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From: | Aere Greenway |
Subject: | Re: [fluid-dev] Crackling sound when more than 4 notes are played simultaneously |
Date: | Thu, 20 Aug 2015 15:09:11 -0600 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.8.0 |
On 08/19/2015 06:30 AM, Herschel
Karunaratne wrote:
Herschel: On slower machines, FluidSynth/Qsynth works better using JACK (qjackctl). Another thing that helps on slower machines, is to set the polyphony down to 64 (rather than the default value of 256). But there is another change worth trying. I got it from David on this e-mail list. I have documented it below. If you're still getting audio drop-outs after having made the foregoing changes, there is yet another change you can make to prevent them. This change works on Ubuntu variants, and I don't know if it is applicable to other Linux distributions. In the “/etc/security/limits.d/” directory, specific limits are set for specific users. Each file in that directory corresponds to a user-ID, and it specifies the limits for that user. For example, my user-ID is “aere”, and in the “/etc/security/limits.d/” directory on my system, there is a file named “aere.conf”, which specifies specific limits (or extra capabilities) for me (user “aere”). The contents of that file on my system, are as follows: aere - rtprio 85 aere - memlock unlimited Note that each line starts with my user-ID (“aere”). You need to create a similar file (for your user-ID) in that directory. You can do that by running your system's terminal program, and cut-and-pasting the line highlighted below into it, and transmitting that line. If you don't know how to use (or don't have) the “vi” editor, substitute the name of the editor you use (such as “leafpad” or “gedit”) in place of “vi” in the line below. Also, substitute your user-id in place of “userid”. sudo vi /etc/security/limits.d/userid.conf After transmitting the above line, you'll have to enter your sign-in password (and the cursor won't advance while you do it). After successfully entering your password, an empty file will be displayed in the editor. Enter the following two lines, substituting your user-ID in place of “userid” in the two lines you enter: userid - rtprio 85 userid - memlock unlimited After doing-so, save the file. You have to log-off and sign back in (or possibly even reboot) before the change takes effect. With the above change in my system, I can successfully run Qsynth on a very slow (450 megahertz) machine. So do take the time to try this configuration change. It can make a big difference. -- Sincerely, Aere |
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