On 06/30/2011 11:47 PM, rosea grammostola wrote:
Hi,
It is very promising that devs like Torben, Paul Davis, Rui and David
Robillard (to name a few), are 'backing up' Jack Session and that the
Jack Session API is in the Jack API. This will give the community a
very good chance that many apps will get JackSession support soon (or
later).
However, it's still reasonable to expect that not all LAD
applications are going to be patched with JackSession support.
In other words, there are and will be apps which might be useful (for
one or more of us) to use in a session but which won't have
JackSession (JS) support. From a users perspective, it would be very
useful to be able to use that application (without JS support) in a
session in some way nevertheless.
At the moment one Session Manager (SM), Pyjacksm (Qjackctl will
follow soon, and also Patchage I expect) makes this possible by
manually adding 'infra clients' to a configuration file, .pyjacksmrc.
See example below. Infra clients are designed for applications
without a state, like a2j. But it is also possible to use apps
without JS support as infra client.
Amsynth is an application without JS support and in this way I am
able to load amsynth, with project A. The SM makes sure that Amsynth
is started and that the Jack connections are restored (that's the
only thing the SM can do for you for apps without JS support). But I
don't want to use Amsynth with Project A always (Session 1). I might
be working on a totally different project and want to make a session
for that also (Session 2). This time I want to load amsynth as:
amsynth -b /home/user/projectB.amSynth.presets (I don't use Session 1
and 2 together in this example).
To be able to load Session 2, I have to edit my .pyjacksmrc file or
make symlinks.
*Feature request*: It would be nice if the SM could provide me a way
to load a different configuration file.
For example: JackSessionManagerX --load configurationfileSession2
Thanks in advance,
\r
I think I have mentioned it before somewhere, but another good feature
for a Session Manager would be the possibility to start (and / or use?)
a session via the command line.
Like: qjackctl --session session1.session
or something.
\r