This is my .asoundrc. I'll have to wait and see if the moderators will
let my very long message of lsusb -v and the cats go through. If not,
I'll shorten it up somehow or put it on the website and drop the link in
a message. But nonetheless, it shows the device supporting 16- and
24-bit samples.
pcm.usb-aduio {
type multi;
slaves.a.pcm "hw:1,0";
slaves.a.channels 2;
slaves.b.pcm "hw:1:1";
slaves.b.channels 2;
bindings.0.slave a;
bindings.0.channel 0;
bindings.1.slave a;
bindings.1.channel 1;
bindings.2.slave b;
bindings.2.channel 0;
bindings.3.slave b;
bindings.3.channel 1;
}
ctl.usb-audio {
type hw;
card 1;
}
rawmidi.usb-audio {
type hw;
card 1;
}
-Chris
Patrick Shirkey wrote:
> You can see which sample rates are supported by running:
>
> lsusb -v
>
> for more info :
>
> lsusb --help
>
> Cheers.
>
>
> Chris Abbott wrote:
>> Tried it, but no luck. Thanks. I think I might toy around with the
>> alsa-jack driver. It may be jack doesn't like how the sample formats
>> are done on the omnistudio. Even though I have alsa playing through
>> it fine still.
>>
>> Patrick Shirkey wrote:
>>> Chris Abbott wrote:
>>>> I'm not sure what jack's problem is, but it returns this no matter
>>>> what I use on my omnistudio.
>>>>
>>>> ~$ jackd -dalsa -dhw:1 -r48000 -p1024 -n2 -i4 -o2
>>>
>>> try this: jackd -dalsa -dhw:1 -r48000 -p1024 -n2 -i4 -o2 -P
>>>
>>> Your device may have different sample rate capabilities for playback
>>> and capture and jackd may not be able to figure that out.
>>>
>>>
>>> Cheers.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
Received on Tue Sep 5 16:15:05 2006
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Tue Sep 05 2006 - 16:15:06 EEST