Lee Revell writes:
> On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 17:48 -0400, Janina Sajka wrote:
> > It seems as if no symbol in the driver is recognized. Here's the output
> > from attempting to start alsa, and the relevant lines in dmesg:
>
> This means that your ALSA modules do not match your kernel version.
> Probably you're using the newer kernel with ALSA modules built for the
> old one.
>
> Did you recompile the ALSA drivers after upgrading the kernel?
>
Yes, and /proc/asound/version showed 1.0.9.
I did not patch the kernel source, though. I only compiled and installed
1.0.9rc2 after upgrading the kernel.
BTW: There was also a gcc upversion recently that I saw in my yum log.
Don't know if that matters:
GCC) 3.4.3 20050227 (Red Hat 3.4.3-22.fc3)
> Lee
-- Janina Sajka Phone: +1.202.494.7040 Partner, Capital Accessibility LLC http://www.CapitalAccessibility.Com Chair, Accessibility Workgroup Free Standards Group (FSG) janina@email-addr-hidden http://a11y.org If Linux can't solve your computing problem, you need a different problem.Received on Wed Apr 20 00:15:15 2005
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