\boot\zImage.krn # First value must be filename of Linux kernel.
-root=/dev/hda3 # device which gets mounted as root FS
-ro # Other kernel arguments go here.
-apm=off
-doc=yes
-3
------------------------
-
-The doc=yes parameter is an environment variable used by my init scripts, not
-a kernel argument.
-
-However, the apm=off parameter IS a kernel argument! APM, at least in my setup,
-causes the kernel to crash when loaded via loadlin (but NOT when loaded via
-LILO). The APM stuff COULD be forced out of the kernel via the kernel compile
-options. Instead, I got an unofficial patch to the APM drivers that allows them
-to be dynamically deactivated via kernel arguments. Whatever you chose to
-document, APM, it seems, MUST be off for setups like mine.
-
-Now make sure C:\MWW\MWCONFIG.REF looks like this:
-
-----------------------
-[NativeDOS]
-Default=SB1.5
-SBInputSource=CD
-SYNTH=FM
-QSound=OFF
-Reverb=OFF
-Chorus=OFF
-ReverbDepth=5
-ChorusDepth=5
-SBInputVolume=5
-SBMainVolume=10
-SBWaveVolume=10
-SBSynthVolume=10
-WaveTableVolume=10
-AudioPowerDriver=ON
-
-[FastCFG]
-Show=No
-HideOption=Off
------------------------------
-
-OR the Default= line COULD be
-
-Default=SBPRO
-
-Reboot to Windows 95 and choose Linux. When booted, use sndconfig to configure
-the sound modules and voilĂ  - ThinkPad sound with Linux.
-
-Now the gotchas - you can either have CD sound OR Mixers but not both. That's a
-problem with the SB1.5 (CD sound) or SBPRO (Mixers) settings. No one knows why
-this is!
-
-For some reason MPEG3 files, when played through mpg123, sound like they
-are playing at 1/8th speed - not very useful! If you have ANY insight
-on why this second thing might be happening, I would be grateful.
-
-===========================================================
- _/ _/_/_/_/
- _/_/ _/_/ _/
- _/ _/_/ _/_/_/_/ Martin John Bartlett
- _/ _/ _/ _/ (martin@nitram.demon.co.uk)
-_/ _/_/_/_/
- _/
-_/ _/
- _/_/
-===========================================================
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/oss-parameters.txt b/Documentation/sound/oss/oss-parameters.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index cc675f25eee4..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/oss-parameters.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,51 +0,0 @@
- OSS Kernel Parameters
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-See Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.rst for general information on
-specifying module parameters.
-
-This document may not be entirely up to date and comprehensive. The command
-"modinfo -p ${modulename}" shows a current list of all parameters of a loadable
-module. Loadable modules, after being loaded into the running kernel, also
-reveal their parameters in /sys/module/${modulename}/parameters/. Some of these
-parameters may be changed at runtime by the command
-"echo -n ${value} > /sys/module/${modulename}/parameters/${parm}".
-
-
- ad1848= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<dma2>,<type>
-
- aedsp16= [HW,OSS] Audio Excel DSP 16
- Format: <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<mss_io>,<mpu_io>,<mpu_irq>
- See also header of sound/oss/aedsp16.c.
-
- dmasound= [HW,OSS] Sound subsystem buffers
-
- mpu401= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>
-
- opl3= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>
-
- pas2= [HW,OSS] Format:
- <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<dma16>,<sb_io>,<sb_irq>,<sb_dma>,<sb_dma16>
-
- pss= [HW,OSS] Personal Sound System (ECHO ESC614)
- Format:
- <io>,<mss_io>,<mss_irq>,<mss_dma>,<mpu_io>,<mpu_irq>
-
- sscape= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<mpu_io>,<mpu_irq>
-
- trix= [HW,OSS] MediaTrix AudioTrix Pro
- Format:
- <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<dma2>,<sb_io>,<sb_irq>,<sb_dma>,<mpu_io>,<mpu_irq>
-
- uart401= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>
-
- uart6850= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>
-
- waveartist= [HW,OSS]
- Format: <io>,<irq>,<dma>,<dma2>
diff --git a/Documentation/sound/oss/ultrasound b/Documentation/sound/oss/ultrasound
deleted file mode 100644
index eed331c738a3..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/sound/oss/ultrasound
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
-modprobe sound
-insmod ad1848
-insmod gus io=* irq=* dma=* ...
-
-This loads the driver for the Gravis Ultrasound family of sound cards.
-
-The gus module takes the following arguments
-
-io I/O address of the Ultrasound card (eg. io=0x220)
-irq IRQ of the Sound Blaster card
-dma DMA channel for the Sound Blaster
-dma16 2nd DMA channel, only needed for full duplex operation
-type 1 for PnP card
-gus16 1 for using 16 bit sampling daughter board
-no_wave_dma Set to disable DMA usage for wavetable (see note)
-db16 ???
-
-
-no_wave_dma option
-
-This option defaults to a value of 0, which allows the Ultrasound wavetable
-DSP to use DMA for playback and downloading samples. This is the same
-as the old behaviour. If set to 1, no DMA is needed for downloading samples,
-and allows owners of a GUS MAX to make use of simultaneous digital audio
-(/dev/dsp), MIDI, and wavetable playback.
-
-
-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.