On 10/29/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Florian Schmidt</b> <<a href="mailto:mista.tapas@gmx.net">mista.tapas@gmx.net</a>> wrote:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On Monday 29 October 2007, Chuckk Hubbard wrote:<br>> On 10/25/07, Florian Schmidt <<a href="mailto:mista.tapas@gmx.net">mista.tapas@gmx.net</a>> wrote:<br>> > Well, if chrt works now without sudo, try running
<br>> ><br>> > jackd -R -P 70 -d alsa ...<br>> ><br>> > again. It should work now, too..<br>><br>> Update: I just discovered that running jackd -R -P 70 -dalsa -P -p256 -n2<br>> -r44100 as ROOT doesn't even set priority 70. jackd then runs as a root
<br>> process with priority 20, according to both chrt and top.<br>> Apparently my system is not able to run anything higher than 20 priority;<br>> does this mean my kernel is misconfigured, or might it be something else?
<br>> -Chuckk<br><br>install htop<br><br>run it<br><br>press f2 [setup]<br>-> Display Options<br> -> uncheck "Hide userland threads"<br> -> uncheck "Hide kernel threads"<br><br>Do you see all 4 jack threads now?
</blockquote><div><br>Woop, there it is. Thanks. I see 5 actually, one -71, one -81 (watchdog?), and the rest 20. Running Csound with its --sched=N flag, I also see two csound processes, one of which is -70 and the other 20, no matter what value I put... time to take that up with the Csound list I guess.
<br><br>Thanks guys.<br><br></div></div>-Chuckk<br clear="all"><br>-- <br><a href="http://www.badmuthahubbard.com">http://www.badmuthahubbard.com</a>