Cool. I have an Eee 701 on which I installed "Ubuntu Eee" (an
unofficial buntu), and then I recompiled the "array kernel" (kernel
tweaked for the eee, "2.6.27-8.17eeepc1" I think,
<http://array.org/ubuntu/>) with the realtime patches added. I didn't
overclock - I have had no problems with SD cards.
That aside, I had a very similar experience to you: solid low-latency
audio I/O as long as I deactivate networking (I habitually just turn
off wifi from the eee-control applet). I do realtime
analysis/processing/synthesis using supercollider.
I also have an Eee using the stock Xandros which doesn't have an rt
kernel but (as long as you sudo) is surprisingly solid for realtime
audio.
Dan
2009/5/6 James Stone <jamesmstone(a)gmail.com>om>:
Following on from Ken Restivo's amazing work
getting RT linux
working on the eeepc, I decided to have a go. I am using a 701,
which I have slightly overclocked using the eee.ko module
(required on my eee to boost voltage to get SD cards working
reliably YMMV).
http://code.google.com/p/eeepc-linux/
I patched the latest 2.6.29.2 kernel with the rt11 patch, and
just built it...
Running Jack with qjackctl, I can set periods to 128, full
duplex, 44100 and get no xruns. I have to set prio to 89, and
force 16 bit. Importantly, I also have to kill NetworkManager and
NetworkManagerD or I get xruns. With all this, it seems really
solid. I am running ardour with no problems.. 6 individually
recorded tracks writing to the SD card seems to work fine.
James
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