OK, this is not any kind of official benchmarking, but here's a rough performance estimate of ChucK on the Raspberry Pi: Setup: Raspberry Pi Model B, no overclock, running Raspbian, 3.6.11+ USB sound card (little PnP device, <$10) No monitor or keyboard; logged in via ssh Testing multiple oscillators: Up to 10 simultaneous SinOsc: no problem 10-12 mild glitching Testing multiple shreds: Using OTF examples, 6 shreds at once, no problem 7 shreds, major gapping Testing LiSa: LiSa-munger1 example works for up to 24 voices at once! ------------------- Overclocking should improve performance. I expect that unplugging the ethernet cable and auto-running a patch would help too. Overall, I'm pretty impressed with its capabilities! Joel On 12/05/2013 10:59 AM, Joel Matthys wrote:
Yes, it compiles and runs nicely on the Pi. I'll try a little performance test and get back to you shortly!
Joel
On 12/05/2013 10:54 AM, Robert Poor wrote:
Joel:
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 8:46 AM, Joel Matthys
mailto:jwmatthys@yahoo.com> wrote: I've run into this problem too while compiling ChucK for the Raspberry Pi.
I admit: In the back of my mind, I still view the Raspberry PI as a very capable embedded controller. So I'm happily agog at what it's really capable of.
Do you have ChucK running on the RPI? And if so, what's a rough assessment of its performance, e.g. how many voices can it synthesize?
- Rob
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