Thread (5 messages) 5 messages, 5 authors, 2017-01-14

Re: debian 8 rt kernel

From: Daniel Vidal <hidden>
Date: 2017-01-14 09:12:13

Hi.

I compile and pack a rt patched kernel for the newest longterm kernel.
Now i run 4.4.38 with rt49 patch.

x64-v3:~$ uname -a
Linux x64-v3 4.4.38-rt49 #1 SMP PREEMPT RT Mon Dec 19 10:28:46 CET
2016 x86_64 GNU/Linux
x64-v3:~$

Is a blobed kernel (not strict free kernel).

if someone send me a site or FTP to upload i can share the packages.

I build bin, headers and source packages.

sorry for my english.

2017-01-13 11:36 GMT+01:00 Ralf Mardorf [off-list ref]:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 08:52:15 +0100, Alexander Dahl wrote:
quoted
Ubuntu Studio
Hi,

I'm an Arch Linux user, but I'm helping users with Ubuntu flavours,
including Ubuntu Studio.

The Ubuntu repositories provide a so called "lowlatency" kernel,
without the rt patch. I doubt that this is much better than a vanilla
kernel with threadirqs as boot option. It's easy to build the linux-rt
packages for Ubuntu flavours, but Ubuntu Studio has got other pitfalls,
too.

Ubuntu Studio is a distro for artists, it's not optimised for
musicians. The default is a jackdbus-pulseaudio mix/mess. While I'm an
Arch user, I anyway set up a tailored Ubuntu install, based upon a
minimal install from a server image.
The Ubuntu policy is to start all services provided by package, so the
user needs to disable all unwanted services, even when starting with a
minimal install, but at least such an install doesn't come with
pulseaudio and you could chose jackd instead of jackdbus.

I recommend against Ubuntu Studio, if a user should be unwilling to
check everything on her own and unwilling to set up everything on her
own. You even can't be sure that somebody really cares that rtirq and
the used kernel fit to each other.

Btw. there's nothing wrong with even using a vanilla kernel with
threadirqs as boot option. In regards to audio latency and MIDI jitter
there are a lot of things to consider, e.g. unbinding USB ports that
share unfavourable IRQs, caring about the CPU frequency handling ...

In my more than a decade of Linux audio experiences IMO the best
approach is to set up everything on your own, by optimizing several
settings. Without knowing all "audio distros" I anyway recommend
against just installing an "audio distro". In my experiences the work
that has to be done by the user is the same for "normal" distros and
"audio distros".

YMMV!

Regards,
Ralf
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