Hello!

I don't have hyperthreading, atleast there's nothing about that in bios. It's a dekstop computer though.
Hmm, alarming! I do use both USB keyboard and USB mouse. My soundcard is also USB. I do have alot of other devices plugged in aswell to my USB. Is there any way I can fix this, other then getting "real" plugs for the USB keyboard/mouse? Like I said, there's still a couple of devices that uses USB even if I get rid of the mouse/keyboard.

@ Jeremy "So the xruns are not completely gone? And what if you force the Lexicon to only use 2 ins and outs with -i2 -o2? Could you also post your jackd command (run JACK and check with ps -eo cmd | grep [j]ackd)":
No, not completely gone. Running a project now that has ~70% cpu load (never goes above that), and that gives atleast 4-5 pops each second. It's not inaudible, but it's very prominent. That command told me something like "/some/path/jackdbus auto" which I figure isn't of much help? I start jack through Cadence, so I don't know how to extract the command from that really =(.

I will try forcing the use of 2 ins and 2 outs!

Also, the MIDI issue turns out to atleast 1st be a problem with either the keyboard or the actual soundcard. I suspect the keyboard, it has been messing with me before. Gotta crack it open and take a look.... =/

Anyway, thanks for all help! I really need this working, if the pops can go away for this I'll have a golden production environment =).

Cheers,
Gabriel


On Sun, Mar 3, 2013 at 5:01 PM, Len Ovens <len@ovenwerks.net> wrote:

On Sun, March 3, 2013 6:29 am, Gabbe Nord wrote:
> Hello Jeremy, and thank you so much for your reply!
>
> I disabled SpeedStep in BIOS, and it helped a little, thanks!

Also hyperthreading? if you have only one cpu you may have to disable cpu1
in the boot command line if the bios doesn't allow this.

> Here's my
> interrupts:
>
> zth@zth:~$ cat /proc/interrupts
>            CPU0       CPU1       CPU2       CPU3
>   0:         43          0          1          1   IO-APIC-edge      timer
>   1:          3          0          0          0   IO-APIC-edge      i8042
>   8:          1          0          0          0   IO-APIC-edge      rtc0
>   9:          0          0          0          0   IO-APIC-fasteoi   acpi
>  12:          4          0          0          0   IO-APIC-edge      i8042
>  23:     412535      22606         20         25   IO-APIC-fasteoi
> ehci_hcd:usb1, ehci_hcd:usb2

This is not great, both USB are on the same irq. do you use a USB mouse or
KB? That could cause problems. If you have the plugs for mouse and KB use
them even if you need adapters. Some bios let you tell the bios not to set
irqs for the USB or video. That might help as Linux seems to be a bit more
inteligent at doing it. In the end usb1 and usb2 may be hardwired to the
same irq. That probably means you can only use one of them.

Laptop or desktop? in either case a USB card may help.

>  41:      12871        435        437        292   PCI-MSI-edge      ahci
>  42:          0          0          0          0   PCI-MSI-edge
> xhci_hcd
>  43:         67          9          3          8   PCI-MSI-edge      eth0
>  44:          9          3          1          0   PCI-MSI-edge      mei
>  45:         78        161         80         19   PCI-MSI-edge
> snd_hda_intel
>  46:      87524         15         46         18   PCI-MSI-edge
> radeon
>  47:         29          0          0          0   PCI-MSI-edge
> snd_hda_intel



--
Len Ovens
www.OvenWerks.net