Re: [LAU] Test if Linux is ready for audio

From: Ray Rashif <schivmeister@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Tue Oct 20 2009 - 04:39:50 EEST

2009/10/20 Jonathan E. Brickman <jeb@email-addr-hidden>

> The best way to test if your Linux setup is ready for audio, I think, is
> here:
>
> http://wiki.linuxmusicians.com/doku.php?id=system_configuration
>
> Download the .pl file, make it executable, and run it in a terminal. In
> other words, in a terminal:
>
> wget
> http://realtimeconfigquickscan.googlecode.com/hg/realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl
> chmod +x realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl
> ./realTimeConfigQuickScan.pl | less
>
> and study the results. My hardware is such that realtime kernel is not
> necessary, and I'm not sure about 'noatime' on the filesystems, but
> everything else it reports has been extremely valuable. AVLinux ran
> well before I did all the things it requested; after I did them, it
> began to run screamingly.
>
> There is a list of multimedia-oriented distros on that page, but some of
> the listings are alpha quality, no longer in existence, et cetera.
>
> J.E.B.
>

noatime means no record of access time:
http://tldp.org/LDP/solrhe/Securing-Optimizing-Linux-RH-Edition-v1.3/chap6sec73.html

Since on a Linux system files are written to almost every minute, recording
atime everytime an access occurs increases the disk I/O.

I need to know access times for some files so I don't quite like that. I use
relatime: http://kerneltrap.org/node/14148

Such tests like to assume a lot of things, so I don't like those either.
Anyway this isn't really a test, it's just a mockup a user put up because he
was asking for something similar and realised there was no answer.

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Received on Tue Oct 20 08:15:01 2009

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