On Sat, Feb 20, 2021 at 4:09 AM Francesco Napoleoni wrote:
> I'll try to explain myself better: the "master machine" is a PC with a
> soundcard, running JACK on a Linux Fedora OS, and is connected with
> the "slaves" with a gigabit ethernet link. The "slaves" are currently
> two, but I would like to expand this to a wider configuration, maybe
> with devices such as Raspberry sharing the load of multiple synths,
> effects and so on.
>
> The problem is that I can see the start/stop of the Jack transport
> synced between the hosts, but not the tempo. This limits the use of
> applications which do make use of tempo changes on slave hosts,
> forcing me to copy the tempo map to them and run it in a DAW. As a
> side effect I can see the BBT drifting between hosts (apparently its
> value is computed using the local tempo mark).
>
> Is there a way to solve this problem? Or am I missing something?
Forgive me if I am having a brain fart (and please understand that I am
still just learning the ropes with audio on Linux), but why not:
- have your primary machine send suitable MIDI signals (note on/off, CC,
patch change, etc; MIDI beat clock if you really need it; MIDI Song
Position Pointer if you really need it) to your synths or samplers
wherever they are, to get them to produce the right audio at the right
moment?
- And then send this audio to your (software or hardware) mixer by the
most convenient means available to you that has acceptably low latency
and acceptably high sound quality?
Sam
-- A: When it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: When is top-posting a bad thing? () ASCII ribbon campaign. Please avoid HTML emails & proprietary /\ file formats. (Why? See e.g. https://v.gd/jrmGbS ). Thank you. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@lists.linuxaudio.org https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Sun Feb 21 04:15:02 2021
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