How do I change the way Ubuntu adjusts my volume mixer levels?
There are many layers in the audio stack that could contribute to this symptom. Most directly is the behavior that PulseAudio defaults to, and you can read about that at http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/PulseAudioStoleMyVolumes. You can work around some instances using the instructions I contributed at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingSoundProblems/KarmicCaveats#Volume%20range%20anomalies:
Volume range anomalies
The latest version of PulseAudio tries to control the volume of the sound card using its mixer controls. Usually this works just fine, but in some cases this does not work properly. (Whether this is PulseAudio's or ALSA's fault is beyond the scope of this wiki page. Some more background information is here.)
Diagnosis
You experience any of the following:
- Jumps in volume, e g if everything below 20% is muted, and 21% is very loud.
- Overdriven (distorted sound) if the volume is set above a certain (low) level
- No volume changes in parts of the range, e g if 20% is just as loud as 70%.
Fix / Workaround
There are a few variables which control how PulseAudio controls the volume. You can either edit
/etc/pulse/default.pa
(you'll have to be root to do that) to change the behavior for all users, or copy that file to~/.pulse/default.pa
and then edit that file, to change behavior for the current user only.Open the file mentioned above. Find the row saying
load-module module-udev-detect
and change it to:load-module module-udev-detect ignore_dB=1
To try your changes, restart PulseAudio with the following command:
killall pulseaudio
PulseAudio will then autospawn (restart itself).
You may find that the above workaround is insufficient, in which case you may configure PulseAudio to control only one mixer control, e.g., PCM (cf. alsamixer). Find the row saying
#load-module module-alsa-sink
and change it to:load-module module-alsa-sink control=PCM
(remember to remove the # in the beginning of the row!) Optionally replace PCM with the mixer control you want PulseAudio to control.
You will then need to
killall pulseaudio
as above and allow the daemon to autospawn.
Finally, whether this anomaly is actually a bug requires you to use ubuntu-bug alsa-base
.