Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2022-06-26 21:35, Per Jessen wrote:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2022-06-26 10:22, Per Jessen wrote:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
I doubt you can easily find a way to remove whatever YaST did and have sound working on that machine (I'm now on my laptop).
"Remove what yast did" is easy. Do a new install
Can't do, machine is in production, that's hours of work.
I did not suggest on the same machine. To check out the default config, any machine with a soundcard will do.
Can't do, the other machines do not have problems with sound, AFAIR.
Nor do I have suitable machines here, only my tiny laptop. Plus, I don't remember on which machines I used yast and on which I didn't.
Hence my earlier suggestion of asking someone with a default install.
or ask someone with a new install, and you can look at the default setup.
Not trivial.
Uh, 100% trivial I would suggest. What isn't trivial about comparing two setups? 'diff' will help with that.
Once you know what files to select...
The easiest is just to run a diff -qrb /etc1 /etc2 - it'll give you too much of course, but it's easy to get rid of what isn't relevant.
The installation logs won't tell you anything. The source code is easy to read, you will see which files are being touched etc.
Not that easy, you have to reproduce the decision tree.
I think I neglected to do that, but it still worked :-) Anyway, too many hurdles. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (21.4°C)