Hi John,As this has become more and more of a mystery, I have investigated a little more. reading the AVLinux user manual, particularly the section on software management, I was able to locate where the jackd packages come from, and that is in fact the kxstudio repos. once I found that out I was able to inspect the build logs for the jack package here:
Am 21.01.2017 um 08:26 schrieb john gibby:
I booted my LiveCD and saw that the dpkg output there is just the same as for my regular system (on solid-state drive). I'm glad to know that I have jack1 and not jack2, though I'm still not really sure I understand completely, since the jack process I get is named jackdbus. For now, I stopped using the jack_control shell script and am just using qjackctl to bring jack up, and still, the process name is jackdbus. I thought jackdbus was jack2...
https://launchpadlibrarian.net/229691222/buildlog_ubuntu-xen ial-amd64.jack-audio-connectio n-kit_2%3A0.124.2~20151211-2~ xenial1_BUILDING.txt.gz
and it turns out that it has the jackdbus patch applied.
So this part of the mystery is resolved, and your system seems to be in good shape.
I have to apologize for adding to confusion and leading you on the wrong track, just remember I'm not familiar with AV Linux (have looked at it several times in the past 15 years but never regularly used it...) and this 2016 version is significantly different from previous ones in that it incorporates the kxstudio repos as a core part, which i didn't realize at first. I'm really sorry for that.
As for your crossover filter network, I've never tried to do such a thig in software, so I have to pass that on to more knwledgable folks...
Cheers, Edgar
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