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alsa_out - Online in the Cloud

Run alsa_out in OnWorks free hosting provider over Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

This is the command alsa_out that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


alsa_in, alsa_out - Jack clients that perform I/O with an alternate audio interface

SYNOPSIS


alsa_in [options]
alsa_out [options]

DESCRIPTION


A JACK client that opens a specified audio interface (different to the one used by the
JACK server, if any) and moves audio data between its JACK ports and the interface.
alsa_in will provide data from the interface (potentially for capture); alsa_out will
deliver data to it (for playback).

The audio interface used by alsa_in/alsa_out does not need to be synchronized with JACK
backend (or the hardware it might be using). alsa_in/alsa_out tries to resample the
output stream in an attempt to compensate for drift between the two clocks.

As of jack-0.116.3 this works almost perfectly. It takes some time, to reach absolute
resample-rate stability. So give it some minutes (its intended to be running permanently
anyways)

OPTIONS


-j jack_client_name
Set Client Name.

-d alsa_device
Use this Soundcard.

-v
Verbose, prints out resample coefficient and other parameters useful for debugging,
every 500ms. also reports soft xruns.

-i
Instrumentation. This logs the 4 important parameters of the samplerate control
algorithm every 1ms. You can pipe this into a file, and plot it. Should only be
necessary, if it does not work as expected, and we need to adjust some of the
obscure parameters, to make it work. Find me on irc.freenode.org #jack in order to
set this up correctly.

-c channels
Set Number of channels.

-r sample_rate
Set sample_rate. The program resamples as necessary. So you can connect a 44k1
jackd to a soundcard only supporting 48k. (default is jack sample_rate)

-p period_size
Set the period size. It is not related to the jackd period_size. Sometimes it
affects the quality of the delay measurements. Setting this lower than the jackd
period_size will only work, if you use a higher number of periods.

-n num_period
Set number of periods. See note for period_size.

-q quality
Set the quality of the resampler from 0 to 4. can significanly reduce cpu usage.

-m max_diff
The value when a soft xrun occurs. Basically the window, in which the dma pointer
may jitter. I don't think its necessary to play with this anymore.

-t target_delay
The delay alsa_io should try to approach. Same as for max_diff. It will be setup
based on -p and -n which is generally sufficient.

-s smooth_array_size
This parameter controls the size of the array used for smoothing the delay
measurement. Its default is 256. If you use a pretty low period size, you can
lower the CPU usage a bit by decreasing this parameter. However most CPU time is
spent in the resampling so this will not be much.

-C P Control Clamp
If you have a PCI card, then the default value (15) of this parameter is too high
for -p64 -n2... Setting it to 5 should fix that. Be aware that setting this
parameter too low, lets the hf noise on the delay measurement come through onto the
resamplerate, so this might degrade the quality of the output. (but its a threshold
value, and it has been chosen, to mask the noise of a USB card, which has an
amplitude which is 50 times higher than that of a PCI card, so 5 wont loose you any
quality on a PCI card)

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