

None of the lights turned on - same thing in root. Maybe you try it to run as root not as sudo.Īnd take a look at the last lines of /var/log/syslog or dmesg. You have two sound cards on your system? Whatever existing card was in the computer and your US-122? Is that right?ĭid you see some lights turning on on the US-122. I have deactivated realtime and frames/period is set to 4096. hw:1|hw:1|4096|2|48000|0|0|nomon|swmeter|-|32bitĬonfiguring for 48000Hz, period = 4096 frames, buffer = 2 periodsĬouldn't open hw:1 for 32bit samples trying 24bit insteadġ7:44:26.891 Server configuration saved to "/home/goye2cz/.jackdrc".ġ7:44:26.957 Audio connection graph change. Under certain conditions see the file COPYING for detailsĬreating alsa driver. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it I get this in the messages after I start jackd (using qjackctl):ġ7:44:16.768 Could not open ALSA sequencer as a client. I still seem to be having trouble with jack. I'd imagine you could even have usx2yloader run on startup, if the card was attached all the time.Īctually, I tried really hard this morning and finally got my tascam installed. Should you reboot or disconnect the device, you'll need to do If you already had a sound card(s) installed, as I did, your USB card will be the last in the list. Sound Blaster Live! (rev.10) at 0xd000, irq 18

The /001/005 comes from your lsusb results. It was in the archive you downloaded from. path/to/ represents the location of your ld2-ezusb.hex file. Sudo fxload -s /path/to/ld2-ezusb.hex -I /usr/share/alsa/firmware/usx2yloader/us122fw.ihx -D /proc/bus/usb/001/005 In this case:īus 001 Device 005: ID 1604:8005 Tascam US-224 Audio/Midi Controller Once you have your deb installed (or got the install done from source) downloadĪnd make note of the bus and device.

Sudo alien -to-deb alsa-firmware-1.0.i386.rpm There is a link there to the source for alsa-firmware but I downloaded an RPM from

"The alsa-tools packages is almost useles without the alsa-firmware one!Īwfully alsa-firmware has broken license terms and it's to legallyĭistributable at the moment. Now, /usr/share/doc/alsa-tools/README.Debian reveals: Although I haven't tested it on any other devices (because I don't have any) I would think the process would be the same. This process definitely got my US-122 to work on a number of different machines. I had seen similar posts regarding other USB sound cards. I have a Tascam US-122 and was having trouble getting it to work.
