![]() ![]() You could also install the qasmixer package from the repos for an excessively-graphical, but more user-friendly, interface to the same controls. The control you’d be looking for is very likely a simple on/off “switch” where white-on-green “OO” means “on” / blue-on-background “MM” means “muted”, or it’s a selector between several fixed options. (If you do accidentally change something, B to Balance the levels is good enough, PulseAudio ignores the levels of the controls anyway, it only cares whether they’re muted or not. Type Esc to quit - don’t use Q, as that’ll raise the left channel level of the control you’re on by one step. ![]() Up and down to change levels or select between options. Left and right arrow keys move between controls. If there really isn’t, then and only then I’d try going the alsa route: # Find the card# of the device So, my first suggestion is definitely to double-check the Configuration tab, and make sure there’s nothing there that will help you. On the “Output Devices” tab, there’s a Port selector, but just like yours it only ever shows one option:Ģ1d2cc3e313fe03e0f2a07f68f1cffc99b2cee40.png 776×552 42 KB As a result, it has quite a few different configurations. At the risk of belaboring that point, did you check all of the tabs?įor example, my USB audio device (a literally $10 jobbie I got from Newegg) doesn’t do any kind of fancy auto-switching, but it does have a bunch of different output configurations because it’s one of those units with a combo analog/digital headphone jack, where there’s an LED at the bottom of the port so you can stick a specially-shaped optical cable in there and use SP/DIF. (Though I guess that was more of a danger when it was in active development, now it seems like it’s in a holding beat me to the pavucontrol suggestion, as that would’ve been my first instinct as well. It may be possible to do it that way, but it’s likely that it’ll mess something up for PulseAudio, or that PulseAudio will mess you up at some point in the future. I highly doubt that ALSA is where you want to fiddle with this. I think it should be possible to separate outputs somehow for alsa but I haven’t found a way to do it. Kernel modules: snd_hda_intel, snd_soc_skl, sof_pci_dev Lspci: Audio device: Intel Corporation Cannon Lake PCH cAVS (rev 10) The same behavior on my work computer with Realtek ® ALC887 8-channel high definition audio CODEC*Īplay - PCH, device 0: ALC887-VD Analog Whereas lspci shows Audio device: Intel Corporation 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family High Definition Audio Controller (rev 04) Manual says it’s Realtek ® ALC892 8-channel High Definition Audio CODEC.Īplay -l shows it as card 0: PCH, device 0: ALC892 Analog I use desktop computer with Asus motherboard’s integrated audio. I do use a rather crude workaround for this with alsamixer – but it’s rather clumsy and switches between outputting sound to both devices simultaneously or headphones only – not an elegant solution. I’ve searched for solution for some time but couldn’t find anything good. I think I’ve seen them as separate devices on older (not recent) versions of Fedora as well but I can be mistaken here. I have to say that Windows does show speakers and headphones as separate output devices and allows switching between them easily – so I’m quite sure the same can be achieved in Linux. If you have an all-in-one computer monitor, you can find the HDMI port on the side or back of the monitor.I know that sound output switching works ok when I physically remove/connect my headphones, but is there a way to achieve the same without unlugging anything? ![]() HDMI ports are usually on the side or front of laptops, and on the back of desktop towers.USB 3.0 ports will either have a blue band on the inside or will have an icon that resembles a fork and says "SS" for super speed. USB port locations, but you'll normally find them near the audio ports.If you have a headset that has a separate 3.5 mm jack for the audio and the microphone, but your computer only has one 3.5-mm port, you can use an adapter to connect both jacks to a single port.On laptops that don't have color-coded ports, the audio-in port will have an image of headphones next to it and the microphone input will have an image of a microphone next to it.Microphone ports are usually pink, while headphone ports are usually green. Laptop PCs typically have the 3.5mm audio-out port on the left, right, or front side of the keyboard, while desktop PCs may have these ports on the front or back of the tower. ![]()
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