On Monday 29 October 2007, Chuckk Hubbard wrote: > On 10/25/07, Florian Schmidt <mista.tapas@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wednesday 24 October 2007, Chuckk Hubbard wrote: > > > On 10/24/07, Florian Schmidt <mista.tapas@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > if you run > > > > > > > > sudo chrt -fp 70 `pidof "jackd"` > > > > > > > > as non root without using sudo > > > > > > > > chrt -fp 70 `pidof "jackd"` > > > > > > > > do you get an error? > > > > > > Why no I don't! And it changes priority. I swore it didn't work > > > before when I tried it. I've just now added "session required > > > /lib/security/pam_limits.so" to /etc/pam.d/common-session, as others > > > suggested, maybe that did something? > > > So does that mean the -P flag can never set priority 70? I got it from > > > your site! > > > > Well, if chrt works now without sudo, try running > > > > jackd -R -P 70 -d alsa ... > > > > again. It should work now, too.. > > Update: I just discovered that running jackd -R -P 70 -dalsa -P -p256 -n2 > -r44100 as ROOT doesn't even set priority 70. jackd then runs as a root > process with priority 20, according to both chrt and top. > Apparently my system is not able to run anything higher than 20 priority; > does this mean my kernel is misconfigured, or might it be something else? > -Chuckk install htop run it press f2 [setup] -> Display Options -> uncheck "Hide userland threads" -> uncheck "Hide kernel threads" Do you see all 4 jack threads now? -- Palimm Palimm! http://tapas.affenbande.org _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user