ALS-007 based sound cards ========================= Support for sound cards based around the Avance Logic ALS-007 chip is included. The ALS-007 is a single chip PnP sound solution which is mostly hardware compatible with the Sound Blaster 16 card, with most differences occurring in the use of the mixer registers. For this reason the ALS-007 code is integrated as part of the Sound Blaster 16 driver (adding only 800 bytes to the SB16 driver). To use an ALS-007 sound card under Linux, enable the following options in the sound configuration section of the kernel config: - 100% Sound Blaster compatibles (SB16/32/64, ESS, Jazz16) support - FM synthesizer (YM3812/OPL-3) support Since the ALS-007 is a PnP card, the sound driver probably should be compiled as a module, with the isapnptools used to wake up the sound card. Set the "I/O base for SB", "Sound Blaster IRQ" and "Sound Blaster DMA" (8 bit - either 0, 1 or 3) to the values used in your particular installation (they should match the values used to configure the card using isapnp). The ALS-007 does NOT implement 16 bit DMA, so the "Sound Blaster 16 bit DMA" should be set to -1. If you wish to use the external MPU-401 interface on the card, "MPU401 I/O base of SB16" and "SB MPU401 IRQ" should be set to the appropriate values for your installation. (Note that the ALS-007 requires a separate IRQ for the MPU-401, so don't specify -1 here). (Note that the base port of the internal FM synth is fixed at 0x388 on the ALS007; in any case the FM synth location cannot be set in the kernel configuration). The resulting sound driver will provide the following capabilities: - 8 and 16 bit audio playback - 8 and 16 bit audio recording - Software selection of record source (line in, CD, FM, mic, master) - Record and playback of midi data via the external MPU-401 - Playback of midi data using inbuilt FM synthesizer - Control of the ALS-007 mixer via any OSS-compatible mixer programs. Controls available are Master (L&R), Line in (L&R), CD (L&R), DSP/PCM/audio out (L&R), FM (L&R) and Mic in (mono). Jonathan Woithe jwoithe@physics.adelaide.edu.au 30 March 1998