From time to time I want to convert a number of .wav files to .mp3.
At the moment the script that creates the .wav calls lame immediately the file is written. Snag is I end up with a lot of simultanious instances of lame running and it is quite processor intensive. In fact, it brings my little netbook to a screaching and sometimes fatal halt. I'm thinking that what I need is a spooler that will react to new .wav files by converting them, so that only one or two instances of lame run at any one time. The idea would be to be transparent, so that if I reboot the machine while conversion is going on it will be restarted at start up. I don't mind if it starts from the beginning of the current .wav, there is no need to resume where it left off. I have thought of three ideas: use the at queue; use anacron; or write a simple daemon spooling script with a foreach loop, lots of sleep before looping and a nice command to run lame. Or am I missing something? is there some supertool already written which will encapsulate it all for me? some spooling service I have not come across? I liked the old VMS batch command where you could have as many jobs running at the end of a queue as you liked, and they would automatically re-start if the machine was restarted. SOmething like that would be cool. TIA Bob -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org