RealTime

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||<#eeeeee> '''Natty -realtime i386''' ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||
||<#eeeeee> '''Natty -realtime amd64''' ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#CCFFCC> Tim Cook ||<#CCFFCC> holstein(nvidia) ||
||<#eeeeee> '''Natty -realtime i386''' ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#FFFFCC> none ||
||<#eeeeee> '''Natty -realtime amd64''' ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#CCFFCC> Alessio Igor Bogani ||<#FFFFCC> none ||<#CCFFCC> Tim Cook ||<#CCFFCC> holstein(nvidia) ||

Realtime

Basic introduction is available at:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuStudio/RealTimeKernel

For a more in-depth look at kernels, please see: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Dev

News:
The -preempt and -rt kernels are no longer being developed due to lack of support. Focus has instead turned to the -lowlatency and -realtime kernels, particularly for the the release of Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal. The long-term goal is to have -lowlatency in the official Ubuntu repositories, while maintaining -realtime in a dedicated PPA.

If you wish to see work continued on -preempt or -rt, you are encouraged to volunteer. To do so, join the Ubuntu Studio Developers e-mail list (see Ubuntu Studio).

Make-up of the team and roles officially assigned:

Kernel Responsibility Matrix

Kernels

Code & Packaging

Upstream Relations

Bug Triage

Kernel/DKMS External Driver Upload

Testing

Video Driver Testing

Lucid -lowlatency i386

none

none

none

none

none

none

Lucid -lowlatency amd64

none

Tim Cook

none

none

Tim Cook

none

Lucid -realtime i386

none

none

none

none

none

Brian David

Lucid -realtime amd64

none

Tim Cook

none

none

Laurent Bellegarde

holstein(nvidia) / Laurent Bellegarde(fglrx)

Natty -lowlatency i386

Luke Yelavich / Scott Lavender / Ronan Jouchet

Scott Lavender

Scott Lavender / Ronan Jouchet

Luke Yelavich

Scott Lavender / Ronan Jouchet

Ronan Jouchet (fglrx), Luke Yelavich (NVIDIA)

Natty -lowlatency amd64

Luke Yelavich

none

none

Luke Yelavich

none

Luke Yelavich (NVIDIA)

Natty -realtime i386

Alessio Igor Bogani

Alessio Igor Bogani

Alessio Igor Bogani

none

none

none

Natty -realtime amd64

Alessio Igor Bogani

Alessio Igor Bogani

Alessio Igor Bogani

none

Tim Cook

holstein(nvidia)

Persons who would want help but not yet assigned to something:
- Asmo Koskinen: Test on -rt on Lucid, Maverick and Natty (AMD64 and i386) with nVidia, M-Audio Delta 66 and Echo Audio Fire 4
- Erik Rasmussen : Test on -rt
- ailo : -rt on Maverick with nvidia
- Brian David: Testing fglrx in all kernel variants, testing -realtime and -rt kernels, if available
- Jeremy Jongepier: Test and packaging on -rt/-realtime
- Janne Jokitalo: Testing, packaging, Ubuntu and Ubuntu Studio relation, learning to generally tweak kernels

Work in progress:
Nvidia on -realtime kernel at Alessio's PPA: testers?

Known issues:
Missing a decent FAQ section
Firewire audio devices: again volunteers?

FAQ:
Q: What is the difference between an -rt kernel and a -realtime kernel?

A: From a technical point of view, -rt and -realtime are the same kernel. They are both based on the PREEMPT_RT patchset, although the version may be different. The main difference is that the -rt kernel should be based on the Ubuntu source tree (and therefore can use the same features, patches, enabled hardware, security fixes and so on) and should offer the same services that the Ubuntu default -generic kernel offers. For example, it should be compatible with closed video drivers (nvidia and fglrx), any external DKMS drivers, and have available backport packages. The goal of an -rt kernel is to obtain a real time variant of the Ubuntu kernel that is aligned with the -generic kernel.

On the other hand, the -realtime kernel is a PREEMPT_RT patched kernel based on the vanilla source tree (not the Ubuntu source). This kernel will be missing Ubuntu specific code, patches or security fixes and it isn't guaranteed to be compatible with any external software (low level utilities, DKMS drivers and so on). It does not use the same Linux kernel version as the -generic kernel, and so these two kernels are not aligned. It is a working, upstream real-time kernel that is being used on Ubuntu. No more no less.

Ancient stuff

These wiki pages covers hard real time support in Ubuntu.

RealTime Feisty
RealTime Gutsy
RealTime Hardy
RealTime Intrepid
RealTime Jaunty
RealTime Karmic
RealTime Lucid

The RT kernel is still around! If you can help by describing it's current state, please do so. In the mean time see the official rt.wiki.kernel.org and the Ubuntu Studio team for more information.

RealTime (last edited 2011-02-23 10:51:46 by cache1)