linux/Documentation/sound/alsa
Takashi Iwai 8b3dfdaf0c ALSA: hda - Adjust speaker HPF and add LED support for HP Spectre 13
HP Spectre 13 has the IDT 92HD95 codec, and BIOS seems to set the
default high-pass filter in some "safer" range, which results in the
very soft tone from the built-in speakers in contrast to Windows.
Also, the mute LED control is missing, since 92HD95 codec still has no
HP-specific fixups for GPIO setups.

This patch adds these missing features: the HPF is adjusted by the
vendor-specific verb, and the LED is set up from a DMI string (but
with the default polarity = 0 assumption due to the incomplete BIOS on
the given machine).

Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=74841
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
2014-06-25 17:50:24 +02:00
..
soc ASoC: docs: Update the Overview document 2014-01-07 17:56:32 +00:00
ALSA-Configuration.txt doc: spelling error changes 2014-05-05 15:32:05 +02:00
alsa-parameters.txt sound: move driver parameters to their own files 2010-06-08 16:40:35 +02:00
Audigy-mixer.txt
Audiophile-Usb.txt ALSA: Fix typo in documentation/alsa 2013-10-29 11:38:04 +01:00
Bt87x.txt
Channel-Mapping-API.txt ALSA: Define more channel map positions 2012-09-12 18:13:03 +02:00
CMIPCI.txt ALSA: Fix typo in documentation/alsa 2013-10-29 11:38:04 +01:00
compress_offload.txt ALSA: Fix typo in documentation/alsa 2013-10-29 11:38:04 +01:00
ControlNames.txt ALSA: rename "PC Speaker" controls to "Speaker" 2009-11-05 09:00:21 +01:00
emu10k1-jack.txt
HD-Audio-Controls.txt ALSA: hda - Add documentation for codec specific mixer controls of Analog codecs 2011-10-04 07:26:59 +02:00
HD-Audio-Models.txt ALSA: hda - Adjust speaker HPF and add LED support for HP Spectre 13 2014-06-25 17:50:24 +02:00
HD-Audio.txt ALSA: hda - Fix invalid multi-io creation on VAIO-Z laptops 2013-07-29 16:54:36 +02:00
hda_codec.txt trivial: Miscellaneous documentation typo fixes 2009-06-12 18:01:47 +02:00
hdspm.txt Documentation: Add newline at end-of-file to files lacking one 2012-07-20 23:10:28 +02:00
Joystick.txt
MIXART.txt Documentation: remove references to /etc/modprobe.conf 2012-03-30 16:03:15 -07:00
OSS-Emulation.txt Documentation: remove references to /etc/modprobe.conf 2012-03-30 16:03:15 -07:00
powersave.txt
Procfile.txt ALSA: Update documents about new bits of xrun_debug proc file 2010-07-08 09:01:17 +02:00
README.maya44 doc: Fix typo "is is" in Documentations 2013-08-27 10:50:52 +02:00
SB-Live-mixer.txt ALSA: emu10k1 - Fix "Music" controls to "Synth" controls in documents 2011-04-14 12:04:28 +02:00
seq_oss.html ALSA: documentation: Fix typo in Documentation/sound 2013-03-17 10:12:13 +01:00
serial-u16550.txt
VIA82xx-mixer.txt

NOTE: The following is the original document of Rainer's patch that the
current maya44 code based on.  Some contents might be obsoleted, but I
keep here as reference -- tiwai

----------------------------------------------------------------
 
STATE OF DEVELOPMENT:

This driver is being developed on the initiative of Piotr Makowski (oponek@gmail.com) and financed by Lars Bergmann.
Development is carried out by Rainer Zimmermann (mail@lightshed.de).

ESI provided a sample Maya44 card for the development work.

However, unfortunately it has turned out difficult to get detailed programming information, so I (Rainer Zimmermann) had to find out some card-specific information by experiment and conjecture. Some information (in particular, several GPIO bits) is still missing.

This is the first testing version of the Maya44 driver released to the alsa-devel mailing list (Feb 5, 2008).


The following functions work, as tested by Rainer Zimmermann and Piotr Makowski:

- playback and capture at all sampling rates
- input/output level
- crossmixing
- line/mic switch
- phantom power switch
- analogue monitor a.k.a bypass


The following functions *should* work, but are not fully tested:

- Channel 3+4 analogue - S/PDIF input switching
- S/PDIF output
- all inputs/outputs on the M/IO/DIO extension card
- internal/external clock selection


*In particular, we would appreciate testing of these functions by anyone who has access to an M/IO/DIO extension card.*


Things that do not seem to work:

- The level meters ("multi track") in 'alsamixer' do not seem to react to signals in (if this is a bug, it would probably be in the existing ICE1724 code).

- Ardour 2.1 seems to work only via JACK, not using ALSA directly or via OSS. This still needs to be tracked down.


DRIVER DETAILS:

the following files were added:

pci/ice1724/maya44.c        - Maya44 specific code
pci/ice1724/maya44.h
pci/ice1724/ice1724.patch
pci/ice1724/ice1724.h.patch - PROPOSED patch to ice1724.h (see SAMPLING RATES)
i2c/other/wm8776.c  - low-level access routines for Wolfson WM8776 codecs 
include/wm8776.h


Note that the wm8776.c code is meant to be card-independent and does not actually register the codec with the ALSA infrastructure.
This is done in maya44.c, mainly because some of the WM8776 controls are used in Maya44-specific ways, and should be named appropriately.


the following files were created in pci/ice1724, simply #including the corresponding file from the alsa-kernel tree:

wtm.h
vt1720_mobo.h
revo.h
prodigy192.h
pontis.h
phase.h
maya44.h
juli.h
aureon.h
amp.h
envy24ht.h
se.h
prodigy_hifi.h


*I hope this is the correct way to do things.*


SAMPLING RATES:

The Maya44 card (or more exactly, the Wolfson WM8776 codecs) allow a maximum sampling rate of 192 kHz for playback and 92 kHz for capture.

As the ICE1724 chip only allows one global sampling rate, this is handled as follows:

* setting the sampling rate on any open PCM device on the maya44 card will always set the *global* sampling rate for all playback and capture channels.

* In the current state of the driver, setting rates of up to 192 kHz is permitted even for capture devices.

*AVOID CAPTURING AT RATES ABOVE 96kHz*, even though it may appear to work. The codec cannot actually capture at such rates, meaning poor quality.


I propose some additional code for limiting the sampling rate when setting on a capture pcm device. However because of the global sampling rate, this logic would be somewhat problematic.

The proposed code (currently deactivated) is in ice1712.h.patch, ice1724.c and maya44.c (in pci/ice1712).


SOUND DEVICES:

PCM devices correspond to inputs/outputs as follows (assuming Maya44 is card #0):

hw:0,0 input - stereo, analog input 1+2
hw:0,0 output - stereo, analog output 1+2
hw:0,1 input - stereo, analog input 3+4 OR S/PDIF input
hw:0,1 output - stereo, analog output 3+4 (and SPDIF out)


NAMING OF MIXER CONTROLS:

(for more information about the signal flow, please refer to the block diagram on p.24 of the ESI Maya44 manual, or in the ESI windows software).


PCM: (digital) output level for channel 1+2
PCM 1: same for channel 3+4

Mic Phantom+48V: switch for +48V phantom power for electrostatic microphones on input 1/2.
    Make sure this is not turned on while any other source is connected to input 1/2.
    It might damage the source and/or the maya44 card.

Mic/Line input: if switch is on, input jack 1/2 is microphone input (mono), otherwise line input (stereo).

Bypass: analogue bypass from ADC input to output for channel 1+2. Same as "Monitor" in the windows driver.
Bypass 1: same for channel 3+4.

Crossmix: cross-mixer from channels 1+2 to channels 3+4
Crossmix 1: cross-mixer from channels 3+4 to channels 1+2

IEC958 Output: switch for S/PDIF output.
    This is not supported by the ESI windows driver.
    S/PDIF should output the same signal as channel 3+4. [untested!]


Digitial output selectors:

    These switches allow a direct digital routing from the ADCs to the DACs.
    Each switch determines where the digital input data to one of the DACs comes from.
    They are not supported by the ESI windows driver.
    For normal operation, they should all be set to "PCM out".

H/W: Output source channel 1
H/W 1: Output source channel 2
H/W 2: Output source channel 3
H/W 3: Output source channel 4

H/W 4 ... H/W 9: unknown function, left in to enable testing.
    Possibly some of these control S/PDIF output(s).
    If these turn out to be unused, they will go away in later driver versions.

Selectable values for each of the digital output selectors are:
   "PCM out" -> DAC output of the corresponding channel (default setting)
   "Input 1"...
   "Input 4" -> direct routing from ADC output of the selected input channel


--------

Feb 14, 2008
Rainer Zimmermann
mail@lightshed.de