Hi Christoph, > I mean that in the verbose output above there’s nothing mentioned after > the entry "capture". but in the output you pasted below it’s the same, > so this obviously is the normal behaviour. It is. The following lines imply that it is enabled :-) > > Is there any output after the lines you quoted, like > > > > fons@zita1:~> zita-a2j -d hw:1,0 -v > > playback : not enabled > > capture : > > nchan : 2 > > fsamp : 48000 > > fsize : 256 > > nfrag : 2 > > format : S32_LE > > Starting synchronisation. > > -0.151 1.000057 0 > > -0.007 1.000034 326 > > -0.053 1.000046 327 > > -0.114 1.000094 327 > > 0.128 1.000019 328 > > > > etc. ? > > no, on both my computers there’s nothing printed after "Starting > synchronization". I suspect your system isn't configured to allow normal users running real-time threads. Zita-ajbridge will fail (silently, and yes that *is* a bug) if that is the case. The way to enable real-time for normal (non-root) users has changed on Archlinux some time ago, it now involves the realtime package (see the archwiki for details). I'm on Arch too but I'm still using the 'old' method without the realtime package. This just involves putting some lines in /etc/security/limits.conf: @audio - rtprio 95 @audio - memlock unlimited and making sure you are in the 'audio' group. If you do this you need to re-login after making the changes. AFAIK the realtime package is doing the same, but using a different group. Ciao, -- FA _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user