On 12 October 2010 23:12, Paul W. Frields <stickster@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 10:09:55PM +0100, Ian Malone wrote: >> On 12 October 2010 16:02, Paul W. Frields <stickster@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > >> > >> > In PulseAudio, each sink has an associated "monitor" source that you >> > can use to monitor what's going out of that sink (such as listening to >> > a mixdown). >> > >> >> How do you actually listen to a monitor? The only way I've found so >> far is to use the loopback device which has a ~ 1/3 second latency. > > You can do this by running 'pamon' (from the pulseaudio-utils package) > and assigning the stream you create to some sink. ÂI just did it both > by 'folding back' onto the same output device and by assigning to a > new device. ÂIn both cases latency was not apparent -- when I folded > back it sounded just like I increased the gain of the input stream. > Thanks, I'm afraid I need a little more help. The best I've managed is running: pamon -r alsa_output.pci-0000_02_09.0.analog-surround-40.monitor and pamon -p alsa_output.pci-0000_02_09.0.analog-surround-40.monitor Which has a noticeable latency between the two. There's a delay corresponding to the difference in starting time, but even trying the latency and raw options I can't eliminate it. Is the difference possibly because I'm using a recording input as source? (To be sure we're on the same page I'm effectively trying to monitor line-in.) -- imalone -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines