* Firewire Audio Card Support
[not found] ` <419C9D47.4090606-l4pODZ2nMLw@public.gmane.org>
@ 2004-11-18 14:15 ` Olaf Christ
2004-11-18 14:32 ` [Alsa-devel] " Steve Harris
2004-11-18 19:36 ` Pieter Palmers
0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Olaf Christ @ 2004-11-18 14:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-audio-user-oG0YroN0ZiqENrSoib9kfje48wsgrGvP,
linux-audio-dev-oG0YroN0ZiqENrSoib9kfje48wsgrGvP,
alsa-devel-5NWGOfrQmneRv+LV9MX5uipxlwaOVQ5f,
alsa-user-5NWGOfrQmneRv+LV9MX5uipxlwaOVQ5f
Hi,
as the owner of a firewire audio card (Motu 828mkII) I was disappointed when
trying to use it under linux. Asking Motu to provide tech docs and/or linux
drivers is useless: "We will possibly release linux drivers in the future,
but we never release any kind of technical documentation."
Is there any effort to join forces for putting pressure on the manufacturers
yet? I am willing to create an address list ordered by audio card
manufacturer/model to make the manufacturers realize there is a need for
linux support.
Any comments?
Olaf
On Thursday 18 November 2004 14:01, derek holzer wrote:
> Of course, the Firewire subsystem for Linux works fine. But AFAIK there
> are no drivers existing for any firewire audio cards. Bug the various
> manufacurers to release more technical info and they might eventually
> show up.
>
> d.
>
> Victor LaLoggia wrote:
> > Hello Frank;
> >
> > Thank you for your response, and I do not mean to be contrary, but what
> > about the work the folks at http://www.linux1394.org/ are doing?
> >
> > I see that their subsystem has been included Linux kernel sources since
> > version 2.3.40. Does the subsystem not work?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > vic
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Frank Barknecht <fbar-T1uUCcFPrxNAfugRpC6u6w@public.gmane.org>
> > Sent: Nov 15, 2004 12:14 PM
> > To: linux-audio-user-oG0YroN0ZiqENrSoib9kfje48wsgrGvP@public.gmane.org
> > Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Using Linux Laptop for Live Performance
> >
> > Hallo,
> >
> > Victor LaLoggia hat gesagt: // Victor LaLoggia wrote:
> >> I am just beginning my research into the available software and
> >> hardware, and would greatly appreciate any information. Especially
> >> on hardware - what would be the best usb/ firewire interface for
> >> live performance?
> >
> > No Firewire audio yet on Linux. The best in your case is PCMCIA, which
> > has the lowest latency. VX-Pocket or RME cards are good choices. Also
> > try, if your internal soundcard is enough.
> >
> > Ciao
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 14:32 ` [Alsa-devel] " Steve Harris
@ 2004-11-18 14:44 ` Amaury Jacquot
2004-11-18 15:09 ` Giuliano Pochini
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Amaury Jacquot @ 2004-11-18 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Harris; +Cc: linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev, alsa-devel
Steve Harris wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 18, 2004 at 03:15:52 +0100, Olaf Christ wrote:
>
>>Hi,
>>
>>as the owner of a firewire audio card (Motu 828mkII) I was disappointed when
>>trying to use it under linux. Asking Motu to provide tech docs and/or linux
>>drivers is useless: "We will possibly release linux drivers in the future,
>>but we never release any kind of technical documentation."
>
>
> That is actually a big improvemnt. When we (linuaudio.org) were demoing at
> Sounds Live in London earlier this year, the were telling thier users that
> they had no intention of supporting linux, and wouldn't release docs.
>
> Though with the number of thier users we were sending to them to ask, I
> guess they were getting a bit concerned :)
>
> - Steve
what's the rationale behind the "we won't release any docs" nonsense ?
someone needs to come out with a professionnal libre-design sound
card... (can't be that hard)
Amaury
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 14:44 ` Amaury Jacquot
@ 2004-11-18 15:09 ` Giuliano Pochini
2004-11-18 15:15 ` Amaury Jacquot
2004-11-18 20:16 ` Lee Revell
0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Giuliano Pochini @ 2004-11-18 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Amaury Jacquot
Cc: Steve Harris, linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev, alsa-devel
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004, Amaury Jacquot wrote:
> > That is actually a big improvemnt. When we (linuaudio.org) were demoing at
> > Sounds Live in London earlier this year, the were telling thier users that
> > they had no intention of supporting linux, and wouldn't release docs.
> >
> > Though with the number of thier users we were sending to them to ask, I
> > guess they were getting a bit concerned :)
> >
> > - Steve
>
> what's the rationale behind the "we won't release any docs" nonsense ?
>
> someone needs to come out with a professionnal libre-design sound
> card... (can't be that hard)
No, it's not hard because there are a lot of skilled people around, but
the card would be expensive. There was a thread about a project of "open
source" graphic card recently on lkml.
--
Giuliano.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 15:09 ` Giuliano Pochini
@ 2004-11-18 15:15 ` Amaury Jacquot
2004-11-18 19:54 ` Pieter Palmers
2004-11-18 20:16 ` Lee Revell
1 sibling, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Amaury Jacquot @ 2004-11-18 15:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Giuliano Pochini
Cc: Steve Harris, linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev, alsa-devel
Giuliano Pochini wrote:
>
> No, it's not hard because there are a lot of skilled people around, but
> the card would be expensive. There was a thread about a project of "open
> source" graphic card recently on lkml.
I know about the project in question, as I participate in the discussion
about it.
an open design sound card would be even easier to design... an atmel
microcontroller and a pair of ADC / DAC chips should be enough to desing
something with a USB port.
now for the firewire thing, I guess a xilinx chip can do it, and those
are not that expensive either...
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 14:15 ` Olaf Christ
2004-11-18 14:32 ` [Alsa-devel] " Steve Harris
@ 2004-11-18 19:36 ` Pieter Palmers
1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Pieter Palmers @ 2004-11-18 19:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Olaf Christ; +Cc: linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev, alsa-devel, alsa-user
Regarding firewire audio support:
We are currently working on a generic driver for DM1000 based firewire
audio cards by BridgeCo. I don't know if the motu device is based upon
this chipset. If it is, chances are that the driver will also work for
you. But at this point the development is still in a very preliminary state.
The good news is that there is a standard for the firewire audio/midi
transport protocol. This means that the core part of the driver will be
the same for all firewire devices. The bad news is that the actual setup
of the device (mixer settings i.e.) doesn't conform to a standard. The
only problem is that experience learns that not every manufacturer
implements the standards (correctly).
Regarding the manufacturer support:
The only thing we can do is promote the manufacturers that are willing
to cooperate. I'll give an overview of my personal experience:
* I had real good experience up till now with ESI (Ego Systems inc). I
sent some manufacturers using the DM1000 chipset a notification that in
order to support their product, I would need
a device to fool around with. About two reply's and a few weeks later, I
received their QuataFire 610 box. Excellent...
* The people at M-Audio also use the DM1000 chipset, and I also
contacted them. They replied and wanted to provide a device, but they
modified the reference firmware, and couldn't provide any info on their
firmware... Maybe this will change once there is a driver available that
only needs to be adapted for their stuff. I don't know, I still hope
that this
* Two other company's using the DM1000 in their products and whom I
contacted were Edirol and Terratec. I din't receive any response from
them yet, not even a confirmation. The mails were sent more than a month
ago.
* Another card I would really like to see ALSA support for is the EMU
DAS range (1820 etc). So I contacted E-MU/Creative Labs to see if they
were willing the cooperate. The product manager for these products was
quite enthousiastic. But after 6 months of e-mail traffic the upper
management descided that they wouldn't give out any info on the DSP. End
of story.
* My first attempt at driver development was for the Guillemot
(=Hercules) Maxi Studio ISIS. There was no support at all from
Guillemot, they wouldn't even reply to emails. I ended up blowing up my
own ISIS in numerous attempts to figure out the workings of the device.
My overall advice on Guillemot/Hercules: stay away from them.
To summarize: If I were to buy a card at this point, I would first go
and check if ESI has a product that fullfills my needs. That is the only
pressure I can put on manufacturers.
Greets,
Pieter Palmers
freebob.sf.net
Olaf Christ wrote:
>Hi,
>
>as the owner of a firewire audio card (Motu 828mkII) I was disappointed when
>trying to use it under linux. Asking Motu to provide tech docs and/or linux
>drivers is useless: "We will possibly release linux drivers in the future,
>but we never release any kind of technical documentation."
>Is there any effort to join forces for putting pressure on the manufacturers
>yet? I am willing to create an address list ordered by audio card
>manufacturer/model to make the manufacturers realize there is a need for
>linux support.
>
>Any comments?
>
>Olaf
>
>
>
>On Thursday 18 November 2004 14:01, derek holzer wrote:
>
>
>>Of course, the Firewire subsystem for Linux works fine. But AFAIK there
>>are no drivers existing for any firewire audio cards. Bug the various
>>manufacurers to release more technical info and they might eventually
>>show up.
>>
>>d.
>>
>>Victor LaLoggia wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Hello Frank;
>>>
>>> Thank you for your response, and I do not mean to be contrary, but what
>>>about the work the folks at http://www.linux1394.org/ are doing?
>>>
>>> I see that their subsystem has been included Linux kernel sources since
>>>version 2.3.40. Does the subsystem not work?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> vic
>>>
>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>From: Frank Barknecht <fbar@footils.org>
>>>Sent: Nov 15, 2004 12:14 PM
>>>To: linux-audio-user@music.columbia.edu
>>>Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Using Linux Laptop for Live Performance
>>>
>>>Hallo,
>>>
>>>Victor LaLoggia hat gesagt: // Victor LaLoggia wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> I am just beginning my research into the available software and
>>>> hardware, and would greatly appreciate any information. Especially
>>>> on hardware - what would be the best usb/ firewire interface for
>>>> live performance?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>No Firewire audio yet on Linux. The best in your case is PCMCIA, which
>>>has the lowest latency. VX-Pocket or RME cards are good choices. Also
>>>try, if your internal soundcard is enough.
>>>
>>>Ciao
>>>
>>>
>
>
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>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 15:15 ` Amaury Jacquot
@ 2004-11-18 19:54 ` Pieter Palmers
0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Pieter Palmers @ 2004-11-18 19:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Amaury Jacquot; +Cc: linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev, alsa-devel
Amaury Jacquot wrote:
> Giuliano Pochini wrote:
>
>>
>> No, it's not hard because there are a lot of skilled people around, but
>> the card would be expensive. There was a thread about a project of "open
>> source" graphic card recently on lkml.
>
>
> I know about the project in question, as I participate in the
> discussion about it.
> an open design sound card would be even easier to design... an atmel
> microcontroller and a pair of ADC / DAC chips should be enough to
> desing something with a USB port.
> now for the firewire thing, I guess a xilinx chip can do it, and those
> are not that expensive either...
I don't think it's possible to obtain the same price vs performance with
a self-developed device. The skills won't be a problem indeed, but as
most of us are doing this in our spare time, I don't think we'll find
the time to keep up with commercial specs. But the major problem would
be the manufacturing cost as we won't have the mass-production benefits
commercial companies have.
Why don't we support the manufacturers that do support us? After all,
there are some that provide us with what we need, and I don't see that
mentioned that often. I'm quite confident that for most needs you can
find a card from a manufacturer that supports ALSA development. Correct
me if I'm wrong, but I got the impression that for example RME and ESI
actively support the development of ALSA drivers for their producs.
It might be more usefull to compile a list of Linux-friendly
manufacturers and make some noise about such a list. This might be
something for the linuxaudio.org people?
Greets,
Pieter Palmers
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
2004-11-18 15:09 ` Giuliano Pochini
2004-11-18 15:15 ` Amaury Jacquot
@ 2004-11-18 20:16 ` Lee Revell
1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Lee Revell @ 2004-11-18 20:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Giuliano Pochini
Cc: Amaury Jacquot, Steve Harris, linux-audio-user, linux-audio-dev,
alsa-devel
On Thu, 2004-11-18 at 16:09 +0100, Giuliano Pochini wrote:
> No, it's not hard because there are a lot of skilled people around, but
> the card would be expensive. There was a thread about a project of "open
> source" graphic card recently on lkml.
And I posted a [possibly OT] rant to that thread about how this was a
waste of time and how you could REALLY make a killing with open sound
hardware.
http://lkml.org/lkml/2004/10/23/292
I got one "right on, brother" response via private mail and that was it.
But then again half the kernel guys don't have sound cards in their
machines ;-)
Lee
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
[not found] <20041118145603.CA5511D211A@sc8-sf-uberspam1.sourceforge.net>
@ 2004-11-19 2:14 ` Yon Mercury
0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Yon Mercury @ 2004-11-19 2:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: alsa-devel
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 06:55:04 -0800, alsa-devel-request wrote
> > > Victor LaLoggia hat gesagt: // Victor LaLoggia wrote:
> > >> I am just beginning my research into the available software and
> > >> hardware, and would greatly appreciate any information. Especially
> > >> on hardware - what would be the best usb/ firewire interface for
> > >> live performance?
> > >
> > > No Firewire audio yet on Linux. The best in your case is PCMCIA, which
> > > has the lowest latency. VX-Pocket or RME cards are good choices. Also
> > > try, if your internal soundcard is enough.
Check out freebob.sourceforge.net. We can cheer for these people! But no luck
yet getting in touch with them.
-Mercury
-------------------------------------------------------
This SF.Net email is sponsored by: InterSystems CACHE
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: Firewire Audio Card Support
[not found] <20041118194002.842C81D4895@sc8-sf-uberspam1.sourceforge.net>
@ 2004-11-19 2:33 ` Yon Mercury
0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Yon Mercury @ 2004-11-19 2:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: alsa-devel
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 11:39:02 -0800, alsa-devel-request wrote
> > an open design sound card would be even easier to design... an atmel
...
> I don't think it's possible to obtain the same price vs performance
> with a self-developed device. The skills won't be a problem indeed,
...
> Why don't we support the manufacturers that do support us? After all,
...
> It might be more usefull to compile a list of Linux-friendly
> manufacturers and make some noise about such a list. This might be
> something for the linuxaudio.org people?
Lovely idea!! It would be like geek grassroots activism!
I'm glad you popped up in this forum. I've been eyeing that ESI FireWire box
and I think it'd be a real winner because it fits a portable market between
the 2 channel consumer people and the Hammerfall people. We need that tier of
product supported for Linux Audio.
A local store is holding an Echo Indigo IO for me. Fewer inputs than the ESI
FireWire, but it's low cost and looks promising for Linux support. Now I'm
rooting for Giuliano to get the drivers up to date with the latest that Echo
released to us.
Kind Regards,
-Mercury
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
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2004-11-19 2:14 ` Firewire Audio Card Support Yon Mercury
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2004-11-19 2:33 ` Yon Mercury
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[not found] ` <419C9D47.4090606-l4pODZ2nMLw@public.gmane.org>
2004-11-18 14:15 ` Olaf Christ
2004-11-18 14:32 ` [Alsa-devel] " Steve Harris
2004-11-18 14:44 ` Amaury Jacquot
2004-11-18 15:09 ` Giuliano Pochini
2004-11-18 15:15 ` Amaury Jacquot
2004-11-18 19:54 ` Pieter Palmers
2004-11-18 20:16 ` Lee Revell
2004-11-18 19:36 ` Pieter Palmers
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