Harry Van Haaren wrote:
Hey David,
The AudioFire has been supported in FFADO for a very long time,
as Echo were helpful and provided "generic" source code for thier devices.
The FFADO site explains details, but all you need is a newish Linux Distro
which has a JACK with FFADO on it.
The new Ubuntu studio has JACK & FFADO, but gave me lots of unknown
problems with my AudioFire12,
AVLinux works very well for me. The new Pure::Dyne works insanely well.
(Pure:Dyne is what I currently have
installed.)
Pure::Dyne runs as a Live CD, so you can try it without destroying you
XP, and all I needed to do to get
firewire audio running, was:
1. sudo modprobe raw1394 // loads the firewire module
2. sudo chmod 777 /dev/raw1394 // allows all users acces the
firewire port
3. start jack (I use QJackCtl).
If there's errors... check your firewire settings, make sure that the
"backend" in QJackCtl = "firewire",
and dont set the latency/buffer-sizes etc too low to start. A little bit
of common sense and it should work
NP!
Hope that helped... -Harry
PS: If you havent upgraded the firmware on the AudioFire to version 5,
DONT!
I'm getting a latency of 14.5 ms on an AudioFire2 (firm:5.5), while the
same machine under
the same approx settings gets 2ms (yes, just two!) on an AudioFire12
(firm:4.8).
Thanks, we tried it today with PureDyne 9.10 "Carrot and Coriander".
modprobe and chmod reported no errors, but JACK didn't recognize the
AudioFire12.
When you say "backend" in QJackCtl, are you talking about the driver, or
something else? I just noticed now (at home on my laptop without any
firewire device) that there's a "firewire" option on the Driver drop down.
We use a Firewire 800 PCIExpress card, I forget the brand. I didn't have
the time to check to see if the card is being recognized.
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community