bionic (7) oss_sblive.7.gz

Provided by: oss4-base_4.2-build2010-5ubuntu3~18.04.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       oss_sblive - Creative Labs Sound Blaster Live/Audigy family driver.

DESCRIPTION

       Open  Sound System driver for Creative Labs Sound Blaster Live!, Audigy, Audigy2, Audigy2-Value and sound
       cards.

       The sblive driver supports:

       •  8-48Khz Playback/Recording

       •  8 or 16 bits

       •  SPDIF digital output and Input

       •  Multi channel 5.1 (Live!) and 7.1 (Audigy) output.

       AC3 passthrough is only supported on Audigy series of the soundcards.

OTHER SIMILAR CARDS

       There are several Sound Blaster cards that are also called as Live or Audigy.  However  these  cards  are
       based on entirely different hardware design and they are not compatible with this driver.

       •  Sound Blaster Live 5.1 card is used in some Dell machines but it's driven by the emu10k1x driver.

       •  Sound Blaster AudigyLS and Live 7.1 models are driven by the audigyls driver of OSS.

   SBLIVE COMBO SPDIF AND AUDIO JACKS
       Most  models  of  Live!  and  Audigy  cards  have  an  orange combo jack that is used both for the analog
       center/LFE output and for digital  DIN  (S/PDIF)  output.  The  output  mode  is  selected  by  a  driver
       configuration  option  (seel  below)  which should be set to proper value depending on the actual speaker
       configuration.

       •  Noisy analog center/LFE output. The orange combo jack at the rear plate of  the  Live/Audigy  card  is
          shared  between  the  digital DIN and the analog center/LFE outputs. In digital DIN mode (default) you
          will hear very noisy output from the speakers connected to  this  output  jack.  If  you  have  analog
          center/LFE  (subwoofer)  speakers  connected  then  you  need  to  turn off the sblive_digital_din (or
          audigy_digital_din) option.

       •  There is a new configuration option to enable/disable the "digital DIN" output. By default the digital
          DIN  interface  is  enabled which disables the center/LFE analog output (uses the same combo jack). By
          setting the sblive_digital_din (or audigy_digital_din) option to 0 you can  enable  the  analog  C/LFE
          output feature. When digital DIN is disabled you can still get S/PDIF (or AC3) output from the digital
          (optical/coax) outputs of the optional livedrive unit.

   SBLIVE MIXER
       SB Live cards have actually two mixer chips. In OSS both of them are controlled  together.  However  only
       limited  set  of  features  can  be  controlled  using  ordinary mixer programs (such as the mixer applet
       included in OSS).  Majority of features can only be  accessed  using  the  ossmix  and  ossxmix  programs
       included in OSS.

       The  AC97  mixer is used to control volumes of the back bracket inputs (mic and line in) and the _analog_
       CD input connector on the soundcard. The 'mic' volume controls the level of the rear  bracket  microphone
       input  sent directly to the front (only front) speakers. The 'line' and 'cd' controls do the same for the
       back bracket line in connector and the on board analog CD input connector. It's  usually  recommended  to
       set these volumes to 0.

       Another  function  of  the  AC97  mixer  is  selecting the signal that is passed to the master mixer (for
       example for recording). One of the 'mic', 'line' or ’cd' signals can be routed to  the  master  mixer  by
       selecting  that  device as the recording source in the AC97 mixer. The 'rec' volume control slider can be
       used to adjust the signal strength. The 'igain' control doesn't usually have any effect but some hardware
       revisions may use it for controlling the microphone recording level.

   SBLIVE MASTER MIXER
       Other  mixer functions are handled by the DSP engine of the EMU 10k1 chip.  Most input signals (including
       all digital signals and LiveDrive inputs).

       There are only two master mixer settings that can be controlled  using  all  mixer  programs.  The  'vol'
       setting  is  the  master  output  volume  that affects both the front and rear speakers and the headphone
       output (digital output volumes are not affected). The 'pcm' setting controls volumes of all PCM  playback
       channels (/dev/dsp#).

       In  addition to volume sliders most inputs have a stereo VU meter pair (only in ossxmix) that can be used
       to monitor the input and to adjust the input levels properly.

       The master mixer consists of several sections that are:

       •  Primary section: This section has two settings. The "spkmode" setting selects how front/rear  speakers
          are  used  for  PCM playback (outputs from programs using /dev/dsp#). The possible settings are FRONT,
          REAR and FRONT+REAR. The default is FRONT+REAR. Change this setting if you like to  get  PCM  playback
          only from front or rear speakers. The "autoreset" flag is used to control the "/dev" section.

       •  "/dev"  section:  This  section  controls  the  volumes of each /dev/dsp# device file supported by the
          device (there are 8 of them at this moment). These volumes will return back to maximum every time  the
          device  is  opened. However this can be disabled by setting the 'autoreset' option to OFF. The ossxmix
          program has special ability to show the application using the particular /dev/dsp device  (for  layout
          reasons only the first 4 characters of the program name are shown).

       •  The equalizer section: This section controls the graphic equalizer for front speakers only.

       •  The  front  rear,  and  record sections: These three identical sections control the levels of external
          inputs and PCM playback (/dev/dsp# devices) to be sent to the front/rear speakers and to the recording
          device.  The CD Analog audio will only be heard from the FRONT speakers.

   SBLIVE RECORDING
       Before  recording  anything  you  need  to  set  the volumes in the recording section properly. To enable
       recording from the AC97 connected inputs (mic, line in and analog CD) use the AC97 mixer  to  select  the
       desired input and then tune the input level using the rec (and igain) setting.

       Finally  set  the  'ac97' slider in the record section of the master mixer so that the recording level is
       suitable.

       The OSS drivers permit recording any application that's currently playing.

       To record audio that's playing on any of the SB Live channels:

       •  Turn down the AC97 control in the "record" section. This prevents any audio being fed to the soundcard
          from  MIC/Line-in/CD-in from getting mixed with the audio produced by the application that's currently
          playing.

       •  Type ossrecord -s<sampling rate> -b<bits/sample> -c<channels> test.wav

       •  To stop recording press <Ctrl-c> and then you can play back the test.wav file using ossplay command.

              RECORDING ISSUES: In most cases noise is caused by the microphone input  or  some  other  (unused)
              input.  Use  the  ossxmix program to turn off all unused inputs and finally save the current mixer
              settings (see below).

       Hint: Look at the VU meter panels of ossxmix. It's usually very  easy  to  locate  the  noise  source  by
       looking which input has some signal coming from it.

              WARNING!  If  you turn off some of the signals in recording section or the AC97 mixer section this
              affects all subsequent recordings. Remember to raise the volume prior doing any  recording.  After
              that decrease the volumes again if necessary.

   SBLIVE HARDWARE MIXING
       You  can  use  /dev/oss/oss_sblive0/ pcm0-pcm7 to play multiple audio programs using the hardware mixing.
       Simply specify the device name with the application. A simple  test  is  to  do  the  following:  ossplay
       -d/dev/oss/oss_sblive0/pcm0  <file1.wav>  &  ossplay  -d/dev/oss/oss_sblive0/pcm1  <file2.wav>  & ossplay
       -d/dev/oss/oss_sblive0/pcm2 <file3.wav> &

       You should hear all three wav files playing simultaneously.

       NOTE: Some apps may desire the old /dev/dspN names. e.g. /dev/dsp0 - /dev/dsp7.

       NOTE: You can increase the number of output devices from the standard 8 devices to 32 device.  For  this,
       run  soundconf,  select  Set  configuration  options and look for the entry "sblive_device", now type any
       number between 1 and 32 for the number of channels you wish. You can also do  this  manually  by  editing
       oss_sblive.conf and inserting sblive_devices=XX entry, e.g.: sblive_devices=27

   CDROM CONNNECTIONS
       There are two alternative ways to connect audio signal from a CD-ROM drive tor the SB Live soundcard. You
       can use a (three wire) analog cable or a (2 wire) digital cable. OSS now supports both of these  choices.
       Note that there are separate mixer settings for both of these connections.

       The  analog  CD-ROM wire is connected to the AC97 code chip and this method works in most cases. To route
       the analog CD -input to the (front) speakers you need to raise the volume of the 'cd' control  in  mixer.
       However  if  you  like  to hear the analog CD input both from the front and rears speakers you need to do
       this in slightly different way (please read the description of the mixer above).

       The digital connection works only with CD-ROM drives that has support for  it.   Note  that  some  CD-ROM
       drives  having  this  digital  output  connector use a different signal level than the one required by SB
       Live. This means that the digital connection doesn't work with all CD-ROM drives (no sound). If you  have
       problems  with the digital connection you should use the analog one.  When using the the digital CD input
       you may need to adjust the 'digcd' volumes using ossxmix (or ossmix).

       It should be noted that SB Live works internally at 48 kHz. This means that all S/PDIF input signals  are
       automatically  sample  rate  converted  to  48  kHz.  If you record from a 44.1 kHz (CD-ROM) and save the
       result to a 44.1 kHz file the signal will be sample rate converted twice. First from the 44.1  kHz  input
       to  internal 48 kHz and then back to 44.1 kHz. While the sample rate converter of SB Live is very precise
       this will cause some change. This should not be any problem when doing audio recordings but it may  cause
       unwanted results when transferring digital data (such as AC3/DTS) using the S/PDIF the interface.

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

       •  sblive_digital_din=<0|1>  -  This  option is to enable/disable the "digital DIN" output of SB Live. By
          default the digital DIN interface is disabled which enables the center/LFE  analog  output  (uses  the
          same  combo  jack). By setting the sblive_digital_din option to 0 you can enable the analog Center/LFE
          output feature. When digital DIN is disabled you can still get S/PDIF (or AC3) output from the digital
          (optical/coax) outputs of the optional livedrive unit. Default: 0=analog output.

       •  audigy_digital_din=<0|1>  -  same  as  "sblive_digital_din"  option  except for the Audigy soundcards.
          Default: 1=digital output.

       •  sblive_devices=<1..32> - Number of audio devices to be configured.

LIMITATION

       •  SB Live! devices will not work in Sparc systems due to PCI addressing limitations. Only Audigy/Audigy2
          models work under Sparc.

       •  EMU Wavetable MIDI synthesizer is not supported

       •  AC3 passthrough only supported on Audigy/Audigy but not on SB Live! devices.

FILES

       /etc/oss4/conf/oss_sblive.conf Device configuration file

AUTHOR

       4Front Technologies

                                                13 November 2019                                   oss_sblive(7)