Date: Fri, 12 Dec 2003 11:58:22 -0500 From: Munish Chopra <chopra@soulwax.net> To: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: audio lag in 5.2-Beta (card emu10k1) Message-ID: <20031212165822.GC48271@opiate.soulwax.net> In-Reply-To: <1071237706.970.41.camel@localhost> References: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0312111204530.25046-100000@shell.netikka.fi> <20031212104433.GA803@galgenberg.net> <1071237706.970.41.camel@localhost>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On 2003-12-12 08:01 +0000, Ryan Sommers wrote: > On Fri, 2003-12-12 at 04:44, Ulrich Spoerlein wrote: > > Another useless "me too", I experienced this behaviour when I switched > > from -STABLE to 5.1-RELEASE. Ever since that day xmms playback more or > > less sucks. Playing/Skipping/Pausing lags about 1-2 seconds. When doing > > a 'make extract' in the Mozilla or Thunderbird or Java or Openoffice > > ports it starts stuttering and slowing down the MP3 playback. > > > > It can't be the Harddisk, because most of my MP3s are coming over > > NFS... > > > > Ulrich Spörlein > > Just curious but are you running with a debug kernel and were you before > on -STABLE? If yes to the first part have you tried running a kernel > without all the extra debugging code? > A whole bunch of people have been experiencing this over the past two or three months, even without debugging features. I'd guess there've been about ten threads about it so far. Nobody has been able to pinpoint exactly what's going on. There seem to be two different problems: 1) The above "lag", including the fact that if you, for instance, extract a large tarball, playback slows down and stutters. 2) The crackling when starting to play a file. There are some other symptoms here too that I don't remember, but Kris and at least one other person are experiencing this. Beyond that, several people (including me) noticed odd popping noises a few seconds apart when playing any kind of audio. They're especially noticeable if you play something fairly mellow. -- Munish Chopra
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20031212165822.GC48271>