Excerpts from Aaron Krister Johnson's message of 2010-05-26 16:50:22 +0200: > Hi Philipp, > > What version of jack and jack_lsp are you using? I see that you are getting > what look like verbose messages, which is not how my version behaves. Did > you enable them by default in some kind of config file? I don't understand > why that's happening except that some newer or older version than what I > have is enabling verbose behavior by default. > > My script depends on a clean output to predictably be summoned by a simple > call to 'jack_lsp -c'....what is the output of this command on your system? > On mine, I just get a list of ports and any connections, no extra messages. > I'm using jack 0.118.0. What's your version. > > I *can* make a robust way of mining this output, but I would need to know > what different jack_lsp versions do!!! ARGH! > > AKJ This was jack2 1.9.5, compiled with --profile. Now I'm using 0.118.0 and get this: $ ./jackctl20100526.py Welcome to jackctl.py! Enter the two numbers you want to connect, separated by a space, then hit return. To see the list again, type 'l'. To disconnect clients type 'd' and then the two clients separated by a space Control-D will end the program here's what's connected to jack so far: 0) system:capture_1 1) system:capture_2 2) system:playback_1 3) system:playback_2 jackctl--> Seems to work so far, so it might be due to jack 1.9.5 -- Regards, Philipp ----- "Wir stehen selbst enttäuscht und sehn betroffen / Den Vorhang zu und alle Fragen offen." Bertolt Brecht, Der gute Mensch von Sezuan _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user