Rosegarden Developers:
I have been experimenting with running various Linux MIDI components
from within a Java program, and my experiments have been successful,
with one exception:
When I attempt to run rosegarden from within the Java program (using an
instance of the "Runtime" class, and its "exec" method), the new
subprocess does not start up until after the Java program is terminated.
Then it (rosegarden) starts up, and runs with no problems.
None of the other MIDI components I am controlling with the Java program
(qjackctl, qsynth, vmpk, and audacious) behave this way. They all start
up (and run) immediately, and asynchronously.
I don't think it's a matter of rosegarden needing a lot of resources,
since I have been able to start the gimp, and even virtualbox (in its
place) from within the Java program. Even if rosegarden is the only
program I start within the Java program, it won't start until after I
terminate the Java program.
Do any of you have any idea of why this happens, and if so, is there any
way to work around it?
I am using Lubuntu 11.10 , which uses the 11.06 "Don Juan" version of
Rosegarden, and I am using Open Java 6 (from the Ubuntu distribution).
--
Sincerely,
Aere
--
Sincerely,
Aere
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Virtualization & Cloud Management Using Capacity Planning
Cloud computing makes use of virtualization - but cloud computing
also focuses on allowing computing to be delivered as a service.
http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfnl/114/51521223/
_______________________________________________
Rosegarden-devel mailing list
[email protected] - use the link below to unsubscribe
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rosegarden-devel