From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Kevin J. Cummings" Subject: sound-slot-1? Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2003 18:06:06 -0400 Sender: linux-admin-owner@vger.kernel.org Message-ID: <3F1F06CE.2020701@kjchome.homeip.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: List-Id: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format="flowed" To: linux-admin I have a Sound Blaster PCI-128 sound card installed (and working) in my system. Linux 2.4.20 from RedHat 7.3. There are no other sound devices in my system. The following is the snipet from /etc/modules.conf which configures it: # Entry for Sound Blaster 128/PCI alias sound-slot-0 es1370 options sound lineout=1 Why then am I getting the following messages in my log files? > Jul 23 16:27:38 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-slot-1 > Jul 23 16:27:38 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-service-1-0 > Jul 23 16:27:39 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-slot-1 > Jul 23 16:27:39 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-service-1-0 > Jul 23 16:29:16 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-slot-1 > Jul 23 16:29:16 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-service-1-0 > Jul 23 16:29:16 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-slot-1 > Jul 23 16:29:16 kjc386 modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module sound-service-1-0 I suspect that they are coming from either the Mozilla browser or the Mozilla Email client (probably from SPAM emails). But why are they sound-slot-1 and sound-service-1-0 errors. Why don't they use the sound-slot-0 or sound-service-0-0???? Could it be because some other application has the -0 devices in use? Is there any way to keep the system from trying to use the -1 stuff? -- Kevin J. Cummings kjchome@rcn.com cummings@kjchome.homeip.net cummings@kjc386.framingham.ma.us