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JACK_NETSOURCE(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
JACK_NETSOURCE(1) |
jack_netsource - Netjack Master client for one slave
jack_netsource [ -H hostname ] [ options ]
jack_netsource The Master side of a netjack connection. Represents the
slave jackd -dnet in the master jack graph. Most connection parameters are
configured via the netsource, and the slave will set itself up according to
the commandline option given to jack_netsource.
Netjack allows low latency audio connections over general IP networks. When
using opus for compression, it is even possible to establish transatlantic
links, with latencies not much over the actual ping time.
But the main usecase is of course a LAN, where it can achieve one jack period of
latency.
- -h this help text
- -H slave host
-
Host name of the slave JACK
- -o num channels
-
Number of audio playback channels
- -i num channels
-
Number of audio capture channels
- -O num channels
-
Number of midi playback channels
- -I num channels
-
Number of midi capture channels
- -n periods
-
Network latency in JACK periods
- -p port
-
UDP port that the slave is listening on
- -r reply port
-
UDP port that we are listening on
- -B bind port
-
reply port, for use in NAT environments
- -b bitdepth
-
Set transport to use 16bit or 8bit
- -P kbits
-
Use Opus encoding with <kbits> per channel
- -m mtu
-
Assume this mtu for the link
- -R N
-
Redundancy: send out packets N times.
- -e
-
skip host-to-network endianness conversion
- -N jack name
-
Reports a different client name to jack
- -s, --server servername
-
Connect to the jack server named servername
- -h, --help
-
Display help/usage message
- -v, --version
-
Output version information and exit
run a 4 audio channel bidirectional link with one period of latency and no midi
channels. Audio data is flowing uncompressed over the wire:
On hostA:
- jackd -d alsa
jack_netsource -H hostB -n1 -i4 -o4 -I0 -O0
On hostB:
- jackd -d net
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