Hi,
I've got 3 periods per buffer, and as I sid everything used to be all fine
and dandy. So it's either the upgraded ubuntu realtime kernel, some
modules therein, latest jack, or the fact that my wife's had a baby
that's caused the problems.
If anyone has settings that work with the Intel-HDA (kernel name, jack
version, modules used) that would be much appreciated. Or if anyone's had
a baby and that's caused their computer to misbehave.
Jonty
On Wed, 22 Oct 2008, Nigel Henry wrote:
On Wednesday 22 October 2008 10:30, J M Needham
wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2008, david wrote:
Matthew Smith wrote:
Quoth I:
>> Whilst it is possible that someone out there may have this working
>> with Jack (and a realtime kernel), I have yet to meet them.
Quoth Ronald Stewart at 2008-10-22 07:49...
> we got it working, you need good ol' 64studio RT..
There you go - so it can be done. Thanks Ron.
Think I'll stick to my external card though - better connectors,
headphone monitor, etc. (And hooked directly into a Soundcraft Compact
10 mixer.)
One day I might actually get the time to use all this - haven't even had
the chance build myself a non-crashing Rosegarden yet :-(
Hmm, my Rosegarden 1.7.0 installed from package in Debian Lenny/Sid
repositories, running with non-RT kernel on a Toshiba laptop also using
Intel HDA sound, doesn't crash.
Although I suffer from crackling when producing sound;I have no problem
with running Rosegarden 1.7.2 (or indeed any other version) compiled from
source.
If your soundcard is hda intel, there is a known problem, where crackling
occurs if the "Periods/Buffer is set to the default "2". The cure is to
open
Qjackctl's setup, settings, and change it to "3".
All the best.
Nigel.
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-user mailing list
Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user