From what I know this is entirely under control of the system load
balancing. So if the two Pd instances would run on the same core there
would either be something seriously broken on your system, or you have
other, even more CPU hungry processes running which are maxing out the
other cores so that the system concludes that it's the best to have the
two Pd instances running on the same core.
A glance at the System Monitor CPU history graph should give you an idea.
m.
On 04.03.20 23:38, Csaba Láng wrote:
True, my apologies.
Ubuntu 19.04
Pd 0.50-0
On Wed, 4 Mar 2020 at 23:37, Peter P. <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
* Csaba Láng <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
[2020-03-04 23:32]:
> Dear list,
> how can I check if my subprocess really runs on a different core
than the
> main pd instance.
Telling about your operating system could be a first step.
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