Re: Help with configuring a laptop for Linux Audio work

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On Mon, 12 May 2014, Louigi Verona wrote:

Nope, I had to install 3.8 as opposed to 3.2 which comes with Ubuntu. Looks
like when you are buying a new laptop what you should do is put on the
latest system available and I typically try to stick with LTS.

LTS is 14.04 with a 3.11 kernel, 12.04 should be good for another year anyway. There are two 3.8 kernels though, there is the generic as well as the lowlatency. The low latency kernel seems to get less xruns in anything I have thrown at it. There were a few 3.8 kernels that had USB audio problems, but I am pretty sure the fix got put in so you should have it. (dmesg would show if there is a problem)

Interestingly enough, I very rarely go lower 512 frames, which is around
46ms. And for some reason, midi is always precise even on 1024. I did test
this and I remember I did work on a system where it made a difference, but
not now.

I should have been clear, I have been quoting qjackctl's version of latency, so at 48k 512 would be 21ms... probably that is a calculated one way trip through jackd and of course doesn't include card delay. Certainly it should be high enough that CPU governing doesn't matter too much.

I try to test before I buy if I can. Boot what you want to run from a memory stick. Ubuntustudio's (if ubuntu is your thing) ISO probably has the SW or enough of it preinstalled to make testing possible running it live. Other audio distros have live ISOs as well. I try to do the same thing with audio IFs. I walk in with my netbook and make sure it works with linux... and how well it works... can I see all the channels? can I hear them? (semi)pro audio is kind of hit and miss right now.

Curious as to why you picked xubuntu over ubuntustudio. Ubuntustudio is based on xubuntu, but has audio set up out of the box and with 14.04LTS allows selection at install time of which SW not to install that is on the live ISO. Though, to be honest, I don't know what happens to packages those applications depend on if you don't install them. For example KDEnlive would have the kde libs on the ISO. If the KDE apps are not selected, do the kde libs still get installed? I'll have to ask. ubiquity does do some sort of clean up at the end of the install.


--
Len Ovens
www.ovenwerks.net

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