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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 12/6/2014 6:59 PM, John Hupp wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:54839865.4000707@prpcompany.com" type="cite">
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This started out as a quest to get rid of inelegant and troubling
on-screen messages appearing during boot before the Plymouth
splash. I have seen this on some number of PC's over time.<br>
<br>
Initially I thought that the problem was a sort of leakage of
ordinarily-hidden screen messages, perhaps caused by a
less-than-smooth handoff between bootup components.<br>
<br>
I imagined that I might find an option to hide screen messages
altogether, while leaving them to be recorded in the logs.<br>
<br>
Then I noted that "quiet" is already included in the default grub
command-line configuration. So I wondered if "quiet" was not
working.<br>
<br>
But then I found an old document at <a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QuietenGrub">https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QuietenGrub</a>
that proposes in the definition for quiet:<br>
<blockquote><i>The messages that are not error or warning messages
should be hidden by default. Special care must be taken to not
remove messages that help identify problems in the boot
sequence</i>. <br>
</blockquote>
So I concluded that quiet was working as designed, and that my
on-screen messages must fall into the category of errors/warnings.<br>
<br>
<hr size="2" width="100%"><br>
The messages are like, or are some subset of, these excerpts from
/var/log/kern.log:<br>
<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.396312] dcdbas dcdbas:
Dell Systems Management Base Driver (version 5.6.0-3.2)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.435312] ivtv: Start
initialization, version 1.4.3<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.435398] ivtv0:
Initializing card 0<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.435405] ivtv0: Unknown
card: vendor/device: [4444:0016]<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.435998]
ivtv0: subsystem vendor/device: [1002:fffb]<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.436707]
ivtv0: cx23416 based<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.437174] ivtv0:
Defaulting to Hauppauge WinTV PVR-150 card<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.437777] ivtv0: Please
mail the vendor/device and subsystem vendor/device IDs and what
kind of<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.438710] ivtv0: card
you have to the ivtv-devel mailinglist (<a moz-do-not-send="true"
class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated"
href="http://www.ivtvdriver.org">www.ivtvdriver.org</a>)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.439514] ivtv0: Prefix
your subject line with [UNKNOWN IVTV CARD].<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.465010] tveeprom
0-0050: Huh, no eeprom present (err=-6)?<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.465018] tveeprom
0-0050: Encountered bad packet header [01]. Corrupt or not a
Hauppauge eeprom.<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 10.465020] ivtv0: Invalid
EEPROM<br>
<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.047525] wm8775 0-001b:
chip found @ 0x36 (ivtv i2c driver #0)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.050818] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 000 to register R23<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.053958] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 000 to register R7<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.057324] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 021 to register R11<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.060463] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 102 to register R12<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.063582] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 000 to register R13<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.067825] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 1d4 to register R14<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.070980] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 1d4 to register R15<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.074115] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 1bf to register R16<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.092657] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 185 to register R17<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.099257] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 0a2 to register R18<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.102421] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 005 to register R19<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.105560] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 07a to register R20<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.113635] wm8775 0-001b:
I2C: cannot write 102 to register R21<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123154] ivtv0:
Registered device video0 for encoder MPG (4096 kB)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123311] ivtv0:
Registered device video32 for encoder YUV (2048 kB)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123456] ivtv0:
Registered device vbi0 for encoder VBI (1024 kB)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123594] ivtv0:
Registered device video24 for encoder PCM (320 kB)<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123725] ivtv0:
Registered device radio0 for encoder radio<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123730] ivtv0:
Initialized card: Hauppauge WinTV PVR-150<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.123843] ivtv: End
initialization<br>
Dec 6 10:39:52 Dell-Lubuntu kernel: [ 12.220965] ivtv-alsa:
module loading...<br>
<br>
My video card is an ATI Radeon X300 PCIe, running the default
Radeon driver. <br>
<br>
Despite the screen messages presumably being displayed because
they need attention, and despite looking like they are related to
S-video TV-out, I show lspci output includes:<br>
Multimedia video controller: Internext Compression Inc iTVC16
(CX23416) Video Decoder (rev 01)<br>
And there is a kernel module loaded that is related to the same
hardware.<br>
<br>
It would be nice to hook this up to a TV with S-video to see if it
actually works, but that would be some work for this desktop.
(Maybe I'll do it anyway.)<br>
<br>
The proprietary ATI fglrx driver reportedly supports TV-Out while
the Radeon driver commonly does not (dated info?). <br>
<br>
But instead of installing the fglrx driver to make these messages
go away and arrive at fully functioning hardware, I'm starting to
wonder if everything is installed just fine already, and if
instead we have grub needlessly selecting some messages to display
onscreen.<br>
<br>
If that is the case, or if I don't care about TV-out here, I
return to the original question: Can I hide/suppress these
messages, noting that "quiet" is already set in the grub command
line?<br>
</blockquote>
<br>
I should add that 'xrandr --props' reports S-video properties, so
that further supports for me the idea that the kernel messages were
needlessly selected for display.<br>
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