Leider habe ich weder Systemtöne, noch sonstigen Sound.
Ich habe sowohl die Lautstärke hochgeschraubt, als auch den Mixer kontrolliert.
Eigentlich sollte ich Sound haben. Jemand eine Idee, was ich noch probieren kann bzw, wo ich kontrollieren könnte?
Sehr gerne auf Sesamstraßen-Niveau.
Ich nutze MX 18.2 auf einem Ryzen3, 2200G auf einer 1000GB HDD. Eine unbenutzte SDD mit 128 GB ist auch im System.
Danke für jegliche Hilfe.
Code: Select all
$ inxi -F
System: Host: mx.anni Kernel: 4.19.0-1-amd64 x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: Xfce 4.12.3
Distro: MX-18.3_x64 Continuum Apr 7 2019
Machine: Type: Desktop System: HP product: HP Pavilion Desktop 590-p0xxx v: N/A
serial: <root required>
Mobo: HP model: 8433 v: 11 serial: <root required> UEFI: AMI v: F.20 date: 10/26/2018
CPU: Topology: Quad Core model: AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics bits: 64
type: MCP L2 cache: 2048 KiB
Speed: 1420 MHz min/max: 1600/3500 MHz Core speeds (MHz): 1: 1420 2: 1420 3: 1422
4: 1534
Graphics: Device-1: AMD driver: amdgpu v: kernel
Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.19.2 driver: amdgpu,ati
unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,radeon,vesa resolution: 1280x1024~60Hz
OpenGL: renderer: AMD RAVEN (DRM 3.27.0 4.19.0-1-amd64 LLVM 7.0.0) v: 4.5 Mesa 18.2.6
Audio: Device-1: AMD driver: snd_hda_intel
Device-2: AMD driver: N/A
Device-3: AMD driver: snd_hda_intel
Sound Server: ALSA v: k4.19.0-1-amd64
Network: Device-1: Realtek driver: N/A
Device-2: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet driver: r8169
IF: eth0 state: up speed: 1000 Mbps duplex: full mac: f4:39:09:49:94:f9
Drives: Local Storage: total: 1.03 TiB used: 5.41 GiB (0.5%)
ID-1: /dev/nvme0n1 vendor: Toshiba model: KBG30ZMV128G size: 119.24 GiB
ID-2: /dev/sda vendor: Toshiba model: DT01ACA100 size: 931.51 GiB
Partition: ID-1: / size: 913.65 GiB used: 5.41 GiB (0.6%) fs: ext4 dev: /dev/sda2
ID-2: swap-1 size: 2.00 GiB used: 0 KiB (0.0%) fs: swap dev: /dev/sda3
Sensors: System Temperatures: cpu: 30.2 C mobo: N/A gpu: amdgpu temp: 30 C
Fan Speeds (RPM): N/A
Info: Processes: 211 Uptime: 42m Memory: 5.67 GiB used: 1012.0 MiB (17.4%) Shell: bash
inxi: 3.0.33
Code: Select all
$ inxi -h
inxi supports the following options. You can combine these or list them one by one. For more
detailed information, see man inxi. Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -bDc 6. If you start inxi with
no arguments, it will display a short system summary.
The following options, if used without -F, -b, or -v, will show option line(s): A, B, C, D, G, I,
M, N, P, R, S, W, d, f, i, l, m, n, o, p, r, s, t, u, w, --slots, --usb - you can use these alone
or together to show just the line(s) you want to see. If you use them with -v [level], -b or -F,
inxi will combine the outputs.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Output Control Options:
-a, --admin Adds advanced sys admin data (only works with verbose or line output, not short
form):
-C If available: CPU vulnerabilities (bugs); family, model-id, stepping -
format: hex (decimal) if greater than 9, otherwise hex; microcode -
format: hex.
-d If available: logical and physical block sizes.
-p,-P If available: raw size of partition, percent available for user, block
size of file system (root required); for swap, shows swapiness and vfs
cache pressure, and if values are default or not.
-A, --audio Audio/sound card(s), driver, sound server.
-b, --basic Basic output, short form. Same as inxi -v 2.
-B, --battery System battery info, including charge and condition, plus extra info (if
battery present).
-c, --color Set color scheme (0-42). For piped or redirected output, you must use an
explicit color selector. Example: inxi -c 11
Color selectors let you set the config file value for the selection (NOTE: IRC
and global only show safe color set)
94 Console, out of X
95 Terminal, running in X - like xTerm
96 Gui IRC, running in X - like Xchat, Quassel, Konversation etc.
97 Console IRC running in X - like irssi in xTerm
98 Console IRC not in X
99 Global - Overrides/removes all settings. Setting specific removes
global.
-C, --cpu CPU output, including per CPU clock speed and max CPU speed (if available).
-d, --disk-full, --optical
Optical drive data (and floppy disks, if present). Triggers -D.
-D, --disk Hard Disk info, including total storage and details for each disk. Disk total
used percentage includes swap partition size(s).
-f, --flags All CPU flags. Triggers -C. Not shown with -F to avoid spamming.
-F, --full Full output. Includes all Upper Case line letters except -W, plus -s and -n.
Does not show extra verbose options such as -d -f -i -l -m -o -p -r -t -u -x,
unless specified.
-G, --graphics Graphics info (card(s), driver, display protocol (if available), display
server, resolution, renderer, OpenGL version).
-i, --ip WAN IP address and local interfaces (requires ifconfig or ip network tool).
Triggers -n. Not shown with -F for user security reasons. You shouldn't paste
your local/WAN IP.
-I, --info General info, including processes, uptime, memory, IRC client or shell type,
inxi version.
-l, --label Partition labels. Triggers -P. For full -p output, use -pl.
-m, --memory Memory (RAM) data. Requires root. Numbers of devices (slots) supported and
individual memory devices (sticks of memory etc). For devices, shows device
locator, size, speed, type (e.g. DDR3). If neither -I nor -tm are selected,
also shows RAM used/total.
-M, --machine Machine data. Device type (desktop, server, laptop, VM etc.), motherboard, BIOS
and, if present, system builder (e.g. Lenovo). Shows UEFI/BIOS/UEFI [Legacy].
Older systems/kernels without the required /sys data can use dmidecode instead,
run as root. Dmidecode can be forced with --dmidecode
-n, --network-advanced
Advanced Network card info. Triggers -N. Shows interface, speed, MAC id, state,
etc.
-N, --network Network card(s), driver.
-o, --unmounted Unmounted partition info (includes UUID and Label if available). Shows file
system type if you have lsblk installed (Linux) or, for BSD/GNU Linux, if
'file' installed and you are root or if you have added to /etc/sudoers (sudo v.
1.7 or newer).
Example: <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/file
-p, --partitions-full
Full partition information (-P plus all other detected partitions).
-P, --partitions Basic partition info. Shows, if detected: / /boot /home /opt /tmp /usr
/usr/home /var /var/log /var/tmp. Use -p to see all mounted partitions.
-r, --repos Distro repository data. Supported repo types: APK, APT, CARDS, EOPKG, PACMAN,
PACMAN-G2, PISI, PORTAGE, PORTS (BSDs), SLACKPKG, TCE, URPMQ, XBPS, YUM/ZYPP.
-R, --raid RAID data. Shows RAID devices, states, levels, and components. md-raid: If
device is resyncing, also shows resync progress line.
-s, --sensors Sensors output (if sensors installed/configured): mobo/CPU/GPU temp; detected
fan speeds. GPU temp only for Fglrx/Nvidia drivers. Nvidia shows screen number
for > 1 screen. IPMI sensors if present.
--slots PCI slots: type, speed, status. Requires root.
-S, --system System info: host name, kernel, desktop environment (if in X/Wayland), distro.
-t, --processes Processes. Requires extra options: c (CPU), m (memory), cm (CPU+memory). If
followed by numbers 1-x, shows that number of processes for each type (default:
5; if in IRC, max: 5).
Make sure that there is no space between letters and numbers (e.g. -t cm10).
--usb Show USB data: Hubs and Devices.
-u, --uuid Partition UUIDs. Triggers -P. For full -p output, use -pu.
-v, --verbosity Set inxi verbosity level (0-8). Should not be used with -b or -F. Example:
inxi -v 4
0 Same as: inxi
1 Basic verbose, -S + basic CPU + -G + basic Disk + -I.
2 Networking card (-N), Machine (-M), Battery (-B; if present), and, if
present, basic RAID (devices only; notes if inactive). Same as inxi -b
3 Advanced CPU (-C), battery (-B), network (-n); triggers -x.
4 Partition size/used data (-P) for (if present) /, /home, /var/, /boot.
Shows full disk data (-D).
5 Audio card (-A), sensors (-s), memory/RAM (-m), partition label (-l),
UUID (-u), short form of optical drives, standard RAID data (-R).
6 Full partition (-p), unmounted partition (-o), optical drive (-d), USB
(--usb), full RAID; triggers -xx.
7 Network IP data (-i); triggers -xxx.
8 Everything available, including repos (-r), processes (-tcm), PCI slots
(--slots).
-w, --weather Local weather data/time. To check an alternate location, see -W. NO AUTOMATED
QUERIES ALLOWED!
-W, --weather-location
[location] Supported options for [location]: postal code[,country/country
code]; city, state (USA)/country (country/two character country code);
latitude, longitude. Only use if you want the weather somewhere other than the
machine running inxi. Use only ASCII characters, replace spaces in
city/state/country names with '+'.
Example: inxi -W [new+york,ny london,gb madrid,es]
--weather-source
[1-9] Change weather data source. 1-4 generally active, 5-9 check. See man.
--weather-unit
Set weather units to metric (m), imperial (i), metric/imperial (mi), or
imperial/metric (im).
-x, --extra Adds the following extra data (only works with verbose or line output, not
short form):
-A Specific vendor/product information (if relevant); PCI Bus ID/USB ID
number of card; Version/port(s)/driver version (if available).
-B Vendor/model, status (if available); attached devices (e.g. wireless
mouse, keyboard, if present).
-C CPU flags (short list, use -f to see full list), Bogomips on CPU; CPU
microarchitecture + revision (if found, or unless --admin, then shows as
'stepping').
-d Extra optical drive features data; adds rev version to optical drive.
-D HDD temp with disk data if you have hddtemp installed, if you are root,
or if you have added to /etc/sudoers (sudo v. 1.7 or newer).
Example: <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/hddtemp
-G Specific vendor/product information (if relevant); PCI Bus ID/USB ID
number of card; Direct rendering status (in X); Screen number GPU is
running on (Nvidia only).
-i For IPv6, show additional scope addresses: Global, Site, Temporary,
Unknown. See --limit for large counts of IP addresses.
-I Default system GCC. With -xx, also shows other installed GCC versions.
If running in shell, not in IRC client, shows shell version number, if
detected. Init/RC type and runlevel (if available).
-m Max memory module size (if available), device type.
-N Specific vendor/product information (if relevant); PCI Bus ID/USB ID
number of card; Version/port(s)/driver version (if available).
-R md-raid: second RAID Info line with extra data: blocks, chunk size,
bitmap (if present). Resync line, shows blocks synced/total blocks.
Hardware RAID driver version, bus ID.
-s Basic voltages (ipmi, lm-sensors if present): 12v, 5v, 3.3v, vbat.
-S Kernel gcc version; system base of distro (if relevant and detected)
-t Adds memory use output to CPU (-xt c), and CPU use to memory (-xt m).
--usb For Device: driver.
-w -W Wind speed and direction, humidity, pressure, and time zone, if
available.
-xx, --extra 2 Show extra, extra data (only works with verbose or line output, not short
form):
-A Chip vendor:product ID for each audio device.
-B Serial number, voltage now/minimum (if available).
-C L1/L3 cache (if root and dmidecode installed).
-D Disk transfer speed; NVMe lanes; Disk serial number.
-G Chip vendor:product ID for each video card; OpenGL compatibility
version, if free drivers and available; compositor (experimental);
alternate Xorg drivers (if available). Alternate means driver is on
automatic driver check list of Xorg for the card vendor, but is not
installed on system.
-I Other detected installed gcc versions (if present). System default
runlevel. Adds parent program (or tty) for shell info if not in IRC.
Adds Init version number, RC (if found).
-m Manufacturer, part number; single/double bank (if found).
-M Chassis info, BIOS ROM size (dmidecode only), if available.
-N Chip vendor:product ID.
-R md-raid: Superblock (if present), algorithm. If resync, shows progress
bar. Hardware RAID Chip vendor:product ID.
-s DIMM/SOC voltages (ipmi only).
-S Display manager (dm) in desktop output (e.g. kdm, gdm3, lightdm); active
window manager if detected; desktop toolkit, if available
(Xfce/KDE/Trinity only).
--slots Slot length.
--usb Vendor:chip ID.
-w -W Snow, rain, precipitation, (last observed hour), cloud cover, wind
chill, dew point, heat index, if available.
-xxx, --extra 3 Show extra, extra, extra data (only works with verbose or line output, not
short form):
-A Serial number.
-B Chemistry, cycles, location (if available).
-C CPU boost (turbo) enabled/disabled, if present.
-D Firmware rev. if available; partition scheme, in some cases; disk
rotation speed (if detected).
-G Compositor version (if detectable).
-I For 'Shell:' adds ([su|sudo|login]) to shell name if present; for
'running in:' adds (SSH) if SSH session.
-m Width of memory bus, data and total (if present and greater than data);
Detail for Type, if present; module voltage, if available; serial
number.
-N Serial number.
-R zfs-raid: portion allocated (used) by RAID devices/arrays. md-raid:
system md-raid support types (kernel support, read ahead, RAID events).
Hardware RAID rev, ports, specific vendor/product information.
-S Panel/tray/bar/dock info in desktop output, if in X (like lxpanel,
xfce4-panel, mate-panel); (if available) dm version number, window
manager version number.
--usb For Device: serial number (if present), interface count; USB speed.
-w -W Location (uses -z/irc filter), weather observation time, altitude,
sunrise/sunset, if available.
-y, --width Output line width max (integer >= 80). Overrides IRC/Terminal settings or
actual widths. Example: inxi -y 130
-z, --filter Adds security filters for IP/MAC addresses, serial numbers, location (-w), user
home directory name. Default on for IRC clients.
-Z, --filter-override
Absolute override for output filters. Useful for debugging networking issues in
IRC, for example.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Additional Options:
-h, --help This help menu.
--recommends Checks inxi application dependencies + recommends, and directories, then shows
what package(s) you need to install to add support for that feature.
-V, --version Prints inxi version info then exits.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Advanced Options:
--alt Trigger for various advanced options:
40 Bypass Perl as a downloader option.
41 Bypass Curl as a downloader option.
42 Bypass Fetch as a downloader option.
43 Bypass Wget as a downloader option.
44 Bypass Curl, Fetch, and Wget as downloader options. Forces Perl if
HTTP::Tiny present.
--display [:[0-9]] Try to get display data out of X (default: display 0).
--dmidecode Force use of dmidecode data instead of /sys where relevant (e.g. -M, -B).
--downloader Force inxi to use [curl|fetch|perl|wget] for downloads.
--host Turn on hostname for -S.
--indent-min Set point where inxi autowraps line starters.
--limit [-1; 1-x] Set max output limit of IP addresses for -i (default 10; -1 removes
limit).
--no-host Turn off hostname for -S. Useful if showing output from servers etc.
--no-ssl Skip SSL certificate checks for all downloader actions (Wget/Fetch/Curl only).
--output [json|screen|xml] Change data output type. Requires --output-file if not
screen.
--output-file
[Full filepath|print] Output file to be used for --output.
--partition-sort
[dev-base|fs|id|label|percent-used|size|uuid|used] Change sort order of
partition output. See man page for specifics.
--sleep [0-x.x] Change CPU sleep time, in seconds, for -C (default: 0.35). Allows
system to catch up and show a more accurate CPU use.
Example: inxi -Cxxx --sleep 0.15
--tty Forces irc flag to false. Generally useful if inxi is running inside of another
tool like Chef or MOTD and returns corrupted color codes. Please see man page
or file an issue if you need to use this flag. Must use -y [width] option if
you want a specific output width. Always put this option first in an option
list.
--usb-sys Force USB data to use /sys as data source (Linux only).
--usb-tool Force USB data to use lsusb as data source (Linux only).
--wan-ip-url [URL] Skips dig, uses supplied URL for WAN IP (-i). URL output must end in the
IP address. See man. Example: inxi -i --wan-ip-url https://yoursite.com/ip.php
--wm Force wm: to use wmctrl as data source. Default uses ps.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Debugging Options:
--dbg Specific debuggers, change often. Only 1 is constant:
1 Show downloader output. Turns off quiet mode.
--debug Triggers debugging modes.
1-3 On screen debugger output.
10 Basic logging.
11 Full file/system info logging.
The following create a tar.gz file of system data, plus inxi output. To
automatically upload debugger data tar.gz file to ftp.techpatterns.com:
inxi --debug 21
20 Full system data collection: /sys; xorg conf and log data, xrandr,
xprop, xdpyinfo, glxinfo etc.; data from dev, disks, partitions, etc.
21 Upload debugger dataset to inxi debugger server automatically, removes
debugger data directory, leaves tar.gz debugger file.
22 Upload debugger dataset to inxi debugger server automatically, removes
debugger data directory and debugger tar.gz file.
--debug-proc Force debugger parsing of /proc as sudo/root.
--debug-proc-print
To locate file that /proc debugger hangs on.
--debug-no-exit
Skip exit on error to allow completion.
--debug-no-proc
Skip /proc debugging in case of a hang.
--debug-no-sys
Skip /sys debugging in case of a hang.
--debug-sys Force PowerPC debugger parsing of /sys as sudo/root.
--debug-sys-print
To locate file that /sys debugger hangs on.
--ftp Use with --debugger 21 to trigger an alternate FTP server for upload.
Format: [ftp.xx.xx/yy]. Must include a remote directory to upload to.
Example: inxi --debug 21 --ftp ftp.myserver.com/incoming