Freebsd Sound Support

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7.2. Setting Up the Sound Card - FreeBSD

    https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/sound-setup.html
    This section is for users who prefer to statically compile in support for the sound card in a custom kernel. For more information about recompiling a kernel, refer to Chapter 8, Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel.. When using a custom kernel to provide sound support, make sure that the audio framework driver exists in the custom kernel configuration file:

Chapter 15. Sound Subsystem - FreeBSD

    https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/arch-handbook/oss.html
    The FreeBSD sound subsystem cleanly separates generic sound handling issues from device-specific ones. This makes it easier to add support for new hardware. The pcm (4) framework is the central piece of the sound subsystem. It mainly implements the following elements:

Other - Sound On FreeBSD and HiDPI support The FreeBSD ...

    https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/sound-on-freebsd-and-hidpi-support.57716/
    Sep 18, 2016 · Any FreeBSD devs care to comment on a toolkit to use? I would like something that's light weight but it has to support HiDPI. I don't think there's any reason to create any program going forward that doesn't support these types of screen and there are a lot of sound software on linux that have UI that scales horribly.

Setting Up the Sound Card - FreeBSD

    https://docs.freebsd.org/doc/5.3-RELEASE/usr/share/doc/handbook/sound-setup.html
    7.2.1.1 Configuring a Custom Kernel with Sound Support. The first thing to do is adding the generic audio driver sound (4) to the kernel, for that you will need to add the following line to the kernel configuration file: device sound Under FreeBSD 4.X, you would use the following line: device pcm Then we have to add the support for our sound card.

Sound card - FreeBSDwiki

    http://www.freebsdwiki.net/index.php/Sound_card
    Since 27/07/04 the sound system has changed a lot and now to install sound under FreeBSD you have to do the following: freebsd# kldload sound Then find out your sound card. I'm using an ASUS A7N8X motherboard with Nvidia onboard sound so I typed freebsd# kldload snd_ich

8.2. Setting Up the Sound Card - FreeBSD

    https://people.freebsd.org/~blackend/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/sound-setup.html
    This section is for users who prefer to statically compile in support for the sound card in a custom kernel. For more information about recompiling a kernel, refer to Chapter 9, Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel.. When using a custom kernel to provide sound support, make sure that the audio framework driver exists in the custom kernel configuration file:

The FreeBSD Diary -- Sound with FreeBSD - A How-To Guide

    http://www.freebsddiary.org/sound.php
    Setting up sound in FreeBSD has two paths: kernel support or OSS. OSS is a nice commercial way to go, around $15 to $20 and I hear it isn't bad. However, if you're like me and hate to pay for something that you can do yourself, kernel support is the way to go.

Setting Up the Sound Card - FreeBSD

    https://docs.freebsd.org/doc/7.3-RELEASE/usr/share/doc/handbook/sound-setup.html
    7.2.3 Utilizing Multiple Sound Sources Contributed by Munish Chopra.. It is often desirable to have multiple sources of sound that are able to play simultaneously, such as when esound or artsd do not support sharing of the sound device with a certain application.. FreeBSD lets you do this through Virtual Sound Channels, which can be enabled with the sysctl (8) facility.



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