On Tuesday 31 of May 2011 02:54:53 Janne Jokitalo wrote:
On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 01:54:34AM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
Allright guys,
I have just fixed the problem...with a trial and error method!
snip
When I uninstalled pavucontrol ardour launched perfectly!! I also
Goodmorning,
I made a memtest all night but it found no errors to my memories.
Also there are these files in the /dev/shm folder. Could you explain why should
I remove all pusle files? Do they cause any conflict with the programm?
alex@Kubuntu-pc:/dev/shm$ ls
Is your disk full? df -h should tell you.
You may also want to remove the .deb that is cached in
/var/cache/apt/archive before you reinstall.
Is there anything in /var/log/syslog that shows up at the same time
you try to run ardour?
You wouldn't happen to be over-clocking this computer would
On Mon, 2011-05-30 at 09:41 +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
Goodmorning,
I made a memtest all night but it found no errors to my memories.
That's why I mentioned to check the RAMs by trail and error, disassemble
and mount back again, one after the other.
I've got 4GB RAM on a 2.1 dual-core
Hello,
On Monday 30 of May 2011 11:01:56 Gustin Johnson wrote:
Is your disk full? df -h should tell you.
No, my disks are not full, I just checked them.
You may also want to remove the .deb that is cached in
/var/cache/apt/archive before you reinstall.
I tried it, but no improvement.
Is
On Tue, 2011-05-31 at 00:56 +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
Hello,
On Monday 30 of May 2011 11:01:56 Gustin Johnson wrote:
Is your disk full? df -h should tell you.
No, my disks are not full, I just checked them.
You may also want to remove the .deb that is cached in
Allright guys,
I have just fixed the problem...with a trial and error method!
I started unistalling one-by-one the packages that I have installed the last 3
days and I kept testing if ardour could launch each time I uninstalled
something.
When I uninstalled pavucontrol ardour launched
On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 12:56:24AM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
Is there anything in /var/log/syslog that shows up at the same time
you try to run ardour?
But yes, I found this on syslog whenever I try to run ardour:
May 31 00:40:18 Kubuntu-pc kernel: [19300.148249]
Hello to everyone!
I am using Kubuntu 11.04 (fresh install, added single audio packages needed)
on my pc where I have been able to work perfectly with my guitar (rakarak and
record in ardour with generic kernel) until some days ago.
However, since the last two days I cannot start Ardour!
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 4:08 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas albitou...@yahoo.grwrote:
Hello to everyone!
I am using Kubuntu 11.04 (fresh install, added single audio packages
needed)
on my pc where I have been able to work perfectly with my guitar (rakarak
and
record in ardour with generic kernel)
On Sunday 29 of May 2011 23:30:36 Mike Holstein wrote:
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 4:08 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas
albitou...@yahoo.grwrote:
Hello to everyone!
I am using Kubuntu 11.04 (fresh install, added single audio packages
needed)
on my pc where I have been able to work perfectly with
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 4:37 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas albitou...@yahoo.grwrote:
On Sunday 29 of May 2011 23:30:36 Mike Holstein wrote:
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 4:08 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas
albitou...@yahoo.grwrote:
Hello to everyone!
I am using Kubuntu 11.04 (fresh install, added
How did you do the reinstall? Try purging the current install and
then reinstall Ardour.
I had similar issues with Ardour once that turned out to be a bad
stick of RAM. You may want to consider running memtest on your
computer.
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas
I just did:
sudo apt-get remove ardour and then sudo apt-get autoremove for removing.
After that I did sudo apt-get install ardour.
How can I purge the current install? With which command? :)
Thanks,
Alex
On Sunday 29 of May 2011 23:44:39 Gustin Johnson wrote:
How did you do the
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:49:21PM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
snip
How can I purge the current install? With which command? :)
$ sudo aptitude purge ardour
...should do the trick. If you don't want to use aptitude, I think:
$ sudo apt-get remove --purge ardour
...works too.
--
Jaska
On Monday 30 of May 2011 00:06:55 Janne Jokitalo wrote:
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:49:21PM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
snip
How can I purge the current install? With which command? :)
$ sudo aptitude purge ardour
...should do the trick. If you don't want to use aptitude, I think:
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 5:32 PM, Alexandros Bitoulas albitou...@yahoo.grwrote:
On Monday 30 of May 2011 00:06:55 Janne Jokitalo wrote:
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 11:49:21PM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
snip
How can I purge the current install? With which command? :)
$ sudo
On Mon, May 30, 2011 at 12:32:20AM +0300, Alexandros Bitoulas wrote:
Thanks guys, but this doesn't either solves the problem. I have
purged-removed
and installed again, but nothing.
Then you could try running strace on the application.
$ strace ardour2
It should show what system call ends
Thanks guys, but this doesn't either solves the problem. I have
purged-removed
and installed again, but nothing.
I will try a memtest...
Hi,
Also, take a look at /dev/shm
ls -l /dev/shm
You might need a
rm -f /dev/shm/pulse*
Cheers, Pablo
--
Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list
On Sun, 2011-05-29 at 14:44 -0600, Gustin Johnson wrote:
How did you do the reinstall? Try purging the current install and
then reinstall Ardour.
I had similar issues with Ardour once that turned out to be a bad
stick of RAM. You may want to consider running memtest on your
computer.
+1
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