>>>>> "Free" == Free Ekanayaka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm re-styling the demudi tasks packages, which I'd like to > upload to Debian in the near future. One of them it's called > demudi-config and it's haevily based on the debian-edu-config > package. It uses cfengine to customize configuration files in a > consistent manner. Great (I think skolelinux does this too, at least at installation time). > 1) Turn on low latency: > echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/lowlatency > This assumes a patched 2.4 kernel, which AFAIK is not the > case of the official Debian kernel. Assuming a 2.4 kernel (which can be easily checked via uname, /proc/version or any other hackish or not-so-hackish way) you simply need to check whether that /proc file exists. If it does not, don't enable it (and maybe put a warning on the screen that jack is not going to be very useful on such a system). Wait - while I was writing it came to my mind that (de)activation of low latency via /proc is a kernel option. You can't rely on such file to be present, but that doesn't mean your kernel is *not* lowlat enable. I don't know any mean to check whether the kernel is lowlat enabled if the /proc interface is not enabled - any ideas? > 2) Setuid the jackstart binary. This can be accomplished via > dpkg-statoverride (as suggested in the README.Debian of jackd), > but I'm not sure whether the best solution is: > a. Add debconf support to the jackd package and ask a > question, for example "Do you want jackstart setuid?", if the > the answer is positive the postinst script takes care of running > dpkg-statoverride. In this case the demudi-config package would > just inject the appropriate value in the debconf database. > b. Do a. but through the demudi-config package, maybe > without the question, as we assume a positive answer. I wouldn't assume a positive/negative answer to anything (just put the question at a very low priority if you don't want users to be asked too often, and provide a sensible default which in this case is `yes'). I know that debconf-izing jackd is on the TODO list for the package, so we might better off providing a patch for that. > c. Do not setuid the jackstart binary, but rather prepare a > 2.6 kernel for DeMuDi (I'm assuming that Debian is not going to > adopt such patch in the short term), using the Jack O'Quin's > kernel module. The demudi-config package could make sure that > such module is loaded in the correct way and ask which users > should belong to the audio group. I don't think 2.4 is going away any time soon (i.e. not before 2.6 reaches 4 or 5, and even after that a lot of people will be using 2.4 anyway because they know its insides and outs - switching always has a cost). Providing a 2.6 kernel looks like a good idea to me, but we should always test for a 2.4 kernel and configure the system correctly for that. > 3) Mount /tmp as a tmpfs, adding the line > none /tmp tmpfs defaults 0 0 > to fstab. Again this can be accomplished both inside > demudi-config and inside jackd and I'm not sure which place is > better. I think this is a matter of what debian-multimedia people think about it. If it's a good thing to have in stock debian, let's put it into jackd. Otherwise, let's put it into demudi-config. > 4) Write a ~/.asoundrc file (for users in the audio group). I > don't know if this is really necessary, but it can be > accomplished by demudi-config. The last time we discussed this on PlanetCCRMA it looked like this is not really necessary - or rather, nobody came up with a reasonable "default" configuration that would actually provide any advantage over base ALSA. This doesn't mean such a "default" doesn't exist, of course. bye, -- Andrea Glorioso [EMAIL PROTECTED] AGNULA Technical Manager http://www.agnula.org/ M: +39 333 820 5723 F: +39 (0)51 930 31 133 "Libre Audio, Libre Video, Libre Software: AGNULA"