Hi,
gentoo 1.4.3 or whatever the later release is
jackd 0.62.0
Ardour/GTK 0.334.0 running with libardour 0.643.2
jackd -R -v -d alsa -d hw:0 -p 64
I tested recording eight tracks of audio into Ardour
using "jackd -R -v -d alsa -d hw:0 -p 64". This
produced one xrun when disengaging record on the
transport.
Next test; one track of audio from Ardour to
freqtweak, back to ardour. Same jackd settings as
above.
One xrun while adding an xterm window.
Well, the obvious change from an environment that was
producing an endless stream of XRUNs to one which
looks encouraging is running jackd with --realtime
enabled. doh!
Jesse, if there's any other tests or whatever that
you'd like me to run so you have some reference for
your environment, let me know. I'll happily follow
your instructions.
ron
--- Jesse Chappell <jesse(a)essej.net> wrote:
On Sun, 23 Mar 2003, R Parker wrote:
What do you make of my IRQs, they're not
consistent
with what you're describing. Is this some
newer
bios
aipc feature?
The pci cards begin at 16 with two scsi controlers
sharing interupt 16, at 18 we see a third scsi
controler that isn't the same as the one on 16.
It's
just the same driver.
Ron, my dual mobo (asus a7m266-d) (amd-762 chipset)
also uses this IRQ system. As
discussed before I thought I had tamed latency
problems, but
indeed I have not. When I run this command while
'jackd -R' is
running (and a client is connected) I get massive
overruns on
the order of 1-2 *seconds* every 5 seconds or so:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/path/for/bigfile bs=1000
count=1000000
This will write a one gig file as fast as possible.
My IDE
drives are tuned properly with hdparm and I'm using
SMP
2.4.20 + LL + preemp + radeonDRM. Also tried with
2.4.18 + LL.
$ cat /proc/interrupts
CPU0 CPU1
0: 59143 60400 IO-APIC-edge timer
1: 1948 2013 IO-APIC-edge keyboard
2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade
8: 1 1 IO-APIC-edge rtc
9: 0 0 IO-APIC-edge acpi
12: 12170 12203 IO-APIC-edge PS/2
Mouse
14: 12232 12459 IO-APIC-edge ide0
15: 52 159 IO-APIC-edge ide1
18: 0 0 IO-APIC-level Ensoniq
AudioPCI
19: 6613 6657 IO-APIC-level eth0
NMI: 0 0
LOC: 119459 119465
(my AGP radeon7500 is on IRQ 16.. not shown above
for some
reason).
Although my BIOS allows me to specify IRQs for
slots, the numbers
there match the traditional style... not this >16
stuff. I tried
anyway, but no change in linux.
I just tried this test on another system, this one
UP 2.4.20 +
LL, similar results. Anyone else care to try this
informal
disk-loading test? If you have >= 1G of memory,
use a
count=2000000 (2GB file).
jlc
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