Re: Re: Ubuntu Studio 8.04 -> 9.04 upgrade
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 9:58 PM, wrote: > On Apr 27, 2009 1:49pm, Hartmut Noack wrote: > > > > > > same here with the Presonus Firebox. The same with Suse111 with the > > > > jengelh-rt-Kernel (that performs just great with my cheapo USB-interface > > > > a.t.o.h) > > > > > > > > very well: looks like its Linux itself. Anyone out there running any > > > > FW-interface successfully on a recent distro? > > > > > > > > HZN > > > > I've been running a Presonus Firepod with no problems on my first > generation MacBook using Hardy for many months. I was actually surprised at > how well it worked. I was getting better performance out of it than I would > in Cubase using OS X. > > The Firepod is also working on Jaunty on my desktop, but it's a bit more > problematic, due mostly to the limitations of the computer itself. Ever > since upgrading to Jaunty on my Macbook, I have been unable to get the > firewire permissions worked out. Everything seems to be set fine, but JACK > just refuses to start and spits out that 'FIFO priority -10" message, or > whatever it is, that is usually given when the limits.conf file isn't set > correctly. I can't figure out why. When I do, though, I'll let you know how > firewire is working in Jaunty on the Macbook. These permissions are going to > be the death of me. Can' wait for that new firewire stack people have > mentioned to be incorporated. > > -Brian Just a quick follow up to that last post, I finally solved my permissions problems. I had to go to System > Administration > Users and Groups, select myself on the list, hit 'Properties', select the 'User Privileges' tab, and pretty much check everything on there. This in addition to adjusting the Ubuntu Studio Controls settings as well as creating a 'video' group and putting myself in it. It's odd behaviour that I did not need to do on my desktop. So, I got JACK working and messed around in Ardour with some live recordings I had done recently, and ran into some real problems, which I'll have to do a write up on later. Suffice it to say that the real-time kernel running on my Macbook was very shaky. But Jaunty as a whole is turning out to be real shaky, I might need to go back to Hardy for a few weeks until some of the bugs (in particularly, some crazy issues with the brightness controls) are worked out. Keep trucking, though! It's coming along, and the work you all are doing is awesome. -- -Brian David -- 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: Re: Ubuntu Studio 8.04 -> 9.04 upgrade
On Apr 27, 2009 1:49pm, Hartmut Noack wrote: same here with the Presonus Firebox. The same with Suse111 with the jengelh-rt-Kernel (that performs just great with my cheapo USB-interface atoh) very well: looks like its Linux itself. Anyone out there running any FW-interface successfully on a recent distro? HZN I've been running a Presonus Firepod with no problems on my first generation MacBook using Hardy for many months. I was actually surprised at how well it worked. I was getting better performance out of it than I would in Cubase using OS X. The Firepod is also working on Jaunty on my desktop, but it's a bit more problematic, due mostly to the limitations of the computer itself. Ever since upgrading to Jaunty on my Macbook, I have been unable to get the firewire permissions worked out. Everything seems to be set fine, but JACK just refuses to start and spits out that 'FIFO priority -10" message, or whatever it is, that is usually given when the limits.conf file isn't set correctly. I can't figure out why. When I do, though, I'll let you know how firewire is working in Jaunty on the Macbook. These permissions are going to be the death of me. Can' wait for that new firewire stack people have mentioned to be incorporated. -Brian -- 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: Re: Ubuntu Studio 8.04 -> 9.04 upgrade
On Apr 25, 2009 7:43pm, Scott wrote: I'd like to chime in here and suggest something that may help people in the future. Linux partitioning is quite robust and provides a great opportunity to do seamless upgrades. If you create two 10-20GB partitions at the front of your volume and leave the rest for '/home/' (minus a couple GB for swap at the end) you can do system upgrades without breaking your previous setup. I alternate releases between the two 20GB '/' partitions and always set my '/home/' and 'swap' to the same partition leaving it untouched. That way I can comfortably test or upgrade new releases without breaking my production system while having access to the same settings and data. If you went with the default 'everything in "/"' install, you can use gparted from a live CD or USB-boot to adjust your existing partitions to accommodate the method above. As always, backup first if adjusting partitions isn't in your blood and make sure you have enough room when you resize. YMMV -Scott Thanks for the advice, Scott, I'm actually going to try to do this with the release of Jaunty, now that I feel more comfortable with Linux in general. At the moment, I can't use Ubuntu Studio properly for my production machine because of the somewhat broken state of the Ubuntu Ardour packages. So I'm going to set up one Jaunty regular partition, and one Studio partition so that I can continue testing Studio and hopefully help out in its development in any way I can. -- 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