Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] I'd like to install the AMD propriety drivers to see if I can fix this prob.
Am Sat, 9 Aug 2014 12:36:21 -0400 schrieb Mike Holstein mikeh...@gmail.com: one trick i use is, i'll fire up a knoppix live CD or puppy and use the wizard to try and force the desktop into the geometry i want.. You can also try to add new modes that were not detected automatially: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1112186 Sometimes that is needed for a combination of video card and monitor. If you know your monitor does 1280x1024 at 60 Hz, you can normally tell this to your Linux box using xrandr, dynmically within the running desktop. Of course, graphical tools using xrandr might helpt you with that. Generally, I really like the Open Source Radeon drivers. I switched from flaky internal Intel graphics to a HD5450 card on my office box, driving 3 displays (the outer ones rotated). Not perfect, but it seems like the best option right now. I avoid binary driver blobs unless I really know I need them (p.ex. for 3D performance). What I don't like at all about all of Linux graphics is that it has gotten really bad with video tearing in default setups. That used to work before that 3D desktop frenzy. Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- ubuntu-studio-users mailing list ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Questions about production
Am Sun, 27 Jul 2014 13:07:32 +0530 schrieb Shubham Mishra mishrashubham2...@gmail.com: a first gen i3 and 3 GB RAM. This is plenty of computing power for audio. A Pentium-M 1.4GHz with 2 GiB RAM was plenty, too. My current laptop is a Core2Duo (OK, with 8 Gig, but those are not in use for audio production) and can work with a project in Ardour with about 20 tracks plus buses and effects all over the place (EQ, comp, reverb ... sometimes a amp/speaker simulation, too) just fine. You'll find that CPU load is not that high, unless you go for extremely low buffer sizes (below 128 or so). The crucial point is to have the system properly configured and to avoid bad luck with certain hardware that just won't work properly. Even frequency scaling with the 'ondemand' governor is no problem with my Core2Duo (also with the Pentium M back then). It might be a problem for you, though, but I actually doubt it. I suspect some software issue interfering with the operation of your gear. Especially if the xruns are regular. A fresh install of Ubuntu Studio _should_ not feature the usual suspects, though. 5. For the microphone, is it ok get a USB microphone? I heard that it's messy handling multiple sound cards with jack. If yes, then what is the best way to connect a microphone? Multiple sound cards are possible, but it should be avoided for simple setups, especially if the cards are not linked to a common clock (I run two Firewire devices that are in sync via S/PDIF). An USB microphone is a separate sound card. Best aquire a normal analog microphone and plug it into the same sound card that offers the MIDI interface. If your keyboard only has USB, not an actual MIDI port, then you could try a USB mic for cost-effectiveness, but you'd be more happy with an audio interface that handles both the data from the MIDI keyboard and the microphone. On the other hand ... I do wonder if there is a sync problem between a MIDI-only USB device and an audio USB device at all (apart from the jitter that Ralf refers to and which can but doesn't have to be a problem you encounter). When MIDI only does input, then the clock is ... you?! I'm not sure about the timing in the protocol ... but does it actually make a difference to have unsynced devices in this case? A question for the audience;-) In any case: Getting two devices into a JACK setup is more work than getting one device in there. Plus, a separate analog microphone can have other uses (on stage, in a different studio). Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- ubuntu-studio-users mailing list ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] [ot] Suggestions for a notebook for music.
Am Tue, 11 Feb 2014 11:23:07 -0500 schrieb Mike Holstein mikeh...@gmail.com: The thinkpad I have, T60, doesn't have a texas instruments FireWire chipset, making it inappropriate for FireWire devices in Linux for audio production. Firewire audio worked fine with my old X31. Wasn't with TI chip, neither, I think. Might even have been O2micro or such. Sometimes, things are just wired up right. Case in point: A dual Socket A board with a flawed nVidia chipset which made Firewire audio impossible regardless of FW controller chip. Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- ubuntu-studio-users mailing list ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Need a CLI command to recursively copy my home folder.
Am Thu, 31 Oct 2013 12:05:07 + (GMT) schrieb Alex Armani alex.arm...@rocketmail.com: What I'd like to do, is copy all the contents of home/alex to sda7 then remove sda6, move sda7 so that it is next to sda2 and install UB13.10 from scratch. So I figure I can login as guest, CTRL ALT 2, login as alex, mount sda7, and then use a single cli command to copy everything in my home partition to sda7, but I don't know what the commands to do this are. The easiest command is cp -a /source /destination This copies directories recursively and preserves ownership, permissions and time stamps. Another, more traditional method (back from when GNU cp wasn't that helpful) is to create an archive: tar -cf /destination/archive.tar /source Both commands work best as root in case there are files with diverse ownership. Otherwise, running as the owning user is fine. I'm not looking to have my home partition on sda7, I just want to backup all my pics / videos /music / downloads so I can start again. You know ... for having a backup ... creating backups is an idea;-) Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- ubuntu-studio-users mailing list ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Upgrading
Am Mon, 21 Oct 2013 05:11:10 -0300 schrieb Gord L Williams i...@gordlwilliams.com: I successfully upgraded from 13.04 to 13.10 via update. It took me a couple of tries though as update told me I had to have so much space on my /boot partition. I had to revive a laptop that got the package management stuck because of that (update process aborted, package management state in need of manual rescue). I cannot believe that ubuntu has no simple option to clean up old kernels. I had to dig out some shell scripting with apt / dpkg. Even without a /boot of limited size (because of full-disk encryption, for example), this is a serious omission which bloats installations over time. I'm all for not removing old kernels without user's consent, but I'd expect ubuntu to give the average user (the ones who this distro is designed for) a way to clean that up. This is not ubuntu-studio specific, but since it came up, I had to vent a bit. Old kernels and their modules occupy quite some space. Mind, I'm not necessarily talking about upgrades to new distro release. Each little kernel update litters the hard disk. Did ubuntu folks really miss that? Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- ubuntu-studio-users mailing list ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Syncing Jack in multiple machines
Am Mon, 10 Jun 2013 21:54:05 +0530 schrieb Abhayadev S abhayad...@gmail.com: Hi, Anyways to sync jack running in multiple machines? I have a video player in my laptop (QJadeo) to be synced with the Jack in my desktop. is it possible via network (OSC)? http://netjack.sourceforge.net/ does that ... not sure how well it works nowadays, but it's exactly for such stuff. Disclaimer: I didn't use netjack myself yet. Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Horrific jackd xrun behaviour after upgrade from US 10.04 to 12.04 (Re: R: Audio issues in 10.04)
Am Mon, 17 Sep 2012 15:30:49 +0200 schrieb Thomas Orgis thomas-fo...@orgis.org: Please post the output of $ /etc/init.d/rtirq status Will try to get to that tonight. Well ... this is interesting. I tried AVLinux and this also showed massive xruns, with the added twist of ffado giving up on the device after some time. I then thought that maybe swapping the firewire card to another slot might help. It shared IRQ with some USB ports. I shoved it into the x16 slot (using onboard graphics). Now, would I have been properly awake at that time, I'd have thought that the generally abysmal performance cannot have something to do with the firewire card, as it also shows for internal audio and a USB card. But, perhaps it was a step towards the final goal. Thing is, the machine did not want to start after swapping the firewire card. Pulling the card out, waiting, connecting/disconnecting power ... and the machine boots again. To shorten it a bit: I must have had something funky with the power connection to the card. On the same wire branch s a SATA power adapter for the 3rd hard disk and I suspect it having had some bad insulation, causing flaky current / shorting out. That would explain the box dying on moving said branch about a bit, and some protection circuit preventing powering on again (for some time). I managed to get the thing running again after adding insulation to the supposedly faulty adapter, and what might play a part: The BIOS got reset. I'm with defaults there now. I'm leaving the box running for the day with JACK on firewire under UbuntuStudio (my partial KXStudio). During the first minutes I did not see one underrun and could record a bit with Ardour. II faintly remember that I checked internal audio, too, and it seemed to be fine. So it could be down to flaky power to the firewire card / the system at all (but how could that subtly influence the machine without killing it outright?) or, what I think is more probable, some BIOS setting. I'll check that later, if the test is successful. Anoter remote possibility would be that the machine freaks out generally when the first PCIe slot is occupied --- I'll move the firewire card back to see if that makes a change. Anyhow, here's the current interrupts (see how the one for firewire is the most populated?): CPU0 CPU1 CPU2 0:124 0 1 IO-APIC-edge timer 1:465 0 25 IO-APIC-edge i8042 7: 1 0 0 IO-APIC-edge parport0 8: 0 0 1 IO-APIC-edge rtc0 9: 0 0 0 IO-APIC-fasteoi acpi 12: 12464 19 1858 IO-APIC-edge i8042 14: 0 0 0 IO-APIC-edge pata_atiixp 15: 0 0 0 IO-APIC-edge pata_atiixp 16: 0 2838 IO-APIC-fasteoi ohci_hcd:usb3, ohci_hcd:usb4, snd_hda_intel 17: 1 1682 2187 IO-APIC-fasteoi ehci_hcd:usb1 18: 50797 4975 IO-APIC-fasteoi ohci_hcd:usb5, ohci_hcd:usb6, ohci_hcd:usb7, radeon, firewire_ohci 19: 0 5 1747 IO-APIC-fasteoi ehci_hcd:usb2 22: 1442 60 15896 IO-APIC-fasteoi ahci 42: 0 0 0 PCI-MSI-edge eth3 NMI: 0 0 0 Non-maskable interrupts LOC: 215017 224583 218795 Local timer interrupts SPU: 0 0 0 Spurious interrupts PMI: 0 0 0 Performance monitoring interrupts IWI: 0 0 0 IRQ work interrupts RES: 38575 50657 61704 Rescheduling interrupts CAL:498451613 Function call interrupts TLB:759889843 TLB shootdowns TRM: 0 0 0 Thermal event interrupts THR: 0 0 0 Threshold APIC interrupts MCE: 0 0 0 Machine check exceptions MCP: 1 1 1 Machine check polls ERR: 1 MIS: 0 rtirq: PID CLS RTPRIO NI PRI %CPU STAT COMMAND 302 FF 90 - 130 0.6 Sirq/18-firewire 994 FF 83 - 123 0.0 Sirq/16-snd_hda_ 84 FF 80 - 120 0.0 Sirq/17-ehci_hcd 88 FF 80 - 120 0.0 Sirq/16-ohci_hcd 86 FF 79 - 119 0.0 Sirq/19-ehci_hcd 90 FF 79 - 119 0.0 Sirq/16-ohci_hcd 99 FF 75 - 115 0.0 Sirq/1-i8042 98 FF 74 - 114 0.1 Sirq/12-i8042 23 FF 50 - 90 0.0 Sirq/9-acpi 73 FF 50 - 90 0.4 Sirq/22-ahci 92 FF 50 - 90 0.1 Sirq/18-ohci_hcd 94 FF 50 - 90 0.1 Sirq/18-ohci_hcd 96 FF 50 - 90 0.1 Sirq/18-ohci_hcd 100 FF 50 - 90 0.0 Sirq/8-rtc0 287
Re: Horrific jackd xrun behaviour after upgrade from US 10.04 to 12.04 (Re: R: Audio issues in 10.04)
Am Tue, 18 Sep 2012 12:37:21 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: Change the config to RTIRQ_NAME_LIST=rtc [and add anything as it was before, excepted of a second rtc entry] PS: After editing the config stop and start might not do the job and a reboot could be required No biggie ... I'll bear with some reboots when I get the thing stable afterwards. As for rtc being first in the list: If that is necessary (I could imagine that it is), I wonder why that is not default on UbuntuStudio (I remember the update modifying that config anyway). And, having read up a bit ... AHCI seems to be known to cause audio issues, also on Windows machines (where people endure greate pain to switch between AHCI and IDE mode ... registry hacking, or even reinstall ... I didn't have to do a thing with Linux and I don't see why I should). Is this a consensus here: If building a DAW, stay away from AHCI? Though, I think that I also had it enabled in 10.04 (on another mainboard, though); that could be a regression in the kernel behaviour, which would be depressing (I'm getting old, as I see lots of regressing with Linux in general, especially considering reliability). Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Horrific jackd xrun behaviour after upgrade from US 10.04 to 12.04
Hi, the subject says it all ... I had an install of 10.04 that worked. Only issue seemed to be instability when recording while a USB drive is connected. So, considering that perhaps this is a sign to replace a mainboard with broken onboard USB (used a PCI add-on card, which might have worsened the interrupt situation), I did replace it and the machine worked fine during a session. Now with the fully replaced hardware (Asus AM3 board with 780G chipset, Athlon || X3 460, 8 Gig of Kingston DDR3 ValueRAM, 250 G Seagate SATA boot, 2 WD EADS on mdraid for recordings and not to forget VIA firewire on PCI-E (same card as before)) and the update to ubuntu 12.04 (yes, should have tested the final hardware with 10.04 first, eh?), the performance is hindered by jackd not being able to keep steady without generating xruns at a some rate. Not really constant rate, though, also its behaviour depends on client connections (even when just connecting meterbridge, this seems to help triggering xruns a lot). A very interesting fact is that using 3x512 periods (or bigger) is less stable even than going down to 3x32! With big periods, I get xruns right away, while with the low setting, I was able to get an hour of recording done, but that ended prematurely -- I _guess_ that this was because of some software glitch (like xrun handling) and not due to the bass player nudging the keyboard by chance. But I cannot be sure about that. Now, I do have the lowlatency kernel already installed, also fresh jack/ardour from kxstudio ... have rtirq setup updated by dpkg (firewire in there instead of ohci1394). What are the ubuntu studio folks' thoughts on this? Did you encounter _more_ stable jack with extremely low latencies? But since it is not really stable and glitch-free in any config, this interesting characteristic does not help. Oh, and it happens independent of cpufreq governor. I do use XFCE and the integrated radeon with open source driver. Any help on getting that setup stable again is appreciated ... or should I simply go back to 10.04 (and hand-install current ardour/jack, as I did before)? I figure that I shouldn't even need a lowlat kernel for getting basic 3x512 recording work! Alrighty then, Thomas. PS: Why upgrade at all? Well, I have always a spark of hope that some iteration of the GNU/Linux audio ecosystem will be really stable, without random crashes of Ardour, for example. But I guess one has to live with crashing multimedia apps ... not been that different during my days doing video with Ulead Media Studio on Windows (and the fact that version 5 was less usable than 2.5). signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: R: Audio issues in 10.04
Am Mon, 17 Sep 2012 14:12:40 +0200 (CEST) schrieb brian.coll...@alice.it brian.coll...@alice.it: Hello Thomas, I use KXStudio on top of UbuntuStudio, but the 12.04 version. I think there is some misunderstanding: I don't have the issues with 10.04 but with 12.04. But thanks for the pointer to KXStudio forum ... I got confused with all that flavouring of ubuntu. I see that I perhaps should not blame UbuntuStudio when I have a partial mix with KXStudio (I just treated it as PPA to get current Ardour ... every 'buntu install I do seems to need an assortment of PPAs to make it work ... the hell of conflicting rpm repos for RHEL gives an acknowledging wink). So, It seems I'm half-way between two flavours of 'buntu here? You install ubuntu ... turn it into ubuntu studio ... then into KXStudio ... I guess I have to test 2, er, 3 setups before continuing to bugger either project 1. roll-back of KXStudio stuff to vanilla UbuntuStudio, 2. do a full install of kxstudio-desktop-xfce, kxstudio-meta-audio ... and finally, KXStudio-kernel-realtime 3. or do a short-track and just install the KXStudio kernel, which might be better tested with the kxstudio JACK. I have prepared a USB drive with AVLinux 6 for comparison ... let's see if _some_ setup works. And then, I can figure out what 'buntu or not I need to get a working recording box. Alrighty then, Thomas PS: Won't UbuntuStudio 12.04 integrate future 2.8.x Ardour releases? It's all about bugfixes. And Ardour has lots of those. It just doesn't feel right to work with 2.8.12 when there is 2.8.14 . Even if the new version introduces new ones, it is one step closer to the illusive 2.8.FINAL that finally does not crash during mixing. It's a fine tool ... it just should never crash. We should not let web browsers set the standard for application stability:-/ But well, I guess the solution is to go KXStudio right away, which seems to provide current versions of things. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Horrific jackd xrun behaviour after upgrade from US 10.04 to 12.04
Am Mon, 17 Sep 2012 15:15:58 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: PS: CPU frequency scaling? I noted that it is independent of that. I switched to 'performance' governor and nothing changed. Also, my experience with working setups is that frequency scaling does not matter to them. That might be exceptional, but I remember reliable firewire recording with my old Thinkpad X31, using freq scaling and tickless kernel (back then when that was a new feature;-) While I will do tests with scaling disabled, I sincerely hope that having it on will not interfere. Heck, even on 'powersave' it'll still be frikkin' 3 cores at around/over 1 GHz or so;-) Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: R: Audio issues in 10.04
Am Mon, 17 Sep 2012 15:11:53 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: Please post the output of $ /etc/init.d/rtirq status Will try to get to that tonight. Alrighty then, Thomas signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Audio interface analysis (AD/DA performance, preamp quality)
Hi folks, just a quick and hopefully easy question: What tool is there for Linux/JACK to do measurements of audio interface performance, comparable to what RightMark Audio Analyzer does? I'd like to measure data as displayed on http://av.watch.impress.co.jp/docs/20080728/44k.htm (at best a comparable methodology since RMAA seems to be some kind of standard for this). Of course I can generate some sine waves sweeps and write programs to compare WAVs, but for sure there is some tool for GNU/Linux that has the procedure automated already, right? Another of course: Of course, I'd like the computed spectral data not only pictures but also as plain (ASCII) data, p.ex. to be able to subtract spectra to determine what a microphone does on its own before entering a specific preamp. Alrighty then, Thomas PS: And if you have used that program already, I'd be interested in comparing performance measurements of my low-grade stuff with your high-end gear;-) signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Sound cards (Was: Re: no sound
Am Fri, 20 May 2011 13:54:57 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: When recording soft synth just by JACK, without the sound cards being involved, there's a loss for the sound quality too! Wait a minute... could you explain that? You have a loss of quality compared to live playback of the soft synths (using JACK?) when playing back a recording taken from JACK? A recording that preserves 32 bit floating point sample format (heck, or 24 bit integer) and the sample rate, of course? I have to wonder what you did there to alter the data from the soft synth. I mean ... we're talking bit-exact copy here, aren't we? Can you present a test setup to observe that issue? Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Sound cards (Was: Re: no sound
Am Fri, 20 May 2011 15:33:39 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: No! But I suspect a bug for Jack and btw. there already was a rounding bug that was fixed, perhaps years ago. Ah, OK. I'll ignore the discussion about different sound cards influencing this as a heap of confusion and settle for this: If JACK would not have bugs, by design it would do bit-exact copies, or at least copies with floating point computation errors in non-audible amplitude. I don't claim that this ideal case is indeed the reality. When you find those bugs, I hope they'll get reported and fixed, for the benefit to us all. In the meantime, those of us with some time on their hands can just try to verify the issue of bit-exact copying of data through the pipeline ... I just don't want to go down that path right now, since I'm already not able to do my actual work because of debugging some gcc 4.6 breakage on code of mine. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: SFX library - Search
Am Mon, 16 May 2011 08:32:31 -0500 schrieb Erik Rasmussen mailfore...@gmail.com: Hopefully someone has a better solution than this, Isn't this what all this semantic desktop / desktop search stuff in KDE4 is for? Nepomuk, Strigi ... etc? Many people are annoyed that it consumes resources (Strigi managing a search index of your disk), but perhaps here is someone who wants to use this? Mind, though, such background search services you do not want to have running wild while recording audio... even the good old locatedb update is not desirable. Hm, seems that you _can_ have this stuff on a Gnome desktop, too (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strigi). Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: *Official Announcement:* Ubuntu Studio is switching to XFCE.
Am Tue, 17 May 2011 00:53:52 +0200 schrieb Robert Klaar nim.b...@gmail.com: Well, either way the system seems to go towards a more OSX like feeling, however I can't help but like the inovative style of Gnome 3, atm. I'm running 10.10 with cairodock Sorry if I'm confused ... are you using Gnome 3 or are you using Unity? Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: *Official Announcement:* Ubuntu Studio is switching to XFCE.
Am Sun, 15 May 2011 15:46:50 -0400 schrieb Michael Dickson mike.dick...@rivendellnh.com: I believe Ubuntu Studio should track the default Ubuntu desktop for the release track its on. I have thoughts in the same direction, but regarding change from default, I got a perhaps more narrow view, even. A user I support has a normal laptop with ubuntu (10.10) and a separate machine with Studio. I actually installed from the US medium and thus got the different UI configuration, compared to stock ubuntu: Different optics and different menus (like, the missing Applications and System direct-access menus in the panel). That wouldn't fly at all. So I configured the US install to look just like a default desktop (which took some time since you have to search through forum posts to find anything). The user doesn't want disruption of the known workflow. Not again, after getting accustomed to Linux / ubuntu at all. So, the current / last ubuntu Studio deviations from the normal Gnome 2 install were too much already. I see the question of switching the desktop you get when installing Studio directly as not that relevant to me: I'll install people the vanilla ubuntu and then add Studio packages on top, keeping the known interface. And to be honest, that's the two faces of ubuntu Studio I see: 1. Exactly the same desktop as vanilla, just with added functionality (realtime settings, etc.). 2. Something different. The second category includes the old setup with a changed Gnome 2 configuration, as well as a possible XFCE setup in the future: It's different from vanilla. That's enough for my users not to use it. It doesn't matter for normal users how different it is. Perhaps more different is better to quickly realize that one has to adapt expectations. Pro people who are more dedicated to studio work, who wire up lots of JACK clients and have many desktops filled with those synth / sampler controls, can benefit from a specialized ubuntu Studio desktop. People who just want to record a bit with some provided Ardour templates will use the environment they have on other installs -- otherwise they get confused and annoyed. Just go ahead and change ubuntu Studio desktop to what you think is best -- as long as one can just upgrade a vanilla install with the audio recording packages. Alrighty then, Thomas. PS: Of course it's a separate question how those users will survive the switch to unity ... well, for 11.04, it will be classic desktop for sure! signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [Solved] Elegantly Disabling PulseAudio in Ubuntu 10.04/10.10
Am Tue, 12 Apr 2011 11:32:21 +0200 schrieb Ralf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net: - The volume icon in the GNOME panel disappeared. I dunno of you people with your scripts ... I just removed the pulseaudio package on a US 10.04 machine I support ... and installed gnome-alsamixer to get volume control. The latter might be useful for you, too. Is this package still there for US 10.10? Of course... you always have alsamixer in a terminal. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Tascam us-144mkII
Am Sat, 09 Apr 2011 06:35:59 +0200 schrieb ailo ailo...@gmail.com: Specifically, I would be interested to find out if one can get 24 bits and 48kHz out of a card. You can get that out of the Alesis io|2, USB 1, duplex, 24 bit stereo, 48 kHz. It uses actual 24 bit sample format ... so that's 3 B * 2 * 2 * 48000 = 563 KiB per second of payload data that fits well into the limit of USB 1.1 (12 MBit/s = 1464 KiB/s), giving space for whatever overhead is present. But yeah, anything more than that gets really tight. You could have a card with 4 recording channels and 2 playback ... that would be 844 KiB/s ... but then, I don't know how much overhead you have with USB audio and also I'd have to review how duplex operation actually affects the available data rate. Also, looking at the devices that are there, USB1 audio for linux goes up to 24 bit stereo, duplex. And yes, USB 2 devices seem to be sparsely supported. For multichannel recording I got a FireWire device... and FireWire audio can be a bitch to get working right (building a good computer setup). Stereo cards work the best. There are a few multichannel cards that work too, but out of those, usually only those will work well that have specific drivers. The one that seems to work nowadays is the Edirol UA-101, the USB2-sister of my FA-101. There is a driver in ALSA, snd-ua101, that reportedly delivers multichannel work. But what's missing is the software control for the direct monitoring mixer. But then, on my FA-101 setup, I don't use direct monitoring from the box ... we have an analog mixer and separate headphone amp for that, the recording interface is just connected via the inserts on the channels (only the send part). Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Recording with Alesis IO/2, what about the noise?
Am Thu, 17 Mar 2011 13:31:23 -0500 schrieb Timothy Cook timothywayne.c...@gmail.com: I have this device as well. When I first used it I had the same issue. Playing around with the settings in QJackCtl finally eliminated it. Hm, I don't remember such an issue. I do remember ground loop noise induced with the help of the laptop's crappy wiring, but that did not appear on recordings and was also helped by exploiting the balanced outputs (ground lift). But what I can imagine is that the input gain is set too high -- noise characteristics of amplifiers are not best at full tilt. When JACK settings fix it ... then it's a weird side effect of the driver, certain period setup? Funny. In Ardour the is an option to have Ardour do the monitoring. But I do have to wonder about that - direct, latency-free (virtually) hardware monitoring via the monitor - usb knob is a good thing to have, and use. But well, if you need your guitar distortions applied, I assume you use something like Rakarrack in chain with ardour ... and that can be routed to your monitor output via qjackctl, independently of ardour. I just say that someone who uses Ardour for some years now and never bothered to get monitoring inside Ardour. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Working USB sound card?
Am Mon, 14 Mar 2011 18:08:23 +0100 schrieb Giuliano Braglia forever...@gmail.com: Woo, I did it! Just needed to connect the capture 2 to ardour. Wwwwooo! Yo, it's the same as in the real world: You gotta plug the devices together (and check for faulty cables;-). wo (sorry, I can't stop rejoycing :p ) Have fun and make some music! Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Working USB sound card?
Am Thu, 10 Mar 2011 10:44:49 +0100 schrieb Giuliano Braglia forever...@gmail.com: I will receive the alesis io2 express next week :) can anyone tell me if I have to do something particular in order to install it? You simply plug in the USB wire (yay for bus power), the USB LED should light up on the device and the kernel should give a brief note in dmesg: shell$ dmesg usb 3-1: new full speed USB device using uhci_hcd and address 2 2:1:1: cannot get freq at ep 0x1 usbcore: registered new interface driver snd-usb-audio Then, you should have plain ALSA devices, for audio: shell$ LANG=C aplay -l List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices card 0: Intel [HDA Intel], device 0: CONEXANT Analog [CONEXANT Analog] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 card 0: Intel [HDA Intel], device 1: Conexant Digital [Conexant Digital] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 card 1: io2 [io|2], device 0: USB Audio [USB Audio] Subdevices: 1/1 Subdevice #0: subdevice #0 ... and for MIDI (I had to load the snd-seq module on a custom install, I doubt you'll have to do that): shell$ LANG=C aconnect -o client 14: 'Midi Through' [type=kernel] 0 'Midi Through Port-0' client 20: 'io|2' [type=kernel] 0 'io|2 MIDI 1 ' shell$ LANG=C aconnect -i client 0: 'System' [type=kernel] 0 'Timer ' 1 'Announce' client 14: 'Midi Through' [type=kernel] 0 'Midi Through Port-0' client 20: 'io|2' [type=kernel] 0 'io|2 MIDI 1 ' Select the respective ALSA device for JACK to use and you're set. Of course you can just use it with ALSA applications, too. Only restriction is, when you use the hw device directly, your app must support 24 bit sample format (really s24_3, as that is what makes it possible to shift 24bit/48kHz through USB 1 reliably). But the default plughw does the necessary conversion for you. I'll quickly test MIDI with hydrogen... using the swissonic USB MIDI thingie as thru cable ... yes, I can record and play MIDI from/to my Roland drum computer. No idea about jitter, but basic functionality is there. Really, I'm extremely happy with this box ... no issues, especially compared to the hair-pulling I had over getting a system that plays nicely with the firewire setup (but then, I don't have 8 analog channels on the io|2). Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Working USB sound card?
Am Thu, 10 Mar 2011 12:49:38 +0100 schrieb Giuliano Braglia forever...@gmail.com: Cool! It's ok if the restriction is to use it with jack, because that's what I wanted to do. I think mainly rosegarden and ardour. I tried to tell you -- there is no restriction to use it with jack;-) The only restriction is that the hardware itself needs a specific sample format, but you as user should not care unless you insist on specifying hw:1,0 for alsa applications instead of plughw:1,0. It's a plain boring USB soundcard that needs S24_3 sample format, as far as the software is concerned. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Working USB sound card?
Am Mon, 7 Mar 2011 15:11:24 +0100 schrieb Giuliano Braglia forever...@gmail.com: Hello :) Yes it's me. I'm still trying to get the US 122 to work. I also asked for an alternative distro to try. But... just in case i decide to change card, any advice? Alesis io|2 Also, search for cheap usb-audio-interface thread in archives, started by Mentoj Dija. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Working USB sound card?
Am Tue, 8 Mar 2011 13:34:22 +0100 schrieb Giuliano Braglia forever...@gmail.com: I like it... so you are using it and it works properly? I use one, yes, and it works like a charm. Out of the box with alsa's usb audio driver. I also recommended to a non-geek friend and she's rather happily using it, too (using ubuntu studio). I did not use MIDI or SP/DIF, though. It's apparently not the best interface regarding S/N ratio, but you don't expect that for around 100 €. There's always something better quality-wise, but this box is compact, rugged (the non-express one, at least), and offers all flexibility a home recording person needs, plus balanced outputs. The support for 24bit / 48kHz format was a must for me to be compatible to the projects we record in the studio (band practice room, with an FA-101) ... and more resolution (sample rate) doesn't make sense, in this price class for sure. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Alesis io 2 express (was: cheap usb-audio-interface)
Am Fri, 11 Feb 2011 20:34:55 +0100 schrieb mentoj dija mentoj_d...@gmx.de: was the only working one. apart from the dummy-driver ;-) On 11.02.2011 15:58, Ricardo Lameiro wrote: why are you using the OSS driver? Heck, I did not spot that: Yeah, having to use the OSS emulation of ALSA is strange, and I don't expect it to work well with JACK -- at minimum you will get horrible latency regardless of your JACK periods. The io|2 should be driven using ALSA directly -- unless of course, you indeed have OSS4 installed and we are not talking about ALSA's OSS emulation. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Alesis io 2 express (was: cheap usb-audio-interface)
Am Thu, 10 Feb 2011 22:25:43 +0100 schrieb mentoj dija mentoj_d...@gmx.de: I got an Alesis io2 express audio interface now. after playing around with the jack-parameters, it's working with this preferences (look at the attachment). but with lots of x-runs and this error-messages: Don't blame the interface... I got an io|2 (without express, that's the same hardware just with digital SP/DIF ports still present) and I can do jackd -R -d alsa -d hw:1,0 -r 48000 -p 128 -n3 (that is, period size of 128 compared to your 512, period count of 3 instead of your 4, rate 48000) on my Thinkpad X200 without trouble, loading ardour2 and playback of a 7-track Project does not yield a single xrun. Also switching to your sample rate of 44100 does not seem to bother the system. But: On another laptop I once used, this setting would not work at all. It would be full with xruns all the time, if not worse. That machine needs a setting of 3*1024 to do reliable recordings (so, no realtime processing work, except delay effects:-/). That other box is also similary bad at getting reliable recordings with the internal audio, so USB really is a secondary factor. So, there could be something you can do to optimize your system setup (realtime / lowlat kernel, stop any background processes -- I once had some cron job scratching all over the disk and grinding jackd to a halt on that other laptop), but it might be that your hardware doesn't allow for low-latency recordings. Your computer that is -- that is my main message; your problems most probably lie on the other side of the USB cable, not the io|2. Does it at least work at 3*1024 periods? For a quick system configuration check, it may be good to just boot an AVLinux live system and check how well the interface works for you there. If that's better, you know that you should be able to tweak your installed system likewise. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Ubuntu Studio 64 bit program availability
Am Wed, 12 Jan 2011 23:57:40 -0800 schrieb Casey Forslund cforsl...@gmail.com: will I be able to use all of the programs that come pre-installed with Ubuntu studio, and would they be true/native 64 bit, able to fully utilize 64 bit hardware etc? I don't miss any software in my 64 bit Linux installs. What you might miss is 32 bit VST plugins via wine in your native DAW (like ardour2), but I don't;-) Anyhow, all the open source software, especially anything being actively developed and used in the audio realm, should be there for you in 64 bits. It is for me. I do run ubuntu studio on one 64 bit machine, as 64 bit system. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Reply to Tim and HZN regarding comments on Tascam US-122 on Lucid
Am Mon, 10 Jan 2011 11:09:18 +0100 schrieb Hartmut Noack zettber...@linuxuse.de: In short: try a differnt distro. My first recommendations would be AVLinux Yes, an AVLinux DVD is always handy -- it's a pre-configured live system that you don't need to install to do audio work with. Just try it once; see if your tascam is detected there and then one could also try to identify what's missing in ubuntu. Meanwhile, you indeed can get some work done in AVLinux itself. Though, the current version has funny ardour2 behaviour when you try to disconnect/reconnect to JACK (it crashes with a wine dialog box, I guess the VST support is to blame). As long as you don't do that, you can get recordings done. I did;-) But AVLinux is not that convenient when you want to install it as everyday system, IMHO. It is great when the existing collection of software does the job for you, though. And its rather static nature makes it easy not to bother for updates that just could break your working setup;-) (should have Alsa-firmwareloader on board) and Pure:Dyne. But OpenSuse or Mandriva may do the job as well and they can be tweaked quite easily for realtime-audio. I run Fedora plus CCRMA and OpenSuse 11.2 plus jengelh-Kernel and pack-man packages. Both work very good for me... I must say that ubuntu studio 10.04 also works nicely now for me. I got a recent kernel from the PPA (just forgot which one, but there is only one realtime/lowlatency/... variant for lucid, as I recall) and built Ardour 2 myself to get the most recent version. I don't have much to complain right now (even with the FireWire setup;-). I'm don't exactly remember anymore what I did do to pulseaudio, but I do have things set up so that all sound goes through JACK. best of luck ;-) And don't forget to Have fun! ;-) Alrighty then, Thomas. PS: And yes, I would prefer a more rugged, stable Ardour 2 instead of Ardour 3 that can do MIDI with another ton of bugs:-/ Have to look into traverso again ... signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Chiming in on the 'cheap-usb-audio-interface' conversation
Am Sat, 8 Jan 2011 11:34:59 -0500 schrieb Mike Holstein mikeh...@gmail.com: in my experience, USB devices can sometimes pick up as much electrical interference as internal sound cards on laptops. I have to spoil the specific take on USB interfaces: Hey, I hear it when you move the mouse! That's what I got with someone listening with headphones to the main output of my Edirol FA-101. I'm glad that you don't get that on the recordings (I _think_), just superimposed on the analog output portion. But still, I am mightily pi**ed about the lack of protection from such issues (our dear friend Improper Grounding again, I guess) even when shelling out several 100 € for the gear. Be it USB or any other digital interface, I guess you can have luck and the bad sort of which. I do not see a technical argument why a USB-connected device should suffer more than a device connected via FireWire (both being bus-powered, even) ... you can get bitten on both camps. For simple recording tasks, I really like the io|2 -- no comparison in bitchyness to the FireWire setup. I ended up angrily smashing a dual socket mainboard with a hammer because it featured a southbridge bug that just so might be the reason for reliable FireWire audio being impossible -- even using a PCI controller with a good FireWire chip. I strongly suspect that a USB interface would have worked just fine. Perhaps not ultra sharp latency, but without all the fuss. That being said, by current setup with ubuntu studio 10.04 and the FA-101 on a custom PC worked without major hickup the last few weeks ... but I very well remember having to reboot the machine (or at least modprobe-cycle firewire) because the firewire subsystem got stuck because of just another subtle driver issue. The FA-101 is a rather old device, but still tricky. No comparison to just having snd-usb-audio loaded and off we go -- with the added plus that it works without JACK, too. To be fair: USB interfaces may not like being put behind a hub... so they're not _totally_ trivial;-) Alrighty then, Thomas. PS: To be a bit more on topic again; I did not test the MIDI performance of any of my USB or FireWire interfaces (uh, would that work with the FA-101?). I am using an Alesis ControlPad with in-built USB for triggering drums via MIDI ... but I don't play seriously enough on that one to judge. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Chiming in on the 'cheap-usb-audio-interface' conversation
Am Sat, 8 Jan 2011 14:47:46 -0500 schrieb Mike Holstein mikeh...@gmail.com: ground lift added to the plug on the laptop quieted down my firewire interface, Still sad that that's necessary, isn't it? But at least it is good to have a way out. For that reason I pointed out the symmetric outputs of the io|2. and not the USB interface i wanted to use (because of the size). Of course, you can get crap on all sides. I won't argue with your experience, just wanted to add mine for perspective. i dont think the quality of firewire vs USB can be challenged. I do challenge, though;-) The actual sound quality really should not differ if the device is built well (and more and more high-class USB devices are coming to market) -- it's a digital interface, after all. When it is only about recording, with direct monitoring from the device or external mixer, USB should do the job just as well, shoving down the bytes with a certain rate, like millions of thumb drives. MIDI may be another issue... the USB device i use needs the madfuloader OK, that sounds ugly. Of course there are USB devices that are a PITA to use (like that Tascam with the L), but at least there is a category of plug-and-play with the standard USB audio class driver. I don't see how setup should be simpler with a FireWire device where you _have_ to run JACK because nothing else uses ffado. cat /proc/interrupts ... and then that whole business. Yes, I dealt with that. I dealt with a laptop with crappy chipset. I shifted PCI cards around ... this is not funny. Of course, there are ways to get lucky, but I have the feeling that it's the norm to have such troubles when first setting up a FireWire interface, while it is the exception for USB to get a faulty mainboard that for some reason doesn't talk right. The complication with the io|2 was that it refuses to work when you plug it into a hub, needs direct connection. That is a sort of problem that users can be expected to solve: Unplug here, replug there ... aah! With audio tech you do that pluggin' around all the time;-) visit a professional studio, the likely-hood of seeing a USB interface in a rack somewhere, or in the signal path at all would be rather unlikely. Well, before USB 2 devices becoming mainstream, USB was no option for studio work as you only get 2 channels through. FireWire was the only solution to get at least 8 or 16 tracks -- besides PCI cards. I believe one reason to rarely see USB stuff is that simply people don't have reason to ditch working FireWire setups. They bought FireWire gear while digitalizing the studio (or ramping up from internal PC interfaces) and trust that, now. Who knows how it looks in 5 years, or 10? I also have said FA-101 in my rack, but I surely had my trouble getting a reliable FireWire setup (interface chips, interrrupts, mainboards, ...). I have the suspicion that my life would have been easier with some USB gear of _today_. Back then, there was no alternative, really. Of course, you won't see USB gear in my rack until the FA-101 died, or until I decide that I want more than 8 channels, because chaining up another FA-101 won't work right since Edirol managed to break the synchronization in that model... hm, OK: Hooking multiple USB devices up to each other and get them synched is not known practice (to me). Looks like a point for FireWire, still. My point isn't that it's no better than USB, anyway -- it's that it can add complication in situations where you don't need any advantage over USB. Though, I must confess: I do not have experienced a multichannel USB interface in action. All I was talking about was simplicity to get some recording going, where latency can as big as it may be, does not matter, and where 2 channels are enough. I would not dare to get into FireWire for that. Anyhow, this is getting out of hand ... I should stop ranting. Somehow I had to get some frustration off my chest -- combined with the relief of the io|2 just working(tm). Perhaps it is a lucky case ... I just see that people also had their troubles with the Edirol UA-101, mainly because it needs a special driver -- I guess most of the mixers with USB interface are 2-channel after all, so have less issues with just being USB class compliant audio devices. Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Someone know this bug with ardour2?
Hi, I reported that one recently, perhaps someone here remembers something like that, too? It would be so nice if recording on Linux would be stable:-/ http://tracker.ardour.org/view.php?id=3213 Quote: I am typing this out of my memory, as the affected box is in the studio, not here. But better a bad bug report than no one:-/ This is an install of ubuntu studio 10.04, with ardour 2.8.6, and jackd 0.118+svn, I presume (I used jack2 before on another install, but I don't remember hacking around in the ubuntu one to get jack2). Ardour quite often is disconnected from jack (for whatever reason, usually _not_ during recording) and the real bummer is that it fails to reconnect the channels/tracks to jack ports. It can connect to jack, but the client name changes from ardour to ardour-01 ... ardour then tries to connect ports for the non-existent client ardour. That doesn't work, of course. I have to exit ardour and start again to get the connections working. This is very reproducable once you got ardour disconnected by some other mischief (I'd need to try if this happens on user requested disconnect/reconnect, but I doubt it). This is is also quite frightening since ardour promises only proper saving of projects when the jack connection is right ... and I had to reconnect things after recovering from the ardour-01 confusion. This gives us (ardour2/Linux and me) really bad press when we (the band) are in a recording session and my band waits where I have to fiddle around with that strange Linux thing:-/ Question is now: Who is to blame for the client name mismatch? Ist it ardour, is it jack? Should ardour verify which name it gets assigned and not try to connect ports for someone else (named ardour where ardour is named ardour-01)? In any case, I hope this one is resolvable... Alrighty then, Thomas. signature.asc Description: PGP signature -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Trouble with wireless setup
Am Mon, 19 Apr 2010 16:36:15 + (GMT) schrieb kirko birilli whyshen...@yahoo.co.uk: hi thomas, wicd and rutilt and all the other graphical applications will not connect nothing if you don't have a 2.6.2x kernel.me got mobile broadband and no problem in 9.10 with networkmanager out of box.what card do you use with wicd?u got good reception? Hm, did you confuse me with someone else? I didn't say I use wicd, just that I see it recommended when people have issues with network-manager. The latter indeed manages the wireless broadband (well... not that broad) just fine. Connection quality seems to be defined by the network (I don't have the best one here) and the modem (sometimes seems to die on me). One annoying thing with network-manager is that I have to restart it to show the tray icon along with my 3G modem (might be that old bug about network manager being confused by a static eth0 config). Alrighty then, Thomas. -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: Trouble with wireless setup
Am Thu, 15 Apr 2010 06:33:35 -0500 schrieb Erik Rasmussen mailfore...@gmail.com: I've had very good success with *WICD* (*W*ireless *I*nterface *C*onnection *D*aemon), instead of using the default Network Manager. (It handles both wireless and wired connections.) I see that one recommended often... but it really misses certain functionality that is increasingly important for users: Connecting with 3G modems, for example. Or am I wrong here? Alrighty then, Thomas. -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Re: [LAU] M-Audio Audiophile 2496 on modern Ubuntu
Am Thu, 8 Apr 2010 10:44:05 +0100 schrieb Ricardo Lameiro ricardolame...@gmail.com: Why Pulseaudio, well Pulse audio is a platform that tries to unite all the old sound architectures and create a easy Desktop audio framework. It is indeed a question why one needs such a sound server on a typical setup. ALSA can do mixing of multiple clients on one device, and it can even route to funky stuff like JACK (or, pulse). I don't day ALSA is perfect (still need to debug ridiculous CPU usage it causes with mpg123 sporadically), but I presume that if it is configured properly and more direct usage of these features irons out bugs, there is no need for pulseaudio. Apps use ALSA plug devices for normal desktop audio work, one app may exclusively use the hw device if it wants, to cut the middlework -- if the hw can do hardware mixing (I had a laptop once that has an internal sound chip that could mix two streams), it could even be several apps. Pulse offers tings like a mixer to control all connected clients (at least I remember something like that... not really using it), but I wonder how people really use that. And: There is also the nagging knowledge that the now-GPL OSS offers such control, too, and works beautifully with low overhead, being compatible to any decades-old Linux audio app. Experience shows that pulseaudio is adding its own problems on top of ALSA problems... I know enough people whose issues with audio were solved by deinstalling pulse. Desktop (laptop) users. I use pulse for my day to day desktop, and jack for pro audio things. when I start jack, pulse just stops, and everything works, if i want to play something through jack, i use a jack-aware app, like vlc. Why would i want to browse around the web, and look at youtube videos, when i am working on pro audio stuff? My setup is a bit different: The studio box is wired up to our monitoring system via a firewire box. Any sound it can produce (apart from fan noise and clattering of the hard disks) has to go through JACK. And yes, in that setup, people want to show each other youtube videos (you know, music videos). I am aiming for a setup that uses the ALSA JACK plugin to make ALSA-apps simply send their sound through JACK. That seems to work, generally. And, one ray of light was that totem on my fresh ubuntu install (hijack attempt: please someone have a look at my posts about the issues I have there...) automagically chose JACK as output option, without any configuration on my side (perhaps coincidence, the JACK plugin being the first tried?). Of course I should deactivate the internal audio to make sure apps rather fail to open any output than the silent one. Another thing to have in mind is that pulse audio is not going away, and it will be used by the other distros also. I am not a pulse defender, in fact i don't like it as much i like alsa and jack, but it is like democracy I have the suspicion that once pulse has settled it's issues and is the dominant and stable audio solution for desktops, something new will come along and again replace the old cruft;-) Alrighty then, Thomas. -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
Trying to install lucid beta on a SCSI box, attempt 2
Ok, then... I am trying to control my rage... and extract some useful information of my day with ubuntu. This day. This night. I followed the advice to install normal ubuntu first, then add the ubuntustudio stuff. That way, I hoped to get the standard stuff like network management including 3G dialup. Well... that is about true ... but what I also got was a bunch of new experienes. 1. First Install I booted the ubuntu ludic beta1 live CD... did a straight forward install (just manually selecting the partition to install to). This one manages to setup up a boot manager correctly... plus, it's able to download language packages from the internet through the configured 3G dialup. Even smart enough to copy the dialup config to the installed system. I had to add rootdelay=90 to the boot command line because of the well-known (???) bug of SCSI disks not being found in time, but I expected that. Still sucks... I wonder if this is some bug specific to ubuntu or just an effect of having the SCSI driver as module with modern kernels. Then, in the booted fresh install, I popped in the ubuntustudio DVD and followed the popup window about accessing that medium as package source with synaptic. Selected the ubuntustudio profile packages... and let it grab a load of stuff from the net, too. This took some time, with the dialup not being that broad banded (about 250 MiB with about 30K/s). 1.1 Known issue: Bad resolution This is fine with plain ubuntu but bad with ubuntu studio: The automatic X11 setup uses a bad resolution. After switching to the ubuntu studio kernel (I assume X11 is not changed), the system wants to run my 15 inch TFT with 1366x768 resolution (I think it was this widescreen res, to big in any case) instead of 1024x768. I knew that from my first install, so I quickly had /etc/X11/xorg.conf created with a fixed set of resolutions. Of course that sucks when we replace the monitor and I have to rember to adapt/delete the xorg.conf ... the default does not work. Bug report needed for this one? Possible that this issue goes away when updating the kernel to 2.6.33-rt10 or so... (I am still wondering if I should install a custom kernel after all ... to include the SCSI driver and hope for reduced rootdelay). 1.2 Big Bad Breakage Now... the crashing plymouth kept nagging me (would a system update really fix this now? -- I need to see if my next visit at the box is long enough for the downloads). It's main function seems to be nagging (and irritate newbies), so I decided to rip plymouth out. Due to a dangerous fling, I clicked on the Software Center menu entry. Searched for plymouth ... removed the daemon... seen that there still is a package for plymouth shared libs... wondered how much stuff might depend on it... figured that one will get warnings about removing dependent stuff (like synaptic does it)... deleted it. B-O-O-M! X11 is killed ... I manage to activate a plain console ... and see that I unwittingly entered a major system fubar. Tried to restart gdm ... there is no gdm ... tried to look after the binary... there is no /bin/ls! Wow. There even is no halt, reboot or shutdown. This system is really ripped apart for good. This is something one really would like to avoid happening to new users, old users ... anyone. This Software Center thingie is supposed to be the bubbly-touchy-feely admin interface for Linux newbies / notcarealots, right? I consider it a serious bug that it hoses the whole install beyond repair for any average ubuntu user (well, except for reinstall). Is this something known? Shall I make a flaming report on launchpad? 2. Second Install Since the system was still pretty vanilla (before the blow-up), I rather decided on starting from scratch, reinstall ubuntu, add ubuntu studio on top again. This time I wanted to avoid waiting hours for downloads, so I saved /var/cache/apt/archives and shoved it back once the basic system was installed. That worked nicely... but what didn't work was the install of archives from the ubuntu studio DVD. 2.1 Aptstinence A first time, the familiar popup about package source CDROM (well, or DVD) being inserted appeared and made me install the first part of ubuntu studio (the desktop stuff, AFAIR). But then, after adjusting the boot config for the rt kernel and restarting... that darned popup did not pop up again. So I tried to manually make synaptic use the DVD. No gain for much pain. When wanting to add a CDROM source, it complains that it cannot mount the cdrom. Also apt-cdrom seems to be confused, too. It might have something to do with the system having too many CD/DVD drives (2 real ones, one virtual from the Huawei E160 modem)... or rather with the automagic mounting system. I have seen that the media was mounted under /media/Ubuntu-bla-bla_, not under /media/Ubuntu-bla-bla ... both directories exist. Maybe synaptic expected the latter mount point while the disc is accessible under the