On Sun, 17 Dec 2017 10:47:33 +0100, Peter wrote:
There, I can even switch to 96kHz, which doesn't
work on ALSA/JACK
Just for testing purpose I connected the Scarlett to my Linux machine
and started jackd at 96KHz. Note, I didn't test it by playing or
recording something, I just launched jackd.
[rocketmouse@archlinux ~]$ aplay -l|grep Scarlett
card 4: USB [Scarlett 18i20 USB], device 0: USB Audio [USB Audio]
[rocketmouse@archlinux ~]$ jackd -dalsa -dhw:4 -r96000 -p128 -n2
jackdmp 1.9.12
Copyright 2001-2005 Paul Davis and others.
Copyright 2004-2016 Grame.
Copyright 2016-2017 Filipe Coelho.
jackdmp comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; see the file COPYING for details
no message buffer overruns
no message buffer overruns
no message buffer overruns
JACK server starting in realtime mode with priority 10
self-connect-mode is "Don't restrict self connect requests"
creating alsa driver ... hw:4|hw:4|128|2|96000|0|0|nomon|swmeter|-|32bit
configuring for 96000Hz, period = 128 frames (1.3 ms), buffer = 2 periods
ALSA: final selected sample format for capture: 32bit integer little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for capture
ALSA: final selected sample format for playback: 32bit integer little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for playback
[rocketmouse@archlinux ~]$ pacman -Q jack2
jack2 1.9.10.r293.gc44a220f-1
[rocketmouse@archlinux ~]$ uname -a
Linux archlinux 4.14.3-rt5-1-rt-pussytoes #1 SMP PREEMPT RT Tue Dec 12 08:01:30 CET 2017
x86_64 GNU/Linux