On Friday 27 January 2006 23:20, Jon Hoskins was like:
Hey all, thought I would share some of my recent
discoveries:
As demudi 1.2.1 has been lacking a kernel source for awhile
It does? Are you sure?
and demudi
1.30rc1 refuses to boot on my new hardware I've had to seek alternatives.
After reading several threads on using Ubuntu as a music production OS I
decided to give Ubuntu 5.10 'breezy' a shot. Installing
"realtime-lsm"
with module-assistant was easy as pie and I got relatively good latency
with the stock kernel, but real improvements came from two things:
I decided to give Ubuntu 6.04 "Dapper Flight 3" a run and noticed that
#cat /boot/config-2.6.15-4-386 | grep PREEMPT gives CONFIG_PREEMPT=y and
has been the same in all the "dapper" kernels I've tried, something that
was not enabled in the stable "breezy" kernels. Does this mean the ubuntu
guys are looking at releasing a stable kernel with PREEMPT enabled?
It does look rather like they they may be from what you say. !:)
Anyway the second thing I found was using
'rtlimits' instead of
"realtime-lsm". Making use of a small app I found at:
http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~jwoithe/
makes assigning realtime access on an app-per-app basis and even
user/group basis a breeze. This combination has lowered my latency *under
load* to 5.8ms in KDE (Kubuntu is what I installed) and I can squeeze
2.9ms out of it in a very conservative fluxbox or even xfce4 enviroment
with no xruns and less than 10% cpu/dps usage (as reported by qjackctl).
Most of the good sound apps are available in the repositories as well with
the exceptions of Seq24 (conflicting libs) that I easily built from
scratch, Freecycle, which I'm still trying to get to compile correctly,
and Willem's wonderful DSSI packages.
It looks like Ubuntu might have a stable release on the horizon suitable
for serious audio work! You are more than welcome to check my blog as
well for an up-to-date journal of my ubuntu "studio" experiments and
installed software list:
http://oktyabr.blogspot.com
Jon, thank you. I've been waiting for someone to report success with Audio on
Ubuntu. Hopefully, recent moves to make sure A/DeMuDi releases enter the main
Debian repositories in a timely fashion, will help bring all Debian based
multimedia systems into focus and increase compatibility between the systems
as well as ensuring that sources are always easily available.
--
cheers,
tim hall
http://glastonburymusic.org.uk/tim