On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 2:42 PM, Niki Kovacscontact@kikinovak.net wrote:
Lucian@lastdot.org a écrit :
ls -al /dev/{dsp,audio} ?
On my laptop:
[kikinovak@lifebook ~]$ ls -al /dev/{dsp,audio} crw------- 1 kikinovak root 14, 4 jui 6 07:32 /dev/audio crw------- 1 kikinovak root 14, 3 jui 6 07:32 /dev/dsp
And on the jukebox:
[kikinovak@jukebox ~]$ ls -al /dev/{dsp,audio} crw------- 1 root root 14, 4 jui 6 15:23 /dev/audio crw------- 1 root root 14, 3 jui 6 15:23 /dev/dsp
Uh oh. So here's the core of the problem.
Now as far as I understand, it's useless to change the owner of these with a simple chown, as the device nodes get dynamically created by udev (correct me if I'm wrong). I *think* I have to edit some udev rule file to change this, but this is as far as my knowledge goes.
(This is strange... I can't remember doing anything like this to the device files... how comes the ownership is different on a standard desktop system?)
Niki _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Yeah, unfortunatelly I don't know either. Never used systems for such thing, it's probably a udev issue. Easy solution is to chown user /dev/dsp and then add this command to rc.local.