Carl Luescher wrote:
Carlos, explanation is close enough, makes sense, as I've been reading up on this too.
Marcus, yes, I now have to agree that for the regular, the default kernels are just fine. The rt stuff I can see as being more application specific as perhaps in the medical or aeronautics fields.
Thank you both for your enlightening inputs!
Carl
I looked into the topic for a bit, what I was "needing" the RT kernel for was audio recording/processing. Normal users can't run threads in "realtime" priority, the super user can, but then running general applications as the superuser is not really the best idea. At any rate, I guess the RT kernel has facilities for setting up a group or users that can run realtime threads. How much this affects the performance of these applications, I don't know and haven't found out. I decided that it was too much trouble right now to try out a RT kernel, especially after I finally got lm_sensors working the recent kernels for 10.3, and I prefer to hold off until/unless I see poor performance in my audio apps. --Jason -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org