I'm using Linux. I increased the minimum buffer to 100 ms, and the jitter essentially went away. I wonder if I could do as well by compiling with kernel preemption. Has anyone tried this?
On Wed, 2006-02-15 at 12:31 +1100, Craig Southeren wrote: > On Tue, 14 Feb 2006 19:23:55 -0600 > Aaron VanDevender <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I'm using Ekiga 1.99 (Beta 2). Occasionally I hear some audio jitter in > > the dialog. This is especially true when there is system load or system > > interrupts happening, such as when I flip desktop pages, or drag windows > > around, or do some heavy disk I/O. I notice that in the Audio Codecs > > config there are values to set minimum and maximum jitter buffers. They > > default to 50 and 200 ms respectively. There is no description, though, > > of what these values mean, or what effect on the operation of the > > program changing these values might have. So my question is, what do > > these do? And what should I change them to if I'm getting some jitter in > > my calls? > > Are you using Windows or Linux? > > I get the same issue on with nearly every VoIP client on Windows. If I > start doing other stuff on the same machine, clicks and breaks starts > occurring in the audio. > > I don't think this is a jitter problem, I think it has to do with the > priorities of the processes reading and writing to the audio device. But > I'm not sure. > > Craig > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Craig Southeren [EMAIL PROTECTED] / [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Phone: +61 243654666 ICQ: #86852844 > Fax: +61 243673140 MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mobile: +61 417231046 Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Post Increment - Consulting & Services http://www.postincrement.com > Vox Gratia - The Open Source VoIP portal http://www.voxgratia.org > VoIP products http://www.sunkom.com.au > -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] Plead the First. _______________________________________________ GnomeMeeting-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnomemeeting-list
