Am Dienstag, den 18.08.2009, 22:56 -0700 schrieb Norval Watson: > Hi Hermann, > Thanks for your reply, just checking: > > > > > jackdmp isn't in sid, you need to build it by your self. Best way (for > > sid) to switch to jackdmp is to build a dummy(empty) package from jack1, > > So I get the equivs package and build a dummy jackd using equivs-control and equivs build > (as in this blog http://blog.andrewbeacock.com/2005/09/creating-dummy-debian-package-for.html ) > and call it, say, version 1.0, which is way higher than 0.116 > > > use a high version number for it, replace your jack1 installation with > > and install it with dpkg > > > it, and then install jackdmp. > > And get jackdmp, build it from source, and install it (do I have to make a .deb of jackdmp and install with dpkg?) Yes, that the way I go to handle it. All way's .deb package are easy to handle later on. I configure jackdmp to install in /usr and not /usr/local and didn't enable dbus because most audio packages in sid couldn't use it. hermann > > > This way you fit all dependences from your .deb audio apps and didn`t > > get probs when you run a upgrade. > > > > hermann > > > > Am Dienstag, den 18.08.2009, 21:56 -0700 schrieb Norval Watson: > > > I just realised there is a multi-processor version of JACK called jackdmp. > > > I'm using jackd 0.116 from the debian repos on a dual core amd64 box. > > > Do I need/should I be using something else? I can't find jackdmp in the sid > > repos I use. > > > TIA > > > Norv > > Thanks, > Norv > > > > __________________________________________________________________________________ > Find local businesses and services in your area with Yahoo!7 Local. > Get started: http://local.yahoo.com.au _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user