JACK has no requirements other than that you can run your process()
callback without blocking, every time.
How much buffering needs to exist to make sure that can happen depends
hugely on what the non-RT part of things is doing. For comparison, when the
non-RT part does disk i/o, you need to be ready for potentially several
seconds of delay in refilling (or emptying) buffers. If the disk i/o
wasn't there, the buffering requirements would be much smaller.
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 1:10 PM, benravin <ben.alex(a)outlook.com> wrote:
I want to know the optimal buffering which i can use for designing my
application.
My use case is as follows, I receive digital radio signals through a tuner
and does the channel and audio decoding in separate threads.
Finally the audio is send to jack callback and played out.
How much of buffering is enough for real time streaming between threads.
I want keep the optimal buffering between these threads.
Please suggest guidelines for using with Jack.
-ben
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