![]() **** List of CAPTURE Hardware Devices ****Ĭard 0: C920, device 0: USB Audio Ĭard 1: PCH, device 0: ALC887-VD Analog Ĭard 1: PCH, device 2: ALC887-VD Alt Analog Ĭard 3: Microphones, device 0: USB Audio ĭiscard all samples (playback) or generate zero samples (capture)ĭefault ALSA Output (currently PipeWire Media Server)Īfter rebooting my system I checked the status of piperwire service and I can see some errors This is what I have before I unplug my microphone and after I plug it back in. I see that it does detect my USB microphone. I didn’t find anything special in the kernel logs. ![]() In the meantime your workaround with unplugging then plugging it back in is one way to be able to use it. Once you have the logs with the differences in how the device is configured then it should be possible to identify the cause and a potential fix. They can be trimmed down if you know exactly what terms to look for. You can see the same with a boot while the device is already connected, but the logs will be larger and need more careful perusal to see and identify the related entries.ĭmesg will show the kernel logs from the beginning of the boot, and journalctl -b 0 will show all the logs from the beginning of the current boot. You also could see a little more in-depth logging with plugging in the device then immediately running journalctl -since=-2minutes which will show all the journal entries in the last 2 minutes and should show the device being configured. The first would be to run dmesg -w to wipe out the dmesg entries, then plug in the headhone and run dmesg so you could see what kernel messages are shown when the device is connected and configured. There are several commands that can give hints as to what is actually happening. Maybe you can do a bit of research to find out. I don’t know what is different if already connected at boot time. ![]() When the device is plugged in with the system already up it is configured by udev. If the headset microphone works when it is plugged in, but fails to do so when booting with it already connected that seems to indicate a config issue. By default fedora uses pipewire and wireplumber for audio. ![]()
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