Bill,
I am aware of the sound sync problem with Ubuntu... but Flash 9
worked out of the box for me. Sound tends to be quite troublesome for
Linux in general.
-jmz
On 1/29/07, Bill Jonas <
bill@billjonas.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Just wanted to share a solution to a problem with you. I actually
> hadn't asked the list for help on this, but I figured that it would be
> good to share, since Google didn't know the answer to my question. PLUG
> should have enough Google juice for this. :-)
>
> Situation
> =========
> Sound in Flash 7 was out of sync (I think that part of the
> problem is ALSA vs. OSS.), and nothing I'd tried worked. I was really
> excited, therefore about the Flash 9 beta, but audio didn't work at
> *all*, period. If I ran gflashplayer from an xterm, it would go for a
> while, and then I'd get these three error messages repeated over and
> over, in sequence (taken from the final release, but the beta was very
> similar):
>
> ALSA lib pcm_direct.c:187:(make_local_socket) socket failed: Too many open files
> ALSA lib pcm_dmix.c:894:(snd_pcm_dmix_open) unable to connect client
> ALSA lib pcm_hw.c:1355:(_snd_pcm_hw_open) Invalid value for card
>
> I figured it was a problem with the beta and that it would be sorted out
> in the final release, but the final release exhibited the same problem.
>
> Also, mpg321 had started acting up. The sound was distorted: The pitch
> was a few notes too high, and the tempo was too fast. I didn't realize
> that these problems were related. mpg123 still worked fine, though, so
> I just made do with that.
>
> Environment
> ===========
> Sound card: SoundBlaster Live! value (emu10k1 chipset, snd_emu10k1 ALSA
> module)
> Distribution: Ubuntu Edgy, upgraded from Dapper (Kubuntu desktop,
> actually). I can't recall how far back I'd originally installed this
> system, if it was Breezy, Hoary, or Warty. It could've been as far back
> as Warty.
> Kernel: The latest Ubuntu-packaged kernel, 2.6.17-10-386.
>
> There is an on-board audio controller on my motherboard (I think), but
> it is disabled in the BIOS.
>
> Solution
> ========
> Delete /etc/asound.conf. (Well, what I actually did was 'mv
> /etc/asound.conf /etc/asound.conf.bak', but you get the idea.)
>
> I haven't yet noticed any ill effects. I think that asound.conf isn't
> too terribly important if you have just one sound card.
>
> I suspect that some upgraded version of ALSA changed subtly between the
> original installation of my system and this version, causing breakage.
> (A friend of mine who did a fresh install of Edgy reported no problems
> with the new Flash 9.) Also, /etc/asound.conf isn't owned by any
> package, so I'm not sure what generates it. The string 'asound.conf' is
> mentioned in the postrm script for alsa-utils, and there's a
> /usr/share/gnome/help/desktopguide/sample/asound.conf_configuresoundproperly
> that belongs to ubuntu-docs.list.
>
> But it's working great for me now without the file, so YMMV.
>
> I hope this helps someone else out.
>
> --
> Bill Jonas * bill@billjonas.com * http://www.billjonas.com/
> "It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your front door. You step
> into the Road, and if you don't keep your feet, there is no knowing
> where you might be swept off to." -- Bilbo Baggins
> ---------------------------------------------------
> PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
> To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings:
> http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss
>
--
.0000. communication.
.0001. development.
.0010. strategy.
.0100. appeal.
JOSHUA M. ZEIDNER
IT Consultant
$wisdom{'mcluhan'} = "Publication is a self-invasion of privacy.";
( 602 ) 490 8006
jjzeidner@gmail.com
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings:
http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss