Jaunty RT testing

Fernando Gomes f.m.gomes at gmail.com
Sun Apr 19 22:26:44 BST 2009


Hi, I'm running ubuntustudio 8.04 and today I tried to install a
second boot with Jaunty. The normal Jaunty setup works well, not a
problem detected (didn't test it much, only used the normal office
internet applications and they were running well with the standard
kernel)). Then I installed the ubuntustudio packages (including the RT
kernel). After this step, if I try to boot using the RT kernel, it
locks during boot. The kernel is the 2.6.28-3-rt, the last message
during boot is:

[0.392000] io scheduler cfq registered (default)

The same machine is working well with 8.04 and kernel 2.6.24-23-rt

The PC is a AMD Athlon(tm) 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 4400+, with 1GB
RAM and 500 GB SATA HDD (Samsung)
The motherboard is an Elite A780GM-A Black Edition with integrated
graphics (AMD 780G-based with ATI™ Radeon HD3200 graphics)

Do you want me to test anything else on this hardware setup?

Fernando


On Sun, Apr 19, 2009 at 8:00 PM, wayne <wayne at jawnee.org> wrote:
>
> 2009/4/19 wayne <wayne at jawnee.org>
>
> On Mon, 2009-04-13 at 22:37 -0500, Brian David wrote:
>
> On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 1:49 PM, Cory K. <coryisatm at ubuntu.com> wrote:
>
> beejunk at gmail.com wrote:
>> On Apr 13, 2009 1:07pm, "Cory K." <coryisatm at ubuntu.com> wrote:
>
>>> System->Admin->Ubuntu Studio Controls
>>
>>
>
>> Believe me, I tried to use Studio Controls. Jaunty changed the
>> relevant permissions file from
>> /etc/udev/rules.d/40-basic-permissions.rules (which is, I believe, the
>> file that Studio Controls is editing) to
>> /lib/udev/rules.d/50-udev-default.rules. When I selected the
>> appropriate box in Studio Controls to allow raw1394 permission, this
>> did not fix my problem. I had to use the solution I mentioned in the
>> earlier post. The original 40-basic-permissions.rules found in Ibex
>> and Hardy is not in Jaunty.
>>
>
>
> Please don't email me directly. ;)
>
> I'll have someone look at it. I seem to remember some changes that
> address what you said above. Maybe the changes didn't hit yet.
>
>
>
> -Cory K.
>
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>
>
> Oh, hey, I just remembered another small annoyance.
>
> For whatever reason, the new version of JACK doesn't allow me to force quit
> if JACK freezes (which is common when you're testing the settings)  Instead,
> I need to restart X now in order to get JACK turned off after a freeze,
> because I'm a noob and I'm not sure how to do it via command line.  It's not
> a huge inconvenience, and I'm not even sure it's something the Ubuntu Studio
> team can do anything about, but it would be nice if I could just force quit
> JACK like the old days.
>
>     you can try "killall jackd" from the command line.  or use the
> GUI-enabled "System Monitor" available in the menu under
> "System/Administration", at least on 8.04 Hardy UBS.
>
> good luck.
>
>
> --
> -Brian David
>
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>
>
> On Sun, 2009-04-19 at 20:05 +0200, Christian Masser wrote:
>
> Same Problem to me, but killall jackd doesn't work, but I didn't try it with
> the system monitor, thanks for the tip
>
> ~Christian Masser
>
>
>
>     maybe it is not jackd that is stuck, but qjackctl, the QT gui for using
> jack?  if so, "killall qjackctl.bin" may work.  the nice thing about killall
> (at least on 8.04), is that after typing "killall", then entering a space,
> then start typing the name of the process, you can use the Tab key (ala Bash
> command completion) to finish the process name.  when JACK freezes, check
> with killall if jackd is even running.  it may just be that qtjackctl is
> stuck, which happens to me when the underlying jackd process crashes: jackd
> dies, but qtjackctl is frozen.  also, the qtjackctl process will prob be
> "qtjackctl.bin", since that pre-script pauses PulseAudio using paususpender
> before starting jackd... again, at least on 8.04.  this way, no PulseAudio
> getting in the way, while not having to totally remove it.
>
>     hope that helps.
>
>
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