thanks fernando for the indepth discussion and the links to alternative
switches; seems indeed that the motu one is on the cheap side of the
spectrum. anyway, what we'll do is test a bit with the devices that our
friends and colleagues have and see if we find a setup that allows us to
configure from two linux boxes without an explicit switch. that firmware
thing doesn't sound promising for the future investment in the box,
though. but then the ultralite avb is still half the price of a fireface
ucx (which exceeds my budget, and the headphone combo 7/8 jack was a
shitty idea), so even if one doesn't use avb streams it's the better
option i guess.
best, ..h.h..
On 17/10/18 07:34, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano wrote:
On 10/15/2018 04:58 PM, Hanns Holger Rutz wrote:
hi there,
i found a number of related threads, seems mainly @Anders Hellquist who
is using connected Ultralite AVB, but with the additional switch.
i'm trying to determine whether this interface or the slightly cheaper
mk4 (which has 2 more analog outs as far as i can see) makes sense for
my setup. i have a performance project where connecting with another AVB
device makes sense, so i'm tempted into the ultralite AVB. only...
- manual seems to indicate that you can maximally route 8 channels
either way, which is a bit silly given that I can already do that
directly with the two laptops connected and Zita running...
The UltraLite AVB supports 3 AVB streams either way. If the target AVB
Motu card also supports AVB 3 streams (8 channels each) you can send up
to 24 channels.
The number of supported streams varies from card to card, details can be
found in the FAQ here:
https://motu.com/avb/avb-faq#q15
- also manual suggests that probably i won't
be getting the web
interface served just with USB connection, but only ethernet, so
catch-22 if i want the two interfaces connected and not spend 430 EUR on
a bloody specialised switch.
I think that is the case, sorry. On exotic operating systems like OSX
there is a proxy in the driver that serves http through usb (I think) so
you can access the configuration pages without an ethernet cable.
AVB will only work through switches that support the protocol (like the
one Motu sells). So a normal switch will not do. There might be cheap
alternatives but I don't know of any. Some info I just found here:
https://support.biamp.com/Tesira/AVB/List_of_AVB-capable_Ethernet_switches
You can connect two Motu cards back to back, but then you cannot add a
computer to the mix without an AVB switch (actually the Motu AVB switch
has a non-AVB port where I normally connect the computer).
isn't it possible to set up the interface
when it's not connected to the second interface and then simply replug
the ethernet cable? i guess the problem will be that i can tell it to
send output channels to the other interface which is not yet visible?
I forget the exact sequence, but yes, you need to connect the AVB
streams together by selecting from the web gui (I thin on the target
Motu you have to select from a popup on a given stream a currently
offered stream from another card). Once they are connected, they
reconnect automatically if the ethernet cable is unplugged and then
plugged in again.
or other idea - simply use an off-the-shelf
ethernet plug, then
disconnect
the laptop once the web interface is configured?
I have not tried that, I imagine it would not work because AVB will not
go through and the cards will not see each other streams'.
As to the cards themselves...
WARNING: the latest versions of Motu AVB cards seem to break the class
compliant driver. The symptom is that on the receiving end (a Linux
computer running Jack) the channels seem to rotate in blocks of 8. So,
if you are sending a signal on channel #1 and receiving it on Jack, it
will suddenly appear after a while on #9 and then move on to #17 (if you
have that many) so on and so forth. Fun. Downgrading the firmware seems
to cure that problem. I have seen this in an UltraLite AVB and a 1248
(and I think on a 24ai as well).
WARNING: Another "feature" lost on an upgrade to the latest is the
ability (on some cards, 16A, 24ai, 24ao) to have three usb modes, one of
them enabling you to use up to 64 channels on usb2 if the sample rate is
restricted to 44.1 and 48KHz. I have had to downgrade cards to be able
to keep using that. Luckily all the firmware versions are available
online and so far the downgrade has always worked (fingers crossed...).
A pain.
-- Fernando
PS: I created and maintain a 56.8 3D diffusion system (in our small
concert hall, the Stage) that has now 8 (yes, eight) Motu cards
connected together through AVB. You can imagine it is not necessarily
fun to deal with firmware stuff like this.
I hate products that you can buy and never know if they will keep
working as initially advertised when you "upgrade", sigh