http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=928394
Takashi Iwai
Good Morning
I am uploading two files for you. Saturday 25April
File1 alsa-info-after.txt (with headphone plugged into the jack)
File2 alsa-info-noHdPhone.txt (headphone was removed from the jack)
In both outputs, there is no change in "Headphone Jack" control value. It means that the driver didn't detect the headphone jack. Most likely it's either a hardware problem or a BIOS problem. The fact that the old PA worked was a bug. It shouldn't have worked as you expected. Now it gets fixed, and the problem is revealed. That said, it's no regression but rather a "fix" to behavior correctly to the hardware that doesn't behave as expected.
Pleasenote.
Fedora 21,22 are experiencing the same issue.
I use both SUSE13.2 and Fedora21.
This implies the same consequence. Now, what you can do is to check the real pin configuration and the hardware configuration. Try to alsa-tools package (or hdajackretask) and see which any pin gives the jack detection corresponds to your headphone jack. If yes, you need to reassign the headphone pin correctly, set up as a "patch" firmware to load to the driver. If no pin reacts to the headphone jack, it's a hardware problem. You might have connected the front panel in a wrong mode (AC97) that has a different pin assignment. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are on the CC list for the bug.