Am Samstag, 15. Dezember 2007 schrieb Sebastian Tschöpel:
Hello James,
thanks for your reply.
You could confirm it by trying to open the
capture device using a
simpler utility, such as arecord. If you get the same result, then you
have nicely excluded audacity from the problem, and identified the
kernel driver as likely cause.
The ice1712 is the module for my Terratec Phase88/Envy24 Chipset soundcard
which I successfully use all the time with any other audiosoftware on my
linux machine.
What I recommend ... check for a more recent
kernel in whatever
distribution you are using.
Hmm. Nothing available at the moment. It looks like they're working on a
openSuse 10.3 based JAD release but there is just a source available
that could
still be unstable.
interesting, I use a Delta1010LT, and never saw something like
this. Audacity
isn't the most stable piece of software for me either, but the worst things
happening for me are crashes when changing the driver backend, or even when
stopping transport sometimes.
If you refer to the new jacklab openSUSE-10.3 repo at ftp.gwdg.de, the
kernel-source package there was made because Novell/SUSE didn't supplied one,
and it is needed to build kernel modules (nvidia etc.). It exactly matches the
standard openSUSE 10.3 kernel-rt package.
rebuild the kernel ...
O.o .... now you said the three magic words that makes me get shivers
down my spine.
I use the JAD kernel-rt-2.6.19-5.i586 Thats all I can say.
Unfortunately, I haven't got any clue
about how to recompile/change/patch a kernel. :(
The 10.3 kernel-rt, recompiled for JAD with CONFIG_HZ=1000 can be found here:
http://people.jacklab.net/appleonkel/RPMS/, 32 and 64 bit.
Alas, for this one there's no kernel-source package available, sorry.
Edgar
Best regards,
Sebastian.
web: linuxaudioblog.sternenhejim.de
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