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Package:Open Sound System (OSS)
Open Sound System (OSS)
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The Open Sound System (or OSS) is an alternative sound architecture for Unix-like and POSIX-compatible systems. OSS version 3 was the original sound system for Linux, but was superseded by the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (or ALSA) in 2002 when OSS version 4 became proprietary software. OSSv4 became free software again in 2007 when 4Front Technologies released its source code and provided it under the GPL license.
Installation
Configuring the kernel
Under Device Drivers:
<M> Sound card support ---> --- Sound card support [ ] Preclaim OSS device numbers <M> Advanced Linux Sound Architecture ---> < > Open Sound System (DEPRECATED) ---
Don't confuse the deprecated OSS module (OSSv3) module with todays OSSv4.
Preparation
The first task is to to make sure that you build OSS with the correct soundcard drivers. To specify them, you can use the OSS_CARDS
setting in make.conf
.
E.g. for an HD Audio card use:
/etc/make.conf
OSS_CARDS="hd_audio"
You can visit the OSS documentation for a driver reference.
Make sure that your current kernel sources directory are symlinked to /usr/src/linux
, since the OSS compilation relies on the kernel headers. You can use eselect kernel to verify or set your kernel. See eselect#kernel for a reference guide.
Install
Now build the OSS modules and add /etc/init.d/oss
to the default runlevel:
root # emerge oss root # rc-update add oss default
Basic Configuration
USE Flags
To compile Applications with OSS support you need to set the oss
USE flag, however you will mostly want the alsa
flag there too as a fallback (OSS will create ALSA devices for those applications):
/etc/make.conf
USE="oss alsa"
See how to set up an ALSA emulation for unsupported Applications below.
Configuring Applications for OSS
Since ALSA is the mostly default configuration for application, you might sometimes need to configure them properly before OSS output/input works.
There are two good resources which guide you through the steps for most applications:
ALSA emulation
You can instruct alsa-lib
to use OSS as its audio output system. This works as a sort of ALSA emulation.
Note, however, that this method may introduce additional latency in your sound output, and that the emulation is not complete and does not work with all applications. It does not work, for example, with programs that try to detect devices using ALSA.
So, as most applications support OSS directly, use this method only as a last resort.
In the future, more complete methods may be available for emulating ALSA, such as libsalsa
and cuckoo
. See [1].
Instructions
- Install the
alsa-plugins
package, available in the Funtoo Overlay.
- Creare and edit
/etc/asound.conf
as follows:
/etc/asound.conf
pcm.oss {
type oss
device /dev/dsp
}
pcm.!default {
type oss
device /dev/dsp
}
ctl.oss {
type oss
device /dev/mixer
}
ctl.!default {
type oss
device /dev/mixer
}
Do not forget to revert the changes after uninstalling.
Volume Control Mixer
To control the volume of various devices, mixers levels will need to be set. There are two mixers:
- ossmix: a command-line mixer, similar to the BSD audio mixer
mixerctl
. - ossxmix: a GTK+-based graphical mixer.
The basic ossxmix
controls look like:
/ High Definition Audio ALC262 \ --------------------------------> 1 /________________________________\________________________________ | \ | [x] vmix0-enable [vmix0-rate: 48.000kHz] vmix0-channels |--> 2 | [ Stereo [v] ] | | | | __codec1______________________________________________________ | | | _jack______________________________________________________ ||--> 3 | | | _int-speaker_________________ _green_________________ ||| | | | | | | | ||| | | | | _mode_____ | | | | _mode_____ | | | ||| | | | | [ mix [v] ] o o [x] [ ]mute | | [ mix [v] ] o o [x] | ||| | | | | | | | | | | | ||| | | | |_____________________________| |_______________________| ||| | | |___________________________________________________________||| | |______________________________________________________________|| | ___vmix0______________________________________________________ | | | __mocp___ O O _firefox_ O O __pcm7___ O O | |--> 4 | | | | O O | | x x | | O O | | | | | | | | x O | | | | x x | | | | O O | | | | | o o [x] | x x | o o [x] | x x | o o [x] | O O | | | | | | | | x x | | | | x x | | | | O O | | | | |_________| x x |_________| x x |_________| O O | | | |_____________________________________________________________| | |_________________________________________________________________|
- One tab for each sound card
- The
vmix
(virtual mixer) special configurations appear at the top. These include sampling rate and mixer priority. - These are your sound card jack configurations (input and output). Every mixer control that is shown here is provided by your sound card.
- Application
vmix
mixer controls and sound meters. If the application is not actively playing a sound it will be labeled aspcm08
,pcm09
... and when the application is playing the application name will be shown.
Color Definitions
For high definition (HD) audio, ossxmix
will color jack configurations by their pre-defined jack colors:
Color | Type | Connector |
---|---|---|
green | front channels (stereo output) | 3.5mm TRS |
black | rear channels (stereo output) | 3.5mm TRS |
grey | side channels (stereo output) | 3.5mm TRS |
gold | center and subwoofer (dual output) | 3.5mm TRS |
blue | line level (stereo input) | 3.5mm TRS |
pink | microphone (mono input) | 3.5mm TS |
Saving Mixer Levels
Mixer levels are saved when you shut off your computer. If you want to save the mixer level immediately, execute:
root # savemixer
savemixer
can be used to write mixer levels to a file with the -f
switch and restore by the -L
switch.
Other Mixers
Other mixers that have support for OSS:
- Gnome Volume Control - for GNOME.
- Kmix - for KDE.
- VolWheel - After the installation, set it to autostart as needed, then enable OSS support by right-clicking on the system tray icon, choosing Preferences and then changing:
- Driver:
OSS
. - Default Channel:
vmix0-outvol
(find out what channel to use withossmix
). - Default Mixer:
ossxmix
. - In the MiniMixer tab (optional), add
vmix0-outvol
and optionally others.
- Driver:
Suspend & Hibernation
OSS does not automatically support suspend, it must be manually stopped prior to suspending or hibernating and restarted afterwards.
OSS provides soundon
and soundoff
to enable and disable OSS, although they only stop OSS if all processes that use sound are terminated first.
The following script is a rather basic method of automatically unloading OSS prior to suspending and reloading afterwards:
/etc/pm/sleep.d/50osssound
#!/bin/sh
. "${PM_FUNCTIONS}"
suspend_osssound()
{
/usr/lib/oss/scripts/killprocs.sh
/usr/sbin/soundoff
}
resume_osssound()
{
/usr/sbin/soundon
}
case "$1" in
hibernate|suspend)
suspend_osssound
;;
thaw|resume)
resume_osssound
;;
*) exit $NA
;;
esac
Save the contents of this script (as root) into /etc/pm/sleep.d/50osssound
and make it executable:
root # chmod a+x /etc/pm/sleep.d/50osssound
This script is rather basic and will terminate any application directly accessing OSS. Save your work prior to suspending/hibernating.
Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting HD Audio devices
Understanding the problem
If you have a HD Audio sound device, it is very likely that you will have to adjust some mixer settings before your sound works.
HD Audio devices are very powerful in the sense that they can contain a lot of small circuits (called widgets) that can be adjusted by software at any time. These controls are exposed to the mixer, and they can be used, for example, to turn the earphone jack into a sound input jack instead of a sound output jack.
However, there are also bad side effects, mainly because the HD Audio standard is more flexible than it perhaps should be, and because the vendors often only care to get their official drivers working.
When using HD Audio devices, you often find disorganized mixer controls, that do not work at all by default, and you are forced to try every mixer control combination possible, until it works.
Solution
Open ossxmix
and try to change every mixer control in the middle area, that contains the sound card specific controls, as explained in the #Volume Control Mixer section.
You will probably want to setup a program to record/play continuously in the background (e.g. ossrecord - | ossplay -
for recording or osstest -lV
for playing), while changing mixer settings in ssxmix
in the foreground.
- Raise every volume control slider.
- In each option box, try to change the selected option, trying all the possible combinations.
- If you get noise, try to lower and/or mute some volume controls, until you find the source of the noise.
- Editing
/usr/lib/oss/conf/oss_hdaudio.conf
, uncommenting and changing1=hdaudio_noskip=0
to a value from 0-7 can give you more jack options inossxmix
.
If you modify this file, restart the oss service for the changes to take effect.
See also
- Official Website
- OSS Wiki
- OSS Forum
- Developer Information
- Git repository
- opensound-devel mailing list