PC speaker

From ArchWiki

PC speaker (beeper) is a built-in loudspeaker in most personal computers since the first IBM PC. This speaker is not capable of high quality playback and merely serves as a simple means of auditory feedback in the form of beeps. Some software, e.g. web browsers, editors and terminals, may produce beeps which may or may not be desired by the user. This article serves as a guide for configuring and/or disabling the speaker entirely. For situations where no sound card or speakers are available and a simple audio notification is desired, see #Beep.

Mechanism

The PC speaker is typically a physical unit connected on the front connections header of the motherboard. Some motherboard manufacturers do not ship their motherboards with a PC speaker at all, whereas others may have the PC speaker soldered directly onto the surface. Laptops typically have no physical PC speaker but have the beeper routed to the laptop's internal speakers. In some cases, the beeper is heard on the regular output (i.e. speakers, headphones) of the soundcard, which tends to be unexpectedly loud.

Upon boot the BIOS will traditionally generate a beep during POST. More recent motherboard models omit the POST beep in favor of rapidly booting into the OS. The BIOS typically allows for toggling the POST beeps but it cannot configure the PC speaker to be turned off completely.

Once the system has booted into Linux and the pcspkr kernel module is loaded, the PC speaker can be used by the environment, be invoked manually by the user, and be configured to some extent. Because the PC speaker is controlled directly by the CPU, along with the fact that they are built for beeping only, PC speakers cannot be used for playing back audio files. If this is really desired, unloading pcspkr and installing snd-pcsp-dkmsAUR provides a rudimentary audio output.

Disabling the PC speaker

Turning off a particular instance of a sound, while leaving the others operational, is possible if and only if one can identify which portion of the environment generates the particular sound. This allows customizing the selection of sounds. Please feel free to add any configurations and settings to this wiki page that may be useful for other users.

Physically

By removing the PC speaker the system will not be able to produce beeps. This can be achieved by physically removing the unit from the motherboard (if possible). Some manufacturers may provide a jumper header to switch it off.

Warning: Removing the PC speaker is generally not recommended as it is a useful tool in diagnosing boot problems, after which it may produce a unique beeping pattern related to the source of fault (refer to your motherboard manual). A better solution is to turn off the POST beeps in the BIOS and blacklisting the beeper as written below. If you do however wish to remove it physically it is highly recommended to keep it at bay for this scenario.

Globally

The PC speaker can be disabled by unloading the pcspkr and snd_pcsp kernel modules:

Note: This will not disable your entire sound system, only the PC speaker.
Tip: The snd_pcsp module is a Linux kernel driver for the PC speaker which allows it to act like a primitive sound card to produce full PCM sound. It appears as an ALSA device, and also replaces the pcspkr driver for beeps. This module does not exist in the official Arch Linux kernels (unless you explicitly choose to install it, see snd-pcsp-dkmsAUR), but certain custom kernels include it by default.
# rmmod pcspkr
# rmmod snd_pcsp

Blacklisting the pcspkr and snd_pcsp modules will prevent udev from loading them at boot. Create the file:

/etc/modprobe.d/nobeep.conf
blacklist pcspkr
blacklist snd_pcsp

Blacklisting it on the kernel command line is yet another way. Simply add module_blacklist=pcspkr,snd_pcsp to your bootloader kernel line.

Console

You can add this command in /etc/profile or a dedicated file like /etc/profile.d/disable-beep.sh, see setterm(1) for more information:

setterm -blength 0

Another way is to uncomment or add this line in /etc/inputrc or ~/.inputrc:

set bell-style none

Less pager

To disable PC speaker in less pager, you can launch it with less -q to mute PC speaker for end of line events or less -Q to mute it altogether. For man pages, launch man -P "less -Q" or set the $MANPAGER or $PAGER environment variables.

Alternatively, you can add these lines to your ~/.bashrc, see bash(1) for more information:

alias less='less -Q'
alias man='man -P "less -Q"'

Xorg

$ xset -b

You can add this command to a startup file such as /etc/xprofile to make it permanent. See xprofile and xset(1) for more information.

ALSA

For most sound cards the PC speaker is listed as an ALSA channel, named either PC Speaker, PC Beep, or Beep. To mute the speaker, either use alsamixer or amixer , for example:

$ amixer set 'PC Speaker' 0% mute

To unmute the channel, see Advanced Linux Sound Architecture#Unmuting the channels.

Tip: If you are using PulseAudio and the PC speaker channel is not listed for the default ALSA device, try selecting the device corresponding to the sound card - PulseAudio proxy controls may not list the PC speaker.

GNOME

Using GSettings:

$ gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences audible-bell false

KDE Plasma

Bell notification settings can be modified in System Settings > Accessibility Options > Bell.

Cinnamon

Cinnamon seems to play a "water drop" sound. To disable it, set in gsettings(1):

$ gsettings set org.cinnamon.desktop.wm.preferences audible-bell false

GTK

Append this line to ~/.gtkrc-2.0:

gtk-error-bell = 0

Add the same line to the [Settings] section of $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gtk-3.0/settings.ini:

[Settings]
gtk-error-bell = 0

This is documented in the Gnome Developer Handbook.

PulseAudio

Play a sound instead of a PC speaker beep using PulseAudio.

Arch Linux ISO

If you want to disable the init tune on the Arch Linux ISO, you will need to repack the ISO. To do so, first install the libisoburn and mtools packages.

Extract the El Torito boot images and systemd-boot configuration (loader.conf) from the ISO:

$ osirrox -indev archlinux-YYYY.MM.DD-x86_64.iso -extract_boot_images ./ -extract /loader/loader.conf loader.conf

Make loader.conf writable and remove the beep option from it:

$ chmod +w loader.conf
$ sed '/^beep on/d' -i loader.conf

Add the modified loader.conf to the El Torito UEFI boot image:

$ mcopy -D oO -i eltorito_img2_uefi.img loader.conf ::/loader/

Finally, repack the ISO using the modified boot image and loader.conf:

$ xorriso -indev archlinux-YYYY.MM.DD-x86_64.iso \
	-outdev archlinux-YYYY.MM.DD-x86_64-silent.iso \
	-map loader.conf /loader/loader.conf \
	-boot_image any replay \
	-append_partition 2 0xef eltorito_img2_uefi.img
Note: Only the init tune will be disabled. Beeps may still be played after booting. To disable the PC speaker after booting, see #Globally.

Beep

Beep is an advanced PC speaker beeping program. It is useful for situations where no sound card and/or speakers are available, and simple audio notification is desired.

Tip: A user can create a short audible tone when logged in to a virtual console, see Wikipedia:Bell character#Usage for the details.

Installation

Install the beep package.

You may also need to unmute the PC speaker in ALSA.

Run as non-root user

beep uses /dev/input/by-path/platform-pcspkr-event-spkr to control the PC speaker. To access it as a non-root user, one has to set the proper permissions. Create /etc/udev/rules.d/70-pcspkr-beep.rules and add the following rule:

ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="input", ATTRS{name}=="PC Speaker", ENV{DEVNAME}!="", TAG+="uaccess"

That will allow any user, who is logged into the currently active virtual console session, to use the PC speaker.

Alternatively, a new user group may be created (e.g. beep) with the corresponding rule to set the right permissions on the device file:

ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="input", ATTRS{name}=="PC Speaker", ENV{DEVNAME}!="", GROUP="beep", MODE="0620"

With that solution any user in the beep group will be able to control the speaker.

To force reloading rules and device file to apply new user permission without a reboot, execute:

# udevadm control --reload && rmmod pcspkr && modprobe pcspkr

Tips and tricks

While many people are happy with the traditional beep sound, some may like to change its properties a bit. The following example plays slightly higher and shorter sound and repeats it two times.

# beep -f 5000 -l 50 -r 2

See also