UpgradingAlsa

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/!\ Aside from the Ubuntu web, there are several guides and blog posts about how to download, compile, and install newer ALSA driver versions yourself. These guides are of varying quality, and in some cases, can break your system really bad. The solutions suggested below are simpler, so it should not be necessary to follow them. /!\ Aside from the Ubuntu web, there are several guides, scripts, and blog posts about how to download, compile, and install newer ALSA driver versions yourself. These guides are of varying quality, and in some cases, can break your system really bad. We do not recommend them - the solutions suggested below are simpler and come with proper uninstall instructions.
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/!\ This currently does not make sense for Maverick since there hasn't been an upstream ALSA release since Maverick was released/frozen. /!\ This currently does not make sense for Natty (Ubuntu 11.04) since the latest upstream ALSA release is in Natty already.
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Whenever a stable release of ALSA is released, the linux-backports-modules-alsa-[Ubuntu Release]-[Kernel Flavor] is updated. [Ubuntu-release] means "karmic", "lucid", "maverick" etc, and [Kernel Flavor] normally means "generic" (or "server" for Ubuntu server edition). So just download and install this package, reboot, and test. Whenever a stable release of ALSA is released, the linux-backports-modules-alsa-[Ubuntu Release]-[Kernel Flavor] is updated. [Ubuntu-release] means "karmic", "lucid", "maverick" etc, and [Kernel Flavor] normally means "generic" (or "server" for Ubuntu server edition). So just download and install this package, reboot, and test.  Uninstallation, if necessary, is just as simple - just uninstall the package and reboot afterwards.
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As a third option, DKMS packages can be constructed that automatically rebuilds themselves whenever a new kernel is installed. More information to come. As a third option, DKMS packages can be constructed that automatically rebuilds themselves whenever a new kernel is installed. See [[Audio/UpgradingAlsa/DKMS|this link]] for how to install them.

Sometimes upgrading sound drivers will help you fix an issue with your sound. There are several ways to upgrade your ALSA sound drivers.

First, some words of caution:

Warning /!\ Make sure you only have one override of ALSA drivers installed at a time. Make sure you uninstall the previous override before trying a new one, otherwise it is unclear which version will take precedence.

Warning /!\ Aside from the Ubuntu web, there are several guides, scripts, and blog posts about how to download, compile, and install newer ALSA driver versions yourself. These guides are of varying quality, and in some cases, can break your system really bad. We do not recommend them - the solutions suggested below are simpler and come with proper uninstall instructions.

The latest stable ALSA - simplest

Warning /!\ This currently does not make sense for Natty (Ubuntu 11.04) since the latest upstream ALSA release is in Natty already.

Whenever a stable release of ALSA is released, the linux-backports-modules-alsa-[Ubuntu Release]-[Kernel Flavor] is updated. [Ubuntu-release] means "karmic", "lucid", "maverick" etc, and [Kernel Flavor] normally means "generic" (or "server" for Ubuntu server edition). So just download and install this package, reboot, and test. Uninstallation, if necessary, is just as simple - just uninstall the package and reboot afterwards.

Daily snapshot - hottest and latest

Every night the current ALSA snapshot is taken and built on Launchpad by the Ubuntu Audio Developers Team. This will give you the absolute latest. See this link for how to install them.

DKMS

As a third option, DKMS packages can be constructed that automatically rebuilds themselves whenever a new kernel is installed. See this link for how to install them.

Audio/UpgradingAlsa (last edited 2013-10-11 03:11:58 by hd9483857)