jackd (1) Linux Manual Page
NAME
jackd – JACK Audio Connection Kit sound server
SYNOPSIS
jackd [options] -d backend [backend-parameters]
jackd –help
DESCRIPTION
jackd is the JACK audio server daemon, a low-latency audio server. Originally written for the GNU/Linux operating system, it also supports Mac OS X and various Unix platforms. JACK can connect a number of different client applications to an audio device and also to each other. Most clients are external, running in their own processes as normal applications. JACK also supports internal clients, which run within the jackd process using a loadable "plugin" interface.
JACK differs from other audio servers in being designed from the ground up for professional audio work. It focuses on two key areas: synchronous execution of all clients, and low latency operation.
For the latest JACK information, please consult the web site, <http://www.jackaudio.org>.
OPTIONS
-d, –driverbackend [backend-parameters ]-
Select the audio interface backend. The current list of supported backends is:
alsa,coreaudio,dummy,freebob,osssunandportaudio. They are not all available on all platforms. All backend-parameters are optional. -h, –help-
Print a brief usage message describing the main
jackdoptions. These do not include backend-parameters, which are listed using the–helpoption for each specific backend. Examples below show how to list them. -m, –no-mlock- Do not attempt to lock memory, even if
–realtime. -n, –nameserver-name- Name this
jackdinstance server-name. If unspecified, this name comes from the$JACK_DEFAULT_SERVERenvironment variable. It will be "default" if that is not defined. -p, –port-maxn- Set the maximum number of ports the JACK server can manage. The default value is 256.
–replace-registry- Remove the shared memory registry used by all JACK server instances before startup. This should rarely be used, and is intended only for occasions when the structure of this registry changes in ways that are incompatible across JACK versions (which is rare).
-R, –realtime-
Use realtime scheduling (default = true). This is needed for reliable low-latency performance. On many systems, it requires
jackdto run with special scheduler and memory allocation privileges, which may be obtained in several ways. -r, –no-realtime- Do not use realtime scheduling.
-P, –realtime-priorityint- When running
–realtime, set the scheduler priority to int. –silent- Silence any output during operation.
-T, –temporary- Exit once all clients have closed their connections.
-t, –timeoutint- Set client timeout limit in milliseconds. The default is 500 msec. In realtime mode the client timeout must be smaller than the watchdog timeout (5000 msec).
-Z, –nozombies- Prevent JACK from ever kicking out clients because they were too slow. This cancels the effect any specified timeout value, but JACK and its clients are still subject to the supervision of the watchdog thread or its equivalent.
-u, –unlock- Unlock libraries GTK+, QT, FLTK, Wine.
-v, –verbose- Give verbose output.
-c, –clocksource( c(ycle) | h(pet) | s(ystem) )- Select a specific wall clock (Cycle Counter, HPET timer, System timer).
-V, –version- Print the current JACK version number and exit.
ALSA BACKEND OPTIONS
-C, –capture[ name ]- Provide only capture ports, unless combined with -D or -P. Parameterally set capture device name.
-d, –devicename-
The ALSA pcm device name to use. If none is specified, JACK will use "hw:0", the first hardware card defined in
/etc/modules.conf. -z, –dither [rectangular,triangular,shaped,none]or unspecified, dithering is off. Only the first letter of the mode name is required.- Set dithering mode. If none
-D, –duplex- Provide both capture and playback ports. Defaults to on unless only one of -P or -C is specified.
-h, –helpPrint a brief usage message describing only the-
alsabackend parameters. -M, –hwmeter- Enable hardware metering for devices that support it. Otherwise, use software metering.
-H, –hwmon-
Enable hardware monitoring of capture ports. This is a method for obtaining "zero latency" monitoring of audio input. It requires support in hardware and from the underlying ALSA device driver.
When enabled, requests to monitor capture ports will be satisfied by creating a direct signal path between audio interface input and output connectors, with no processing by the host computer at all. This offers the lowest possible latency for the monitored signal.
Presently (March 2003), only the RME Hammerfall series and cards based on the ICE1712 chipset (M-Audio Delta series, Terratec, and others) support
–hwmon. In the future, some consumer cards may also be supported by modifying their mixer settings.Without
–hwmon, port monitoring requires JACK to read audio into system memory, then copy it back out to the hardware again, imposing the basic JACK system latency determined by the–periodand–nperiodsparameters. -i, –inchannelsint- Number of capture channels. Default is maximum supported by hardware.
-n, –nperiodsint-
Specify the number of periods of playback latency. In seconds, this corresponds to
–nperiodstimes–perioddivided by–rate. The default is 2, the minimum allowable. For most devices, there is no need for any other value with the–realtimeoption. Without realtime privileges or with boards providing unreliable interrupts (like ymfpci), a larger value may yield fewer xruns. This can also help if the system is not tuned for reliable realtime scheduling.For most ALSA devices, the hardware buffer has exactly
–periodtimes–nperiodsframes. Some devices demand a larger buffer. If so, JACK will use the smallest possible buffer containing at least–nperiods, but the playback latency does not increase.For USB audio devices it is recommended to use
-n 3. Firewire devices supported by FFADO (formerly Freebob) are configured with-n 3by default. -o, –outchannelsint- Number of playback channels. Default is maximum supported by hardware.
-P, –playback[ name ]- Provide only playback ports, unless combined with -D or -C. Optionally set playback device name.
-p, –periodint-
Specify the number of frames between JACK
process()calls. This value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024. If you need low latency, set-pas low as you can go without seeing xruns. A larger period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely. The JACK capture latency in seconds is–perioddivided by–rate. -r, –rateint- Specify the sample rate. The default is 48000.
-S, –shorts- Try to configure card for 16-bit samples first, only trying 32-bits if unsuccessful. Default is to prefer 32-bit samples.
- -s, –softmode
-
Ignore xruns reported by the ALSA driver. This makes JACK less likely to disconnect unresponsive ports when running without
–realtime. -X, –midi[seq|raw]-
Specify which ALSA MIDI system to provide access to. Using
rawwill provide a set of JACK MIDI ports that correspond to each raw ALSA device on the machine. Usingseqwill provide a set of JACK MIDI ports that correspond to each ALSA "sequencer" client (which includes each hardware MIDI port on the machine).rawprovides slightly better performance but does not permit JACK MIDI communication with software written to use the ALSA "sequencer" API.
COREAUDIO BACKEND PARAMETERS
-c –channels- Maximum number of channels (default: 2)
-i –inchannels- Maximum number of input channels (default: 2)
-o –outchannels- Maximum number of output channels (default: 2)
-C –capture- Whether or not to capture (default: true)
-P –playback- Whether or not to playback (default: true)
-D –monitor- Provide monitor ports for the output (default: false)
-D –duplex- Capture and playback (default: true)
-r –rate- Sample rate (default: 44100)
-p –period- Frames per period (default: 128). Must be a power of 2.
-d –device- CoreAudio device name (default: none)
-I –input-latency- Extra input latency (frames) (default: 0)
-O –output-latency- Extra output latency (frames) (default: 0)
-l –list-devices- Display available CoreAudio devices (default: false)
-H –hog- Take exclusive access of the audio device (default: false)
-L –async-latency- Extra output latency in asynchronous mode (percent) (default: 100)
-G –grain- Computation grain in RT thread (percent) (default: 100)
-s –clock-drift- Whether to compensate clock drift in dynamically created aggregate device (default: false)
DUMMY BACKEND PARAMETERS
-C, –captureint- Specify number of capture ports. The default value is 2.
-P, –playbackint- Specify number of playback ports. The default value is 2.
-r, –rateint- Specify sample rate. The default value is 48000.
-p, –periodint- Specify the number of frames between JACK
process()calls. This value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024. If you need low latency, set-pas low as you can go without seeing xruns. A larger period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely. The JACK capture latency in seconds is–perioddivided by–rate. -w, –waitint- Specify number of usecs to wait between engine processes. The default value is 21333.
NETONE BACKEND PARAMETERS
-
-i, –audio-insint- Number of capture channels (default: 2)
-o, –audio-outsint- Number of playback channels (default: 2)
-I, –midi-insint- Number of midi capture channels (default: 1)
-O, –midi-outsint- Number of midi playback channels (default: 1)
-r, –rateint- Sample rate (default: 48000)
-p, –periodint- Frames per period (default: 1024)
-n, –num-periodsint- Network latency setting in no. of periods (default: 5)
-l, –listen-portint- The socket port we are listening on for sync packets (default: 3000)
-f, –factorint- Factor for sample rate reduction (default: 1)
-u, –upstream-factorint- Factor for sample rate reduction on the upstream (default: 0)
-c, –celtint- sets celt encoding and number of kbits per channel (default: 0)
-b, –bit-depthint- Sample bit-depth (0 for float, 8 for 8bit and 16 for 16bit) (default: 0)
-t, –transport-syncint- Whether to slave the transport to the master transport (default: true)
-a, –autoconfint- Whether to use Autoconfig, or just start. (default: true)
-R, –redundancyint- Send packets N times (default: 1)
-e, –native-endianint- Dont convert samples to network byte order. (default: false)
-J, –jittervalint- attempted jitterbuffer microseconds on master (default: 0)
-D, –always-deadlineint- always use deadline (default: false)
OSS BACKEND PARAMETERS
-r, –rateint- Specify the sample rate. The default is 48000.
-p, –periodint- Specify the number of frames between JACK
process()calls. This value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024. If you need low latency, set-pas low as you can go without seeing xruns. A larger period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely. The JACK capture latency in seconds is–perioddivided by–rate. -n, –nperiodsint- Specify the number of periods in the hardware buffer. The default is 2. The period size (
-p) times–nperiodstimes four is the JACK buffer size in bytes. The JACK output latency in seconds is–nperiodstimes–perioddivided by–rate. -w, –wordlengthint- Specify the sample size in bits. The default is 16.
-i, –inchannelsint- Specify how many channels to capture (default: 2)
-o, –outchannelsint- Specify number of playback channels (default: 2)
-C, –capturedevice_file- Specify input device for capture (default: /dev/dsp)
-P, –playbackdevice_file- Specify output device for playback (default: /dev/dsp)
-b, –ignorehwbufboolean- Specify, whether to ignore hardware period size (default: false)
SUN BACKEND PARAMETERS
-r, –rateint- Specify the sample rate. The default is 48000.
-p, –periodint- Specify the number of frames between JACK
process()calls. This value must be a power of 2, and the default is 1024. If you need low latency, set-pas low as you can go without seeing xruns. A larger period size yields higher latency, but makes xruns less likely. The JACK capture latency in seconds is–perioddivided by–rate. -n, –nperiodsint- Specify the number of periods in the hardware buffer. The default is 2. The period size (
-p) times–nperiodstimes four (assuming 2 channels 16-bit samples) is the JACK buffer size in bytes. The JACK output latency in seconds is–nperiodstimes–perioddivided by–rate. -w, –wordlengthint- Specify the sample size in bits. The default is 16.
-i, –inchannelsint- Specify how many channels to capture (default: 2)
-o, –outchannelsint- Specify number of playback channels (default: 2)
-C, –capturedevice_file- Specify input device for capture (default: /dev/audio)
-P, –playbackdevice_file- Specify output device for playback (default: /dev/audio)
-b, –ignorehwbufboolean- Specify, whether to ignore hardware period size (default: false)
PORTAUDIO BACKEND PARAMETERS
-c –channel- Maximum number of channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-i –channelin- Maximum number of input channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-o –channelout- Maximum number of output channels (default: all available hardware channels)
-C –capture- Whether or not to capture (default: true)
-P –playback- Whether or not to playback (default: true)
-D –duplex- Capture and playback (default: true)
-r –rate- Sample rate (default: 48000)
-p –period- Frames per period (default: 1024). Must be a power of 2.
-n –name- Driver name (default: none)
-z –dither- Dithering mode (default: none)
EXAMPLES
Print usage message for the parameters specific to each backend.
-
jackd -d alsa –help
jackd -d coreaudio –help
jackd -d net –help
jackd -d dummy –help
jackd -d firewire –help
jackd -d freebob –help
jackd -d oss –help
jackd -d sun –help
jackd -d portaudio –help
Run the JACK daemon with realtime priority using the first ALSA hardware card defined in /etc/modules.conf.
-
jackstart –realtime –driver=alsa
Run the JACK daemon with low latency giving verbose output, which can be helpful for trouble-shooting system latency problems. A reasonably well-tuned system with a good sound card and a low-latency kernel can handle these values reliably. Some can do better. If you get xrun messages, try a larger buffer. Tuning a system for low latency can be challenging. The JACK FAQ, http://jackit.sourceforge.net/docs/faq.php has some useful suggestions.
-
jackstart -Rv -d alsa -p 128 -n 2 -r 44100
Run jackd with realtime priority using the "sblive" ALSA device defined in ~/.asoundrc. Apply shaped dithering to playback audio.
-
jackd -R -d alsa -d sblive –dither=shaped
Run jackd with no special privileges using the second ALSA hardware card defined in /etc/modules.conf. Any xruns reported by the ALSA backend will be ignored. The larger buffer helps reduce data loss. Rectangular dithering will be used for playback.
-
jackd -d alsa -d hw:1 -p2048 -n3 –softmode -zr
Run jackd in full-duplex mode using the ALSA hw:0,0 device for playback and the hw:0,2 device for capture.
-
jackd -d alsa -P hw:0,0 -C hw:0,2
Run jackd in playback-only mode using the ALSA hw:0,0 device.
-
jackd -d alsa -P hw:0,0
ENVIRONMENT
JACK is evolving a mechanism for automatically starting the server when needed. Any client started without a running JACK server will attempt to start one itself using the command line found in the first line of $HOME/.jackdrc if it exists, or /etc/jackdrc if it does not. If neither file exists, a built-in default command will be used, including the -T flag, which causes the server to shut down when all clients have exited.
As a transition, this only happens when $JACK_START_SERVER is defined in the environment of the calling process. In the future this will become normal behavior. In either case, defining $JACK_NO_START_SERVER disables this feature.
To change where JACK looks for the backend drivers, set $JACK_DRIVER_DIR.
$JACK_DEFAULT_SERVER specifies the default server name. If not defined, the string "default" is used. If set in their respective environments, this affects jackd unless its –name parameter is set, and all JACK clients unless they pass an explicit name to jack_client_open().
SEE ALSO:
http://www.jackaudio.org
The official JACK website with news, docs and a list of JACK clients.
http://jackaudio.org/email
The JACK developers’ mailing list. Subscribe, to take part in development of JACK or JACK clients. User questions are also welcome, there is no user-specific mailing list.
http://www.jackosx.com/
Tools specific to the Mac OS X version of JACK.
http://www.alsa-project.org
The Advanced Linux Sound Architecture.
BUGS
Please report bugs to
http://trac.jackaudio.org/
AUTHORS
Architect and original implementor: Paul Davis
Original design Group: Paul Davis, David Olofson, Kai Vehmanen, Benno Sennoner, Richard Guenther, and other members of the Linux Audio Developers group.
Programming: Paul Davis, Jack O’Quin, Taybin Rutkin, Stephane Letz, Fernando Pablo Lopez-Lezcano, Steve Harris, Jeremy Hall, Andy Wingo, Kai Vehmanen, Melanie Thielker, Jussi Laako, Tilman Linneweh, Johnny Petrantoni, Torben Hohn.
Manpage written by Stefan Schwandter, Jack O’Quin and Alexandre Prokoudine.
