JFTR some users might find setting up jackd to complicated, but jackd
provides advantages, e.g. "Within software, jackd provides
sample-accurate synchronization between all JACK applications." -
http://manual.ardour.org/synchronization/on-clock-and-time/
This does mean, that signals are not out-of-
On Fri, 2014-01-10 at 10:45 +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> I still don't understand why pulse could not have just been some extra
> software working with jackd. I guess I'll have to get back to
> programming at some point.
There's pulseaudio jack sink
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuStud
On 1/9/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On 1/9/14, Raffaele Morelli wrote:
>> If you are going to use/test jackd as your primary audio server you will
>> need to have a look a this sooner or later
>> http://alsa.opensrc.org/Jack_and_Loopback_device_as_Alsa-to-Jack_bridge
>
> Thank you very much. Very
On Thu, Jan 09, 2014 at 10:13:25PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Also, I just ran a strace on qjackctl, and the following from its
> output might be relevant, I don't know:
>
> open("/usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf.d//50-pulseaudio.conf",
> open("/usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf.d//pulse.conf",
I see later
On 1/9/14, Raffaele Morelli wrote:
> If you are going to use/test jackd as your primary audio server you will
> need to have a look a this sooner or later
> http://alsa.opensrc.org/Jack_and_Loopback_device_as_Alsa-to-Jack_bridge
Thank you very much. Very useful information.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE,
If you are going to use/test jackd as your primary audio server you will
need to have a look a this sooner or later
http://alsa.opensrc.org/Jack_and_Loopback_device_as_Alsa-to-Jack_bridge
/r
2014/1/9 Zenaan Harkness
> On 1/9/14, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> > Perhaps it's restarted by D-Bus, disable
On 1/9/14, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Perhaps it's restarted by D-Bus, disable jack dbus
No, that was well and truly taken care of by me - killall is my friend
> Setup... > Misc > [ ] Enable D-Bus interface
- along with disabling the dbus option in qjackctl of course :)
> However, I don't know what
On 1/9/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Also, I just ran a strace on qjackctl, and the following from its
> output might be relevant, I don't know:
...
> Finally, this might be relevant:
> ... open("/etc/pulse/client.conf",
>
> so, cat /etc/pulse/client.conf (without comments) gives:
...
> ; autospawn
Also, I just ran a strace on qjackctl, and the following from its
output might be relevant, I don't know:
open("/usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf.d//50-pulseaudio.conf",
open("/usr/share/alsa/alsa.conf.d//pulse.conf",
open("/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/alsa-lib/libasound_module_conf_pulse.so",
open("/usr/lib
Perhaps it's restarted by D-Bus, disable jack dbus
Setup... > Misc > [ ] Enable D-Bus interface
However, I don't know what is the correct way to disable pulseaudio, I
simply don't install it or replace it by a dummy package.
Those ways might or might not work:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/842
On 1/9/14, Raffaele Morelli wrote:
> 2014/1/9 Zenaan Harkness
>> I use qjackctl.
>>
>> I've disabled pulse from xfce session, sudo service pulseaudio stop,
>> insserv -r pulseaudio, killall -9 pulseaudio.
>>
>> ps aux | egrep -vi disk\|gvfs | egrep alsa\|jack\|pulse\|mix\|vol
>> gives a nice, cl
2014/1/9 Zenaan Harkness
> OK, I have not been able to solve my pulse dropouts (professionally
> faded out and in, but very noticeable nonetheless - they're about a
> second or less in duration, essentially random intervals between
> dropouts), so have spent today trying to get jackd to work:
>
>
OK, I have not been able to solve my pulse dropouts (professionally
faded out and in, but very noticeable nonetheless - they're about a
second or less in duration, essentially random intervals between
dropouts), so have spent today trying to get jackd to work:
I use qjackctl.
I've disabled pulse
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