From Fedora Project Wiki
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simply navigate to the  directory  
simply navigate to the  directory  
<pre>cd realtimeconfigquickscan</pre>  
<pre>cd realtimeconfigquickscan</pre>  
for the last part I choose to run the command line version as I have had better luck with it.  Luck being results.
for the last part I choose to run the command line version as I have had better results with it.   
type <pre>./realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl</pre>  
type <pre>./realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl</pre>  
and hit enter.
and hit enter.

Revision as of 02:17, 27 August 2010

Ok, so you have installed the real time kernel form Planet CCRMA but you feel that something is still compromising your low latency objectives. Well, this is touchy subject and it does have many variables, but with some research and some useful tools, you will gain the knowledge to have your Fedora machine running with acceptable latencies.

Tests

There are a two tools that I have found to use and further fine tune my system for real time audio use.

This first script was written and shown to me by raboof in the #opensourcemusicians channel on irc.freenode.net. This is the real time configuration quick scan. You can download it here: http://code.google.com/p/realtimeconfigquickscan/ [1]

Follow the instructions on the site.

They are as follows

hg clone https://realtimeconfigquickscan.googlecode.com/hg/ realtimeconfigquickscan

simply navigate to the directory

cd realtimeconfigquickscan

for the last part I choose to run the command line version as I have had better results with it.

type

./realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl

and hit enter.


Now, if the scan reports that something is not optimized, it will not only tell you, but it will give you a link to http://wiki.linuxmusicians.com/doku.php?id=system_configuration [2]


Granted, all of the tests in this scan may not apply to you and your hardware, but this is where the real fun begins. And we all know that real fun can only happen in real time.