Re: esound eats CPU cycles
- From: Andrew Clausen <clausen alphalink com au>
- To: Ronald de Man <deman win tue nl>, gnome-list <gnome-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: esound eats CPU cycles
- Date: Wed, 25 Nov 1998 07:33:03 +1100
Ronald de Man wrote:
> > Ronald de Man writes:
> > > I have the lastest version from CVS. No sound is playing, just
> > > esd running in the background. Esd should be sleeping, and strace
> > > shows that it is. But the performance decrease is real.
> >
> > Might you have slow DMA on your combination of motherboard and sound
> > card? Nearly all sound cards use DMA to transfer data, and I would be
> > very surprised if esd closed the sound device -- starting and stopping
> > the DMA often produces a click. The device driver
> >
> > Stop esd and try this: dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/dsp bs=8k count=20
> >
> > I'll bet it clicks. It does on mine. While it's running, do your
> > gzip test. On my system it doesn't show any performance decrease.
> > Does it on yours?
>
> I'll try when I get home. This seems to be a very reasonable explanation.
> My sound card is an SB16 without 16-bit DMA. I can play 16-bit sound
> by setting the 16-bit channel equal to the 8-bit channel. I don't
> know why this works but it does, and it is probably the reason of
> the slow down. The computer shop where I bought the card is even
> more crap than the card (Creative ViBRA 16X PnP).
I remember when reading the creative-docs, that the "high" DMA channels
(4-7) are much faster than the "low" ones (0-3). But when you do full
duplex mode (16-bit), then you'd need the two channels (including the slow
one at the high rate)
When you do a DMA transfer, doesn't it lock up the bus? While your CPU is
in parrallel, I think it needs to wait for the DMA for memory access (I
could be wrong on that...it might only be for <=486 motherboards, I've got
no idea...) If the DMA is taking a long time, then its effectively taking
away CPU time (if what I said above is true).
Another option would be to try doing 8-bit DMA with esound - see if that is
any better. That would halve the time for the DMA, halving the CPU time it
eats (again, if what I said is true)
Andrew Clausen
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]