On Tuesday 22 February 2005 04:38 am, Steve Harris wrote:
Yes, ecpect that for real time apps and latency, its
the worse case thats
important, not the average case.
- Steve
I wouldn't expect a lot of packet routing to be happening. Curiously enough, I
was wondering what would happen if the dlapdspa sliding windows transmission
dealie was ported to a jack framework. I need to look at jack.plumbing.
-ramble-
It could be feasible to use an OSX Mac and jack as kind of a bridge to
whatever they use to route audio... for integration purposes. I'm assuming
the proprietary Mac stuff doesn't support jack, but that doesn't mean the
converse is impossible.
On Tue, Feb 22, 2005 at 09:09:55 +0000, Jamie Bullock wrote:
> It depends on how many nodes the traffic has to go through, and how much
> latency each node introduces. You can measure udp latency in relation to
> your own system using lmbench. I think it's available on bitmover.
>
Thanks and `apt-get install lmbench`worked ;)
>
> Jamie
>
> On Mon, 2005-02-21 at 20:56 -0500, John Check wrote:
> > On Monday 21 February 2005 05:07 pm, Marc Lavallée wrote:
> > > Le 21 Février 2005 16:53, Unifr a écrit :
> > > > After searching the web, I couldn't find any software that could
> > > > connect 2 (or more) computers (through jack would be kind of
> > > > perfect!). Well, I got only one yet but I plan to get a laptop soon
> > > > and it would be good if could use both at the same time.
> > > >
> > > > Any of you have heard of a soft like that on GNU/Linux?
> > >
> > > jack.udp :
http://www.alphalink.com.au/~rd/sw/jack.html
> > > -
> > > Marc
> >
> > Interesting.. I'm wondering about the latency numbers.. Must compare
> > with dladspa
>
> --
> Regards,
>
> Jamie