Did it work? I'm glad!
-----Original Message-----
From: linux-audio-user-admin(a)music.columbia.edu
[mailto:linux-audio-user-admin@music.columbia.edu]On Behalf Of Patrick
Shirkey
Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2002 10:34 AM
To: linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] [Fwd: Re: [ardour-dev] Ardour, IRQs and
xruns]
Mark Knecht wrote:
Patrick,
On most machines with onboard USB, the USB IRQ is shared with one or
more
PCI slots. If this is true on your machine, then you
would find the PCI
devices that share that IRQ and set those slots to the IRQ you want. The
USB
will tag along.
If you find no PCI devices sharing an IRQ, then try setting the IRQ for
the slots that have no PCI devices at this time.
Sweet that works for me.
If none of that works, then you may not be able to
change the USB
controller's IRQ. This is the case for someone else trying to run alsa
apps
on a laptop with an onboard audio chip. We have not
been able to change
his
audio chip's IRQ no matter what.
I hope that's not your situation. We can't get rid of his xruns yet.
Yet another reason to stay with PC hardware where this kind of stuff is
more configurable. (Jorn knows what I'm referring to here ;)
--
Patrick Shirkey - Boost Hardware Ltd.
For the discerning hardware connoisseur
Http://www.boosthardware.com
Http://www.boosthardware.com/LAU/guide/
========================================
"Um...symbol_get and symbol_put... They're
kindof like does anyone remember like get_symbol
and put_symbol I think we used to have..."
- Rusty Russell in his talk on the module subsystem
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