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Full Discussion: System audible beep
Operating Systems Linux Slackware System audible beep Post 302483173 by slak0 on Friday 24th of December 2010 06:10:39 AM
Old 12-24-2010
System audible beep

I have tried everything with sounds on Slackware and after over a decade am at the end of it.
I have uncommented /sbin/modprobe pcspkr in rc.modules.
I have commented blacklist pcspkr in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
I have set bell-style audible in /etc/inputrc
and I still can't get echo 007 or \a or ctrl-v,ctrl-G to produce a sound on the system speaker. It does beep during boot so it is working somewhere somehow. Can someone show me how to get bash echo to produce a beep from the system speaker?
 

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discover-modprobe.conf(5)					File Formats Manual					 discover-modprobe.conf(5)

NAME
discover-modprobe.conf -- configuration file for discover-modprobe(5) Description discover-modprobe.conf is the configuration file for discover-modprobe, which is responsible for retrieving and loading kernel modules. Warning: This file is a shell script, and as such is subject to a string variable assignment syntax. No space is allowed between the variable name, the equal (=) sign, and the value(s) assigned. If multiple values are to be assigned, the list must be space-delimited with surrounding quotes. Two directives can be used in this file: types and skip. Both can be defined multiple times. types This describes the classes of hardware that should be scanned and queried. skip These modules should never be loaded. See the ``Files'' section for details on the mechanism for generating these entries auto- matically. Files /var/lib/discover/crash A crash file written and erased each time discover-modprobe attempts to load a module. If the file lingers, the computer is assumed to have crashed while loading that module, and the module name is added to discover-modprobe.conf as a module to skip in the future. See Also discover-modprobe(8), modprobe(8), discover(1) discover-modprobe.conf(5)
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