Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
ALSA has its own proc tree, /proc/asound. Many useful information are found in this tree. When you encounter a problem and need debugging, check the files listed in the following sections.
Each card has its subtree cardX, where X is from 0 to 7. The card-specific files are stored in the card* subdirectories.
The card-specific files are found in /proc/asound/card* directories. Some drivers (e.g. cmipci) have their own proc entries for the register dump, etc (e.g. /proc/asound/card*/cmipci shows the register dump). These files would be really helpful for debugging.
When PCM devices are available on this card, you can see directories like pcm0p or pcm1c. They hold the PCM information for each PCM stream. The number after pcm is the PCM device number from 0, and the last p or c means playback or capture direction. The files in this subtree is described later.
The status of MIDI I/O is found in midi* files. It shows the device name and the received/transmitted bytes through the MIDI device.
When the card is equipped with AC97 codecs, there are codec97#* subdirectories (described later).
When the OSS mixer emulation is enabled (and the module is loaded), oss_mixer file appears here, too. This shows the current mapping of OSS mixer elements to the ALSA control elements. You can change the mapping by writing to this device. Read OSS-Emulation.txt for details.
This file appears when CONFIG_SND_DEBUG=y and CONFIG_PCM_XRUN_DEBUG=y. This shows the status of xrun (= buffer overrun/xrun) and invalid PCM position debug/check of ALSA PCM middle layer. It takes an integer value, can be changed by writing to this file, such as:
# echo 5 > /proc/asound/card0/pcm0p/xrun_debug
The value consists of the following bit flags:
When the bit 0 is set, the driver will show the messages to kernel log when an xrun is detected. The debug message is shown also when the invalid H/W pointer is detected at the update of periods (usually called from the interrupt handler).
When the bit 1 is set, the driver will show the stack trace additionally. This may help the debugging.
Since 2.6.30, this option can enable the hwptr check using jiffies. This detects spontaneous invalid pointer callback values, but can be lead to too much corrections for a (mostly buggy) hardware that doesn’t give smooth pointer updates. This feature is enabled via the bit 2.
Shows the AC97 register dump. Useful for debugging.
When CONFIG_SND_DEBUG is enabled, you can write to this file for changing an AC97 register directly. Pass two hex numbers. For example,
# echo 02 9f1f > /proc/asound/card0/codec97#0/ac97#0-0+regs
Available for HDMI or DisplayPort interfaces. Shows ELD(EDID Like Data) info retrieved from the attached HDMI sink, and describes its audio capabilities and configurations.
Some ELD fields may be modified by doing echo name hex_value > eld#*. Only do this if you are sure the HDMI sink provided value is wrong. And if that makes your HDMI audio work, please report to us so that we can fix it in future kernel releases.
When the problem is related with PCM, first try to turn on xrun_debug mode. This will give you the kernel messages when and where xrun happened.
If it’s really a bug, report it with the following information:
when it’s a PCM problem,
when it’s a mixer problem,
for USB audio/midi,
The ALSA bug-tracking system is found at: https://bugtrack.alsa-project.org/alsa-bug/