I'm on Debian 10 and there was an issue with the keys. I haven't give it another trial yet. The Dev changed the installation command. As khz screwed his system last year by installing the kernel I'm a bit cautious.
I opened a thread in the tech patterns forum also: https://techpatterns.com/forums/about2806.html
I'm on Debian 10 and there was an issue with the keys. I haven't give it another trial yet. The Dev changed the installation command. As khz screwed his system last year by installing the kernel I'm a bit cautious.
I opened a thread in the tech patterns forum also: https://techpatterns.com/forums/about2806.html
Oh I'm not the professional about Linux either.
A lot of c/p I simply, also with the Liquorix Kernel install from their HP which was more than unsuccessful with me.
Otherwise I write everything meticulously in my note (signature) because I forget much faster than to find the right solution.
<EDIT>I had tried to install the Liquorix kernel back then with Debian-9 stretch following the instructions on their HP. System was no longer updatable after that. Probably some mistake of mine.</EDIT>
I installed it on Ubuntu and it worked a treat. The system felt snappier, and I could use the Nvidia hardware acceleration, which was not possible with the normal low-latency kernel.
Audio mastering for open minds: https://openmastering.studio
I master music using only free/libre softwares and DIY hardware. Contact me for a free mastering sample.
I have installed it under Debian 10 by following the instructions on the website. No issues so far and like openmastering said, it feels snappier and buttery smooth. hands down the best experience I've had with Jack and linux.
OS: Debian 11 kernel: Liquorix
...trying out AV Linux
These are so called meta packages, meaning they will always install the latest version when there are updates. Liquorix kernel updates frequently aka rolling release.
Last edited by lad on Sat Jun 13, 2020 6:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
OS: Debian 11 kernel: Liquorix
...trying out AV Linux
== GUI-enabled checks ==
Checking if you are root... no - good
Checking filesystem 'noatime' parameter... 5.6.0 kernel - good
(relatime is default since 2.6.30)
Checking CPU Governors... CPU 0: 'performance' CPU 1: 'performance' CPU 2: 'performance' CPU 3: 'performance' - good
Checking swappiness... 10 - good
Checking for resource-intensive background processes... none found - good
Checking checking sysctl inotify max_user_watches... >= 524288 - good
Checking access to the high precision event timer... readable - good
Checking access to the real-time clock... readable - good
Checking whether you're in the 'audio' group... yes - good
Checking for multiple 'audio' groups... no - good
Checking the ability to prioritize processes with chrt... yes - good
Checking kernel support for high resolution timers... found - good
Kernel with Real-Time Preemption... not found - not good
Kernel without real-time capabilities found
For more information, see http://wiki.linuxaudio.org/wiki/system_configuration#installing_a_real-time_kernel
Checking if kernel system timer is high-resolution... found - good
Checking kernel support for tickless timer... found - good
== Other checks ==
Checking filesystem types... ok.
** Set $SOUND_CARD_IRQ to the IRQ of your soundcard to enable more checks.
Find your sound card's IRQ by looking at '/proc/interrupts' and lspci.
== GUI-enabled checks ==
Checking if you are root... no - good
Checking filesystem 'noatime' parameter... 5.6.0 kernel - good
(relatime is default since 2.6.30)
Checking CPU Governors... CPU 0: 'performance' CPU 1: 'performance' CPU 2: 'performance' CPU 3: 'performance' - good
Checking swappiness... 10 - good
Checking for resource-intensive background processes... none found - good
Checking checking sysctl inotify max_user_watches... >= 524288 - good
Checking access to the high precision event timer... readable - good
Checking access to the real-time clock... readable - good
Checking whether you're in the 'audio' group... yes - good
Checking for multiple 'audio' groups... no - good
Checking the ability to prioritize processes with chrt... yes - good
Checking kernel support for high resolution timers... found - good
Kernel with Real-Time Preemption... not found - not good
Kernel without real-time capabilities found
For more information, see http://wiki.linuxaudio.org/wiki/system_configuration#installing_a_real-time_kernel
Checking if kernel system timer is high-resolution... found - good
Checking kernel support for tickless timer... found - good
== Other checks ==
Checking filesystem types... ok.
** Set $SOUND_CARD_IRQ to the IRQ of your soundcard to enable more checks.
Find your sound card's IRQ by looking at '/proc/interrupts' and lspci.
I have done it but I am not sure if it is necessary Good question...
OS: Debian 11 kernel: Liquorix
...trying out AV Linux