Been there, done that.
From what I tried here, I think it is an Audacity
problem. I don't get the
da-da-da-syndrome you get, but something similar. The
problem occurs when
trying to mix more than 5 channels succesivly. At this point, I get some kind
of small delay in between the left channel and right channel, resulting in a
""wider" stereo-sound. 20 seconds later, audacity starts dying. Some kind
of
synchronisation problem I guess.
Also I noticed an excessive use of the swap-file. (Is it normal to have +1gig
swap used with about 20 minutes of sound put in audacity?)
I'm using the latest sound-rpms from Thac.
(Should this be anounced on this list, or better, do the audacity-developpers
know they have a problem (I think)?)
Moeflon (powerdesktopuser without programmingskills :-p)
(MDK 9.1 (clean install) , P3 750, 384ram, ext3 for / & /home)
On Wednesday 07 May 2003 11:13, Daniel James wrote:
We've done our first night of testing with the
Delta 1010, with mixed
results. The hardware is:
Asus P4PE motherboard (Intel 845 chipset)
Pentium IV 2.4B (2.4GHz, 533MHz FSB)
Seagate Barracuda IV 80GB
M-Audio Delta 1010 (IRQ 9)
Matrox G550 Dual DVI (IRQ 10)
SB Live (IRQ 11, for soundfonts in hardware with external MIDI
keyboard)
All other hardware disabled in BIOS (USB, serial ports, parallel port,
onboard sound etc) except for Broadcom onboard LAN sharing IRQ 9 -
configured, but disabled for recording session with:
ifconfig eth0 down
cat /proc/interrupts
now shows only Delta 1010 on IRQ 9
Software:
Linux Mandrake 9.1 upgraded from 9.0
Multimedia patched 2.4.21-pre kernel
ReiserFS filesystem on / and /home
ALSA upgraded to 0.92 with Cooker RPMs
envy24control compiled from alsa-tools 0.93 tarball
wxGTK 2.40 compiled from tarball
Audacity 1.1.3 compiled from tarball
With the Delta 1010 and two input tracks selected in the Preferences,
it all works fine. Four input tracks also works. Select eight input
tracks and it works fine initially, but after a while something weird
happens to the recorded input - I've never seen this behaviour with
Audacity in any other context.
Suddenly the waveform is drawn as a rapid series of the same shape.
Playing the track back, it sounds as it looks:
da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-
Can anyone replicate this bug, if it is a bug? With full duplex
enabled, it was even more flaky. I did compile Audacity before the
upgrade to Mandrake 9.1, so this may be related. On another computer
with just a normal two-channel soundcard, Audacity can dummy 'record'
eight channels in full duplex without problems, but then it isn't
actually doing much work.
Next, we're going to try Thac's RPMs of Audacity 1.1.3 and at least
one other multichannel recorder app to see if this is my lack of
compilation skills, a system problem or an Audacity problem.
Cheers
Daniel