On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 22:50:19 +0100 Joe Mc Cool <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sorry, I don't know what iec958 is. > > I have used alsamixer and muted all the inputs I can. iec958 are the optical digital lines and it seems like something that normally shows on the mixer even if the optical jack was not included on the card, but they could be something you don't have. If all the available inputs are muted that should take care of it if you are using the alsamixer or some other mixer that shows all of the alsa stuff. > > > > Essentially my perl script is: > > > > > > system("timidity -L /usr/share/timidity -Ou -o$au_file $midi_file > > > > /tmp/timidity 2> /dev/null"); > > > > > > system("play -v $volume $au_file "); > > Since the script tells timidity to create an audio file from the midi then uses play to play back the audio it just seems odd that it would be an issue with timidity. This is why I question whether the file is actually created in it's entirety or if it is actually being played back while it is being created by timidity. If it is being read while it is being created by timidity this might create some odd behaviour. I don't see any reason for there to be a significant difference between the use of alsa or oss. This is why I wondered if the oss driver would work with the 2.6 kernel. If you are using the stock Debian kernel the oss should be there they are just not the default. If you edit /etc/modules and put: es1371 : in there then the oss modules should load at boot time instead of the alsa modules. Depending on what you are running you may be able to open a terminal window and type: /etc/init.d/alsa stop modprobe es1371 : and switch modules without rebooting. The efficiency of timidity leaves something to be desired, but even on a slow system I think it should work. Especially since you have commented the stuff as the configuration file suggests for a slower system. Going back to the script, if the audio file is created in it's entirety before play starts to play it back the speed of the machine should not be a factor. This is assuming my thinking is correct that when you output to an audio file the resulting file will be the same no matter how fast the machine is. The only two suggestions I have left at this point are: 1. If the option is available to you try the oss module. 2. Open a terminal window and use timidity directly to create an audio file instead of using the script and then see if it sounds the same when you try to play the audio file back with the play command and if it does sound the same try playing the audio file with something else. Later, Seeker -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]