NAME
snd_hda
—
Intel High Definition Audio bridge
device driver
SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in your kernel configuration file:
device sound
device snd_hda
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5):
snd_hda_load="YES"
DESCRIPTION
The High Definition (HD) Audio specification was developed by Intel as the logical successor of the old AC'97 specification and has several advantages, such as higher bandwidth which allows more channels and more detailed formats, support for several logical audio devices, and general purpose DMA channels.
The snd_hda
driver includes HDA bus
controller driver (hdac), HDA codec driver (hdacc) and HDA codecs audio
functions bridge driver (hdaa) that allows the generic audio driver,
sound(4), to be used with this hardware. Only audio functions are
supported by snd_hda
. Modem and other possible
functions are not implemented.
The snd_hda
driver supports hardware that
conforms with revision 1.0 of the Intel High Definition Audio specification
and tries to behave much like the Microsoft Universal Audio Architecture
(UAA) draft (revision 0.7b) for handling audio devices.
According to HDA and UAA specifications, depending on the number
of HDA buses and codecs present in system, their audio capabilities and BIOS
provided configuration, the snd_hda
driver often
provides several PCM audio devices. For example, one device for main rear
7.1 output and inputs, one device for independent headset connectors at
front and one device for SPDIF or HDMI audio input/output. The assignment of
audio inputs and outputs may be tuned with
device.hints(5) or
sysctl(8). The driver's verbose boot messages provide a lot of
information about the operation of the driver and present audio setup.
The default audio device may be tuned by setting the hw.snd.default_unit sysctl, as described in sound(4), or explicitly specified in application settings.
Boot-time Configuration
The following variables are available at boot-time through the device.hints(5) file:
- hint.hdac.%d.config
- Configures a range of possible controller options. Possible values are:
“
64bit
”, “dmapos
”, “msi
”. An option prefixed with “no
”, such as “nomsi
”, will do the opposite and takes precedence. Options can be separated by whitespace and commas. - hint.hdac.%d.msi
- Controls MSI (Message Signaled Interrupts) support.
- hint.hdac.%d.cad%d.nid%d.config
- Same as hint.hdaa.%d.nid%d.config
- hint.hdaa.%d.config
- Configures a range of possible audio function options. Possible values
are: “
eapdinv
”, “ivref
”, “ivref50
”, “ivref80
”, “ivref100
”, “fixedrate
”, “forcestereo
”, “ovref
”, “ovref50
”, “ovref80
”, “ovref100
”, “senseinv
”, “softpcmvol
”, and “vref
”. An option prefixed with “no
”, such as “nofixedrate
”, will do the opposite and takes precedence. Options can be separated by whitespace and commas.The “
eapdinv
” option inverts External Amplifier Power Down signal. The “fixedrate
” denies all sampling rates except 48KHz. The “forcestereo
” denies mono playback/recording. The “senseinv
” option inverts jack sensing logic. The “ivref
X” and “ovref
X” options control the voltage used to power external microphones. - hint.hdaa.%d.gpio_config
- Overrides audio function GPIO pins configuration set by BIOS. May be
specified as a set of space-separated
“num=value”
pairs, where num is GPIO line number, and
value is one of:
“
keep
”, “set
”, “clear
”, “disable
” and “input
”.“
GPIO
s” are a codec's General Purpose I/O pins which system integrators sometimes use to control external muters, amplifiers and so on. If you have no sound, or sound volume is not adequate, you may have to experiment a bit with the GPIO setup to find the optimal setup for your system. - hint.hdaa.%d.nid%d.config
- Overrides audio function pin configuration set by BIOS. May be specified as a 32-bit hexadecimal value with a leading “0x”, or as a set of space-separated “option=value” pairs.
- hint.pcm.%d.rec.autosrc
- Controls automatic recording source feature:
- 0
- disabled,
- 1
- once on attach,
- 2
- enabled.
Pin configuration is the UAA driver's main source of information
about codec usage. This information is usually provided by the codec
manufacturer and tuned by system integrators for specific system
requirements. The snd_hda
driver allows users to
override it to fix integrator mistakes or to use the available codec in
alternative ways (for example to get stereo output and 2 inputs instead of a
single 5.1 output).
The following options are supported:
- as
- Association number. Associations are used to group individual pins to form a complex multi-pin device. For example, to group 4 connectors for 7.1 input/output, or to treat several input connectors as sources for the same input device. Association numbers can be specified as numeric values from 0 to 15. A value of 0 means disabled pin. A value of 15 is a set of independent unassociated pins. Each association includes only pins of the same direction (in/out) and is detected atomically (all pins or none). A separate PCM audio device is created for every pair of input and output associations.
- seq
- Sequence number. A unique, per-association number used to order pins
inside the particular association. Sequence numbers can be specified as
numeric values from 0 to 15.
The sequence number 15 has a special meaning for output associations. Output pins with this number and device type “Headphones” will duplicate (with automatic mute if jack detection is supported) the first pin in that association.
The sequence numbers 14 and 15 has a special meaning for input associations. Their presence in association defines it as multiplexed or mixed respectively. If none of them are present and there are more than one pin in association, the association will provide multichannel input.
For multichannel input/output associations sequence numbers encode channel pairs positions: 0 - Front, 1 - Center/LFE, 2 - Back, 3 - Front Wide Center, 4 - Side. Standard combinations are: (0) - Stereo; (0, 2), (0, 4) - Quadro; (0, 1, 2), (0, 1, 4) - 5.1; (0, 1, 2, 4) - 7.1.
- device
- Device type. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 15 or as a name:
“
Line-out
”, “Speaker
”, “Headphones,
” “CD
”, “SPDIF-out
”, “Digital-out
”, “Modem-line
”, “Modem-handset
”, “Line-in
”, “AUX
”, “Mic
”, “Telephony
”, “SPDIF-in
”, “Digital-in
”, “Res.E
”, or “Other
”. The device type also describes the pin direction (in/out). For example, “CD
” always means an input pin, while “Headphones
” always means an output. - conn
- Connection type. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 3. The connection
type can also be specified as one of the special names
“
Jack
”, “None
”, “Fixed
”, or “Both
”. Pins with a connection type of “None
” are disabled. - ctype
- Connector physical type. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 15. This
is a reference only value. It is ignored by the
snd_hda
driver. - color
- Connector color. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 15 or as one of
the names “
Unknown
”, “Black
”, “Grey
”, “Blue
”, “Green
”, “Red
”, “Orange
”, “Yellow
”, “Purple
”, “Pink
”, “Res.A
”, “Res.B
”, “Res.C
”, “Res.D
”, “White
”, or “Other
”. This is a reference only value. It is ignored by thesnd_hda
driver. - loc
- Connector physical location. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 63.
This is a reference only value. It is ignored by the
snd_hda
driver. - misc
- Misc bits. Can be specified as a number from 0 to 15. Bit 0 has a special meaning. When set it means that jack detection is not implemented in hardware.
Runtime Configuration
The following sysctl(8) variables are available in addition to those available to all sound(4) devices:
- dev.hdac.%d.pindump
- Setting this to a non-zero value dumps the current pin configuration, main capabilities and jack sense status of all audio functions on the controller to console and syslog.
- dev.hdac.%d.polling
- Enables polling mode. In this mode the driver operates by querying the device state on timer ticks using callout(9) instead of interrupts. Polling is disabled by default. Do not enable it unless you are facing weird interrupt problems or if the device cannot generate interrupts at all.
- dev.hdaa.%d.config
- Run-time equivalent of the hint.hdaa.%d.config tunable.
- dev.hdaa.%d.gpi_state
- Current state of GPI lines.
- dev.hdaa.%d.gpio_state
- Current state of GPIO lines.
- dev.hdaa.%d.gpio_config
- Run-time equivalent of the hint.hdaa.%d.gpio.config tunable.
- dev.hdaa.%d.gpo_state
- Current state of GPO lines.
- dev.hdaa.%d.nid%d_config
- Run-time equivalent of the hint.hdaa.%d.nid%d.config tunable.
- dev.hdaa.%d.nid%d_original
- Original pin configuration written by BIOS.
- dev.hdaa.%d.reconfig
- Setting this to a non-zero value makes driver to destroy existing pcm devices and process new pins configuration set via dev.hdaa.%d.nid%d_config.
- dev.pcm.%d.play.32bit, dev.pcm.%d.rec.32bit
- HDA controller uses 32bit representation for all samples of more than 16 bits. These variables allow to specify how many bits of these 32 should be used by CODEC. Depending on codec capabilities, possible values are 20, 24 and 32 bit. The default value is 24.
- dev.pcm.%d.rec.autosrc
- Run-time equivalent of the hint.pcm.%d.rec.autosrc tunable.
EXAMPLES
Taking HP Compaq DX2300 with Realtek ALC888 HDA codec for example. This system has two audio connectors on a front side, three audio connectors on a rear side and one internal speaker. According to verbose driver output and the codec datasheet, this codec has five stereo DACs and two stereo ADCs, all of them are routable to any codec pin (external connector). All codec pins are reversible (could be configured either as input or output).
So high codec uniformity and flexibility allow driver to configure it in many different ways, depending on requested pins usage described by pins configuration. The driver reports such default pin configuration when verbose messages enabled:
hdaa0: nid 0x as seq device conn jack loc color misc hdaa0: 20 01014020 2 0 Line-out Jack 1/8 Rear Green 0 hdaa0: 21 99130110 1 0 Speaker Fixed ATAPI Onboard Unknown 1 hdaa0: 22 411111f0 15 0 Speaker None 1/8 Rear Black 1 DISA hdaa0: 23 411111f0 15 0 Speaker None 1/8 Rear Black 1 DISA hdaa0: 24 01a19830 3 0 Mic Jack 1/8 Rear Pink 8 hdaa0: 25 02a1983f 3 15 Mic Jack 1/8 Front Pink 8 hdaa0: 26 01813031 3 1 Line-in Jack 1/8 Rear Blue 0 hdaa0: 27 0221401f 1 15 Headphones Jack 1/8 Front Green 0 hdaa0: 28 411111f0 15 0 Speaker None 1/8 Rear Black 1 DISA hdaa0: 30 411111f0 15 0 Speaker None 1/8 Rear Black 1 DISA hdaa0: 31 411111f0 15 0 Speaker None 1/8 Rear Black 1 DISA
Here we can see, that the nodes with ID (nid) 25 and 27 are front panel connectors (Jack, Front), nids 20, 24 and 26 are rear panel connectors (Jack, Rear) and nid 21 is a built-in speaker (Fixed, Onboard). Pins with nids 22, 23, 28, 30 and 31 will be disabled by driver due to "None" connectivity. So the pin count and description matches to connectors that we have.
Using association (as) and sequence (seq) fields values pins are grouped into 3 associations:
hdaa0: Association 0 (1) out: hdaa0: Pin nid=21 seq=0 hdaa0: Pin nid=27 seq=15 hdaa0: Association 1 (2) out: hdaa0: Pin nid=20 seq=0 hdaa0: Association 2 (3) in: hdaa0: Pin nid=24 seq=0 hdaa0: Pin nid=26 seq=1 hdaa0: Pin nid=25 seq=15
Each pcm(4) device uses two associations: one for playback and one
for recording. Associations processed and assigned to
pcm(4) devices in increasing numerical order. In this case
association #0 (1) will become pcm0
device playback,
using the internal speakers and Headphones jack with
speaker automute on the headphones jack connection. Association #1 (2) will
become pcm1
playback, using the
Line-out jack. Association #2 (3) will become
pcm0
recording, using the external microphones and
the Line-in jack.
The snd_hda
driver provides extensive
verbose messages to diagnose its operation logic and describe its current
codec configuration.
Using device.hints(5) it is possible to modify the configuration of the existing pins, allowing a broad range of different audio setups. Here are a few examples of some setups possible for this particular hardware:
Example 1
Setting the device.hints(5) options
hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid20.config="as=1" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid21.config="as=2"
will swap line-out and speaker functions. So the
pcm0
device will play to the line-out and headphones
jacks. Line-out will be muted on the headphones jack connection. Recording
on pcm0
will go from two external microphones and
line-in jacks. pcm1
playback will go to the internal
speaker.
Example 2
Setting the device.hints(5) options
hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid20.config="as=1 seq=15 device=Headphones" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid27.config="as=2 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid25.config="as=4 seq=0"
will split the headphones and one of the microphones to a separate
device. The pcm0
device will play to the internal
speaker and to the line-out jack, with speaker automute on the line-out jack
connection. Recording on pcm0
will use input from
one external microphone and the line-in jacks. The
pcm1
device will be completely dedicated to a
headset (headphones and mic) connected to the front connectors.
Example 3
Setting the device.hints(5) options
hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid20.config="as=1 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid26.config="as=2 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid27.config="as=3 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid25.config="as=4 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid24.config="as=5 seq=0 device=Line-out" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid21.config="as=6 seq=0"
will give 4 independent devices: pcm0
(line-out and line-in), pcm1
(headphones and mic),
pcm2
(additional line-out via retasked rear mic
jack), and pcm3
(internal speaker).
Example 4
Setting the device.hints(5) options
hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid20.config="as=1 seq=0" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid24.config="as=1 seq=1 device=Line-out" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid26.config="as=1 seq=2 device=Line-out" hint.hdac.0.cad0.nid21.config="as=2 seq=0"
will give 2 devices: pcm0
for 5.1 playback
via 3 rear connectors (line-out and retasked mic and line-in) and headset
(headphones and mic) at front connectors. pcm1
for
internal speaker playback. On headphones connection rear connectors will be
muted.
MIXER CONTROLS
Depending on codec configuration, these controls and signal sources could be reported to sound(4):
- vol
- overall output level (volume)
- rec
- overall recording level
- igain
- input-to-output monitoring loopback level
- ogain
- external amplifier control
- pcm
- PCM playback
- mix
- input mix
- mic
- first external or second internal microphone input
- monitor
- first internal or second external microphone input
- line, line1, line2, line3
- analog (line) inputs
- dig1, dig2, dig3
- digital (S/PDIF, HDMI or DisplayPort) inputs
- cd
- CD input
- speaker
- PC speaker input
- phin, phout, radio. video
- other random inputs
Controls have different precision. Some could be just an on/off triggers. Most of controls use logarithmic scale.
HARDWARE
The snd_hda
driver supports controllers
having PCI class 4 (multimedia) and subclass 3 (HDA), compatible with Intel
HDA specification.
The snd_hda
driver supports more than two
hundred different controllers and CODECs. There is no sense to list all of
them here, as in most cases specific CODEC configuration and wiring are more
important then type of the CODEC itself.
SEE ALSO
snd_ich(4), sound(4), device.hints(5), loader.conf(5), sysctl(8)
HISTORY
The snd_hda
device driver first appeared
in FreeBSD 6.3.
AUTHORS
The snd_hda
driver was written by
Stephane E. Potvin
<sepotvin@videotron.ca>,
Ariff Abdullah
<ariff@FreeBSD.org>
and Alexander Motin
<mav@FreeBSD.org>.
This manual page was written by Joel Dahl
<joel@FreeBSD.org>,
Alexander Motin
<mav@FreeBSD.org> and
Giorgos Keramidas
<keramida@FreeBSD.org>.
BUGS
Some Hardware/OEM vendors tend to screw up BIOS settings or use
custom unusual CODEC wiring that create problems to the driver. This may
result in missing pcm devices, or a state where the
snd_hda
driver seems to attach and work, but no
sound is played. Some cases can be solved by tuning
loader.conf variables. But before trying to fix
problem that way, make sure that there really is a problem and that the PCM
audio device in use really corresponds to the expected audio connector.
Some vendors use non-standardized General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pins of the codec to control external amplifiers. In some cases setting a combination of GPIO bits may be needed to make sound work on a specific device.
HDMI and DisplayPort audio may also require support from video driver.