No sound from speakers on Ubuntu 18.04
I just installed Ubuntu 18.04. (In dual boot)
The speakers are recognized in settings: it says "speakers - built-in audio" under Settings-Sound. However, they do not work.
Headphones do work for system sounds and in Chromium, but they do not work in Firefox.
Any other information, please ask. I am new at this and don't really know what is necessary to give.
This worked for a few days, but then it stopped working:
I turned off fast startup on Windows following No sound from laptop speakers in Ubuntu 14.04 after booting into Windows 8.1. Now my speakers are working except on firefox: so now the only problem was that neither the speakers nor the headphones work with firefox.
Using pavucontrol as in https://askubuntu.com/a/822196/679786 I managed to get the sound right in firefox too.
But now the problem is back.
sound alsa headphones
add a comment |
I just installed Ubuntu 18.04. (In dual boot)
The speakers are recognized in settings: it says "speakers - built-in audio" under Settings-Sound. However, they do not work.
Headphones do work for system sounds and in Chromium, but they do not work in Firefox.
Any other information, please ask. I am new at this and don't really know what is necessary to give.
This worked for a few days, but then it stopped working:
I turned off fast startup on Windows following No sound from laptop speakers in Ubuntu 14.04 after booting into Windows 8.1. Now my speakers are working except on firefox: so now the only problem was that neither the speakers nor the headphones work with firefox.
Using pavucontrol as in https://askubuntu.com/a/822196/679786 I managed to get the sound right in firefox too.
But now the problem is back.
sound alsa headphones
Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56
add a comment |
I just installed Ubuntu 18.04. (In dual boot)
The speakers are recognized in settings: it says "speakers - built-in audio" under Settings-Sound. However, they do not work.
Headphones do work for system sounds and in Chromium, but they do not work in Firefox.
Any other information, please ask. I am new at this and don't really know what is necessary to give.
This worked for a few days, but then it stopped working:
I turned off fast startup on Windows following No sound from laptop speakers in Ubuntu 14.04 after booting into Windows 8.1. Now my speakers are working except on firefox: so now the only problem was that neither the speakers nor the headphones work with firefox.
Using pavucontrol as in https://askubuntu.com/a/822196/679786 I managed to get the sound right in firefox too.
But now the problem is back.
sound alsa headphones
I just installed Ubuntu 18.04. (In dual boot)
The speakers are recognized in settings: it says "speakers - built-in audio" under Settings-Sound. However, they do not work.
Headphones do work for system sounds and in Chromium, but they do not work in Firefox.
Any other information, please ask. I am new at this and don't really know what is necessary to give.
This worked for a few days, but then it stopped working:
I turned off fast startup on Windows following No sound from laptop speakers in Ubuntu 14.04 after booting into Windows 8.1. Now my speakers are working except on firefox: so now the only problem was that neither the speakers nor the headphones work with firefox.
Using pavucontrol as in https://askubuntu.com/a/822196/679786 I managed to get the sound right in firefox too.
But now the problem is back.
sound alsa headphones
sound alsa headphones
edited Aug 25 '18 at 13:27
Soap
asked Aug 20 '18 at 15:28
SoapSoap
12817
12817
Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56
add a comment |
Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56
Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
I had this same problem and it was driving me nuts trying to fix it because whenever I booted into Windows 10, sound worked fine. Meanwhile, on Ubuntu 18.04, I found a number of helpful web pages with suggestions for troubleshooting audio problems.
The suggestion that worked for me was running 'sudo alsamixer' in a terminal window. I didn't even have success with this until I started to approach the problem with the expectation that things were gonna work realized I needed to be able to tell when they did.
I have provided some very basic instructions below that I hope might help someone troubleshooting audio problems. While steps 3 and onward are specific to alsamixer (version 1.1.3), steps 1 and 2 may help a person detect when things are working for other changes. If you are already familiar with alsamixer, then I'm sure you will understand that we are looking for any playback settings that may be muting output or producing output at a volume to low to be heard. In my case, it was the muting of one particular item that actually produced audio through the speakers.
- Turn speakers on to HALF volume, NOT full volume
- Start the audio source you want to hear through the speakers. It is important that the audio source provide continuous test audio so that you will hear the audio through the speakers once the correct setting is discovered and adjusted.
- Open a terminal window
- Enter the following command:
sudo alsamixer
- Assuming the application launches and you can see the UI, proceed with the remaining steps.
- Press F6 to select the desired soundcard
- Press F3 to ensure we are only exploring [Playback] settings
We're gonna change the volume level or mute status of various items to see if the change causes audio to come through the speakers. The currently selected item is the one on the left. By moving the right arrow key we can select the item to its right. We will slowly explore each item until we go all the way to the right. You will see the name of the currently selected item appear in the upper right of the screen next to "Item:"
- Use the right and left arrow keys to move to different items.
- Note the current volume level or mute status.
- If the item volume indicator has a little box with "MM" or "0", try toggling the mute status with the "M" on the keyboard. If you do not hear audio from the speakers, then toggle the item again to put it back to its original state.
- If the item volume has a vertical box, use the up and down arrow keys to raise the volume level all the way to the top. If this does not result in audio being output from the speaker, then lower the volume back to its original value.
- Repeat steps 7 through 10 until you hear the test audio from the speakers or until you reach the last item on the right.
My apologies if you get all the way to the right without any improvement in your audio configuration.
In my case, I have an ancient Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS sound card. Everything worked right out of the box when I first installed Ubuntu, but some later actions on my part broke the audio configuration to where I could hear audio through headphones but nothing came through the speakers, even if I physically disconnected the headphones (which I also tried since some cards auto-toggle speakers when headphones are connected/disconnected).
When I followed the steps above, I came to the item: Audigy Analog/Digital Output Jack, which was set to "0" (enabled), I toggled to mute ("MM"), thereby turning the item "[Off]". The moment I did this, I actually got sound output through the speakers. Makes no sense to me at all why enabling this item would DISABLE output to speakers and vice-versa, but I'm so happy to have finally found this setting and fixed my audio configuration, and can now listen through speakers or headphones as I choose.
add a comment |
Try installing pavucontrol.
sudo apt install pavucontrol.
Run the app and in the [Output Devices] tab select
Port: Headphones. (Actually speak
ers for me.)
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
add a comment |
try using,
- killall pulseaudio
- rm -r ~/.config/pulse/*
- apt-get remove --purge alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo init 6
and install again,
- apt-get install alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo alsa force-reload
and reboot. so follow the command pavucontrol
Hope this helps.
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I had this same problem and it was driving me nuts trying to fix it because whenever I booted into Windows 10, sound worked fine. Meanwhile, on Ubuntu 18.04, I found a number of helpful web pages with suggestions for troubleshooting audio problems.
The suggestion that worked for me was running 'sudo alsamixer' in a terminal window. I didn't even have success with this until I started to approach the problem with the expectation that things were gonna work realized I needed to be able to tell when they did.
I have provided some very basic instructions below that I hope might help someone troubleshooting audio problems. While steps 3 and onward are specific to alsamixer (version 1.1.3), steps 1 and 2 may help a person detect when things are working for other changes. If you are already familiar with alsamixer, then I'm sure you will understand that we are looking for any playback settings that may be muting output or producing output at a volume to low to be heard. In my case, it was the muting of one particular item that actually produced audio through the speakers.
- Turn speakers on to HALF volume, NOT full volume
- Start the audio source you want to hear through the speakers. It is important that the audio source provide continuous test audio so that you will hear the audio through the speakers once the correct setting is discovered and adjusted.
- Open a terminal window
- Enter the following command:
sudo alsamixer
- Assuming the application launches and you can see the UI, proceed with the remaining steps.
- Press F6 to select the desired soundcard
- Press F3 to ensure we are only exploring [Playback] settings
We're gonna change the volume level or mute status of various items to see if the change causes audio to come through the speakers. The currently selected item is the one on the left. By moving the right arrow key we can select the item to its right. We will slowly explore each item until we go all the way to the right. You will see the name of the currently selected item appear in the upper right of the screen next to "Item:"
- Use the right and left arrow keys to move to different items.
- Note the current volume level or mute status.
- If the item volume indicator has a little box with "MM" or "0", try toggling the mute status with the "M" on the keyboard. If you do not hear audio from the speakers, then toggle the item again to put it back to its original state.
- If the item volume has a vertical box, use the up and down arrow keys to raise the volume level all the way to the top. If this does not result in audio being output from the speaker, then lower the volume back to its original value.
- Repeat steps 7 through 10 until you hear the test audio from the speakers or until you reach the last item on the right.
My apologies if you get all the way to the right without any improvement in your audio configuration.
In my case, I have an ancient Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS sound card. Everything worked right out of the box when I first installed Ubuntu, but some later actions on my part broke the audio configuration to where I could hear audio through headphones but nothing came through the speakers, even if I physically disconnected the headphones (which I also tried since some cards auto-toggle speakers when headphones are connected/disconnected).
When I followed the steps above, I came to the item: Audigy Analog/Digital Output Jack, which was set to "0" (enabled), I toggled to mute ("MM"), thereby turning the item "[Off]". The moment I did this, I actually got sound output through the speakers. Makes no sense to me at all why enabling this item would DISABLE output to speakers and vice-versa, but I'm so happy to have finally found this setting and fixed my audio configuration, and can now listen through speakers or headphones as I choose.
add a comment |
I had this same problem and it was driving me nuts trying to fix it because whenever I booted into Windows 10, sound worked fine. Meanwhile, on Ubuntu 18.04, I found a number of helpful web pages with suggestions for troubleshooting audio problems.
The suggestion that worked for me was running 'sudo alsamixer' in a terminal window. I didn't even have success with this until I started to approach the problem with the expectation that things were gonna work realized I needed to be able to tell when they did.
I have provided some very basic instructions below that I hope might help someone troubleshooting audio problems. While steps 3 and onward are specific to alsamixer (version 1.1.3), steps 1 and 2 may help a person detect when things are working for other changes. If you are already familiar with alsamixer, then I'm sure you will understand that we are looking for any playback settings that may be muting output or producing output at a volume to low to be heard. In my case, it was the muting of one particular item that actually produced audio through the speakers.
- Turn speakers on to HALF volume, NOT full volume
- Start the audio source you want to hear through the speakers. It is important that the audio source provide continuous test audio so that you will hear the audio through the speakers once the correct setting is discovered and adjusted.
- Open a terminal window
- Enter the following command:
sudo alsamixer
- Assuming the application launches and you can see the UI, proceed with the remaining steps.
- Press F6 to select the desired soundcard
- Press F3 to ensure we are only exploring [Playback] settings
We're gonna change the volume level or mute status of various items to see if the change causes audio to come through the speakers. The currently selected item is the one on the left. By moving the right arrow key we can select the item to its right. We will slowly explore each item until we go all the way to the right. You will see the name of the currently selected item appear in the upper right of the screen next to "Item:"
- Use the right and left arrow keys to move to different items.
- Note the current volume level or mute status.
- If the item volume indicator has a little box with "MM" or "0", try toggling the mute status with the "M" on the keyboard. If you do not hear audio from the speakers, then toggle the item again to put it back to its original state.
- If the item volume has a vertical box, use the up and down arrow keys to raise the volume level all the way to the top. If this does not result in audio being output from the speaker, then lower the volume back to its original value.
- Repeat steps 7 through 10 until you hear the test audio from the speakers or until you reach the last item on the right.
My apologies if you get all the way to the right without any improvement in your audio configuration.
In my case, I have an ancient Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS sound card. Everything worked right out of the box when I first installed Ubuntu, but some later actions on my part broke the audio configuration to where I could hear audio through headphones but nothing came through the speakers, even if I physically disconnected the headphones (which I also tried since some cards auto-toggle speakers when headphones are connected/disconnected).
When I followed the steps above, I came to the item: Audigy Analog/Digital Output Jack, which was set to "0" (enabled), I toggled to mute ("MM"), thereby turning the item "[Off]". The moment I did this, I actually got sound output through the speakers. Makes no sense to me at all why enabling this item would DISABLE output to speakers and vice-versa, but I'm so happy to have finally found this setting and fixed my audio configuration, and can now listen through speakers or headphones as I choose.
add a comment |
I had this same problem and it was driving me nuts trying to fix it because whenever I booted into Windows 10, sound worked fine. Meanwhile, on Ubuntu 18.04, I found a number of helpful web pages with suggestions for troubleshooting audio problems.
The suggestion that worked for me was running 'sudo alsamixer' in a terminal window. I didn't even have success with this until I started to approach the problem with the expectation that things were gonna work realized I needed to be able to tell when they did.
I have provided some very basic instructions below that I hope might help someone troubleshooting audio problems. While steps 3 and onward are specific to alsamixer (version 1.1.3), steps 1 and 2 may help a person detect when things are working for other changes. If you are already familiar with alsamixer, then I'm sure you will understand that we are looking for any playback settings that may be muting output or producing output at a volume to low to be heard. In my case, it was the muting of one particular item that actually produced audio through the speakers.
- Turn speakers on to HALF volume, NOT full volume
- Start the audio source you want to hear through the speakers. It is important that the audio source provide continuous test audio so that you will hear the audio through the speakers once the correct setting is discovered and adjusted.
- Open a terminal window
- Enter the following command:
sudo alsamixer
- Assuming the application launches and you can see the UI, proceed with the remaining steps.
- Press F6 to select the desired soundcard
- Press F3 to ensure we are only exploring [Playback] settings
We're gonna change the volume level or mute status of various items to see if the change causes audio to come through the speakers. The currently selected item is the one on the left. By moving the right arrow key we can select the item to its right. We will slowly explore each item until we go all the way to the right. You will see the name of the currently selected item appear in the upper right of the screen next to "Item:"
- Use the right and left arrow keys to move to different items.
- Note the current volume level or mute status.
- If the item volume indicator has a little box with "MM" or "0", try toggling the mute status with the "M" on the keyboard. If you do not hear audio from the speakers, then toggle the item again to put it back to its original state.
- If the item volume has a vertical box, use the up and down arrow keys to raise the volume level all the way to the top. If this does not result in audio being output from the speaker, then lower the volume back to its original value.
- Repeat steps 7 through 10 until you hear the test audio from the speakers or until you reach the last item on the right.
My apologies if you get all the way to the right without any improvement in your audio configuration.
In my case, I have an ancient Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS sound card. Everything worked right out of the box when I first installed Ubuntu, but some later actions on my part broke the audio configuration to where I could hear audio through headphones but nothing came through the speakers, even if I physically disconnected the headphones (which I also tried since some cards auto-toggle speakers when headphones are connected/disconnected).
When I followed the steps above, I came to the item: Audigy Analog/Digital Output Jack, which was set to "0" (enabled), I toggled to mute ("MM"), thereby turning the item "[Off]". The moment I did this, I actually got sound output through the speakers. Makes no sense to me at all why enabling this item would DISABLE output to speakers and vice-versa, but I'm so happy to have finally found this setting and fixed my audio configuration, and can now listen through speakers or headphones as I choose.
I had this same problem and it was driving me nuts trying to fix it because whenever I booted into Windows 10, sound worked fine. Meanwhile, on Ubuntu 18.04, I found a number of helpful web pages with suggestions for troubleshooting audio problems.
The suggestion that worked for me was running 'sudo alsamixer' in a terminal window. I didn't even have success with this until I started to approach the problem with the expectation that things were gonna work realized I needed to be able to tell when they did.
I have provided some very basic instructions below that I hope might help someone troubleshooting audio problems. While steps 3 and onward are specific to alsamixer (version 1.1.3), steps 1 and 2 may help a person detect when things are working for other changes. If you are already familiar with alsamixer, then I'm sure you will understand that we are looking for any playback settings that may be muting output or producing output at a volume to low to be heard. In my case, it was the muting of one particular item that actually produced audio through the speakers.
- Turn speakers on to HALF volume, NOT full volume
- Start the audio source you want to hear through the speakers. It is important that the audio source provide continuous test audio so that you will hear the audio through the speakers once the correct setting is discovered and adjusted.
- Open a terminal window
- Enter the following command:
sudo alsamixer
- Assuming the application launches and you can see the UI, proceed with the remaining steps.
- Press F6 to select the desired soundcard
- Press F3 to ensure we are only exploring [Playback] settings
We're gonna change the volume level or mute status of various items to see if the change causes audio to come through the speakers. The currently selected item is the one on the left. By moving the right arrow key we can select the item to its right. We will slowly explore each item until we go all the way to the right. You will see the name of the currently selected item appear in the upper right of the screen next to "Item:"
- Use the right and left arrow keys to move to different items.
- Note the current volume level or mute status.
- If the item volume indicator has a little box with "MM" or "0", try toggling the mute status with the "M" on the keyboard. If you do not hear audio from the speakers, then toggle the item again to put it back to its original state.
- If the item volume has a vertical box, use the up and down arrow keys to raise the volume level all the way to the top. If this does not result in audio being output from the speaker, then lower the volume back to its original value.
- Repeat steps 7 through 10 until you hear the test audio from the speakers or until you reach the last item on the right.
My apologies if you get all the way to the right without any improvement in your audio configuration.
In my case, I have an ancient Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 ZS sound card. Everything worked right out of the box when I first installed Ubuntu, but some later actions on my part broke the audio configuration to where I could hear audio through headphones but nothing came through the speakers, even if I physically disconnected the headphones (which I also tried since some cards auto-toggle speakers when headphones are connected/disconnected).
When I followed the steps above, I came to the item: Audigy Analog/Digital Output Jack, which was set to "0" (enabled), I toggled to mute ("MM"), thereby turning the item "[Off]". The moment I did this, I actually got sound output through the speakers. Makes no sense to me at all why enabling this item would DISABLE output to speakers and vice-versa, but I'm so happy to have finally found this setting and fixed my audio configuration, and can now listen through speakers or headphones as I choose.
answered Feb 3 at 21:03
Live And LearnLive And Learn
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
Try installing pavucontrol.
sudo apt install pavucontrol.
Run the app and in the [Output Devices] tab select
Port: Headphones. (Actually speak
ers for me.)
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
add a comment |
Try installing pavucontrol.
sudo apt install pavucontrol.
Run the app and in the [Output Devices] tab select
Port: Headphones. (Actually speak
ers for me.)
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
add a comment |
Try installing pavucontrol.
sudo apt install pavucontrol.
Run the app and in the [Output Devices] tab select
Port: Headphones. (Actually speak
ers for me.)
Try installing pavucontrol.
sudo apt install pavucontrol.
Run the app and in the [Output Devices] tab select
Port: Headphones. (Actually speak
ers for me.)
answered Aug 20 '18 at 17:18
Farad'nFarad'n
194
194
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
add a comment |
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
It is speakers for me too, right? I mean, I want the speakers to work, not the headphones... Anyway, that didn't work.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 22:58
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
Yes. Speakers or headphones.Sorry that didn't work. Had to install the app back when I was on 16.04. Speakers work on 18.04.
– Farad'n
Aug 20 '18 at 23:17
add a comment |
try using,
- killall pulseaudio
- rm -r ~/.config/pulse/*
- apt-get remove --purge alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo init 6
and install again,
- apt-get install alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo alsa force-reload
and reboot. so follow the command pavucontrol
Hope this helps.
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
add a comment |
try using,
- killall pulseaudio
- rm -r ~/.config/pulse/*
- apt-get remove --purge alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo init 6
and install again,
- apt-get install alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo alsa force-reload
and reboot. so follow the command pavucontrol
Hope this helps.
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
add a comment |
try using,
- killall pulseaudio
- rm -r ~/.config/pulse/*
- apt-get remove --purge alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo init 6
and install again,
- apt-get install alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo alsa force-reload
and reboot. so follow the command pavucontrol
Hope this helps.
try using,
- killall pulseaudio
- rm -r ~/.config/pulse/*
- apt-get remove --purge alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo init 6
and install again,
- apt-get install alsa-base pulseaudio pavucontrol
- sudo alsa force-reload
and reboot. so follow the command pavucontrol
Hope this helps.
answered Aug 21 '18 at 14:38
abu-ahmed al-khatiriabu-ahmed al-khatiri
1,029116
1,029116
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
add a comment |
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
It did not work
– Soap
Aug 25 '18 at 13:35
add a comment |
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Is your system in a dual-boot configuration?
– velix
Aug 20 '18 at 17:19
@velix Yes, it is.
– Soap
Aug 20 '18 at 20:50
I have a problem in a dual boot with Windows. If I reboot from Windows (when audio is working there) i get no audio in Ubuntu and vice versa. To switch from an OS to another without losing audio I have to perform a complete shutdown. Try yourself, may be a problem similar to mine.
– velix
Aug 21 '18 at 9:57
@velix Thanks for the suggestion, but it didn't work
– Soap
Aug 21 '18 at 13:56