I have installed airtime in ubuntu server 12.04 following the instructions from the manual in section: Automated installation Earlier on "preparing the server" the manual suggest to remove the pulse-audio server, so i had it removed.
After enabling the the Hardware Audio Output ALSA , on the airtime-playout status i was getting:
I am testing airtime to replace an old automation system on the radio station i am working.
I have tested airtime for over 3 months there, without any problems, great job with airtime guys.
I recently had to moved airtime from Debian to Ubuntu server.
The reason to move to Ubuntu was that i needed alsa 1.0.24 or later for my new M-audio Delta 66 sound card. For the same card i needed the envy4control from the alsa-tools-gui package so i had the xubuntu desktop installed too.
This is probably an ubuntu issue
Post edited by Spyros Theodosis at 2012-07-23 08:08:19
At first remove pulse-audio and then i install airtime.
After that i installed the desktop to set up my sound card with envy4control and then i realized that there was a problem with pulse-audio and liquidsoap and i had to reinstalled pulse-audio.
Seems I read somewhere that pulseaudio needed to be removed so that logging in was not required in order for Airtime to work? This is not the case with Ubuntu Server 12.04 as I installed pulseaudio and all seems to be running after booting. Could be I've not remembering this right.
Anyway, the information at http://en.flossmanuals.net/airtime/preparing-the-server/ directs one to remove pulseaudio and install alsamixer. Perhaps removing pulseaudio is no longer necessary. Though for a server I need a mixer that runs from the command line, and alsamixer works great for this.
I don't mind having pulseaudio installed as long as this does not require more from CPU. The current version of Airtime seems to work well on a netbook, not requiring too much processor time. Older versions (1.8 - 1.9) would hang the netbook after a number of hours to a day and the CPU usage was higher.