So the problem here, as I see it, is that Jack itself is not an NSM
aware client.
My perception of NSM always was that it is not strictly bound to jack
but jack is another client. If jack would be a NSM client which supports
switch and saves it settings in the session folder you can save the
samplerate (and the connections, without a special program).
On the other hand that binds a session to specific jack settings again,
which is bad. Are there any examples of NSM clients that deal with
system-specific settings?
Nils
On 03.09.2014 05:49, Filipe Coelho wrote:
On 09/02/2014 11:57 PM, Philipp Überbacher wrote:
I did not know that nsm supports live switching
of sessions without
restarting clients, but in case you need to change the jack sample rate
you most likely can't do that anyway.
FYI: You can change sample rate on the fly (e.g. without stopping
JACK) if you use JACK2 and switch-master.
When this happens clients will receive buffer-size and sample-rate
change callbacks.
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