On 6 September 2012 at 9:50, "S. Massy" <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Sep 04, 2012 at 09:17:36PM -0700, Kevin Cosgrove wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I'm trying to record on a new system, and I'm getting xruns. My > > old system produced no xruns. > > > > The problem system runs: > > > > Fedora 17 > > Kernel 3.5.2-3.fc17.x86_64 > > Ardour 2.8.14 > > JACK 1.9.8 > > Intel i7, 16GB RAM, SATA 6Gb/s drives > > > > My user ID is a member of the "jackuser" group. > > > > Jack is running as: > > > > /usr/bin/jackd \ > > -T -ndefault -p 256 -R -P 60 -T -d alsa -n 2 -r 48000 -p 1024 -d hw:2,0 > > > > In 43 minutes I've had almost 6700 xruns. > > Other replies cover most of the bases, but I'll throw this in, though > it's a long shot. Do you have any active network traffic going on Not during the time of xruns. > (especially wifi)? The KDE desktop taskbar area has a wifi network icon on it, which says that there's no connection. But, I don't have a wifi capability in this computer. That's confusing to me, like maybe a driver got loaded but can't find any hardware to access. > Is your system using any binary/proprietary drivers? nVidia, for the ASUS GeForce GT 520 card. > I have had some nasty experiences with a wifi interface using > the proprietary Broadcom driver interfering with audio work in > an obscure manner. I'll see if I can figure out what the wifi kernel module, for the card I don't have, might be, and see if blacklisting it helps. Thanks! -- Kevin _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user