[PlanetCCRMA] VST
Joseph Dell'Orfano
fullgo at dellorfano.net
Wed Nov 5 20:25:02 PST 2008
Thank you so much for your reply. I have explored all of these options
and actually just got my Amplitube plugin working on my old 32-bit
machine. This is using CCRMA with FC6. This works for me because I have
this connected via S/PDIF to my main DAW (a 64-bit machine running CCRMA
and FC8), so essentially my old 32-bit machine is functioning as a
digital effects processor.
Here is the summary of my experience with VST so far. I have cross
posted this on LAU as well.
1. I cannot run a (windows) VST on my 64-bit machine. I cannot compile
dssi-vst, fst, or wine-asio. It appears that they do not want to compile
against my 64-bit jack libraries. Perhaps I am missing something obvious
(probably) but I just can't compile these.
2. Reaper does not work in Wine on my 64-bit machine. I installed wine
from the CCRMA repo (it is 32-bit I believe).
3. Energy-XT runs but I cannot compile the libamm with jack support.
Again, 64-bit problems. I have not tried to run the windows version of
energy-XT but I suspect I will have wine problems as I did with reaper.
4. dssi-vst appears to be broken on the 32-bit machine. Again, I
downloaded this from CCRMA repo. vsthost scans all of my plugins
properly and starts them up but quickly fails with a report that it
"lost communication" with the plugin.
5. fst compiles on my 32-bit machine very easily and runs my windows
plugins properly (Yay!)
I hope this is helpful. Any comments about getting VST support up and
running on my 64-bit machine would be greatly appreciated.
-Joe
Preston C. wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 3, 2008 at 12:43 AM, Joseph Dell'Orfano
> <fullgo at dellorfano.net> wrote:
>
>> Hi everybody,
>>
>> I am trying to find a solution to vst support on a ccrma fedora 8
>> system. Oh, did I mention I'm running 64-bit? That seems to be a major
>> wall preventing dssi-vst and others from compiling. I can compile wine-
>> asio-x and jackbridge seems work fine. I cannot get Reaper to run, nor
>> can I get extreme-xt to run with jack support (cannot compile libamm).
>> I am using the stock wine packages from ccrma which do not appear to
>> be 64-bit so this may prevent programs such as reaper from working.
>>
>> So, any suggestions would be appreciated. There do not seem to be a
>> lot of success stories out there.
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Joe Dell'Orfano
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> PlanetCCRMA mailing list
>> PlanetCCRMA at ccrma.stanford.edu
>> http://ccrma-mail.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/planetccrma
>>
>>
>
> I asked the same question on this list, and got a great reply from a
> guy named Ray Rashif. Here it is:
>
> OK, the deal about VST "support" on GNU/Linux is that you can read all
> about it scattered all around the WWW. It'd take some time to really
> get things right if you don't come across the correct sources sooner
> than expected. The SDK is freely available, but not free is in our
> understanding; the license forbids redistribution. So, say you were to
> use the SDK to program a host, you're not allowed to let the binary be
> up for download. Each individual must agree to the licensing terms and
> then download the SDK to compile the software himself. This is what
> limits the so-called support for VSTs on Linux, or any free platform.
>
> In view of the situation, there are currently a few ways to use
> VST(i)s on our favourite distros:
>
> (1) Proprietary DAW software with Linux offerings. Examples are
> Renoise, energyXT..and I think that's about it.
>
> (2) Wine-friendly Windows software. Examples are..example is Reaper.
>
> (3) SDK-compiled Linux software that support it. Examples are Ardour,
> Rosegarden, and I can't really remember the rest. Here you need to
> download the SDK and configure the build to compile against the SDK.
>
> (4) Linux software with unique support for VSTs built in, with the
> help of Wine. Note: No SDK required. This is my personal favourite
> route to take. Examples are LMMS and Qtractor (via dssi-vst).
> ---- Extra note: Qtractor is different because it relies on a separate
> wrapper, which in turn has that unique Wine-based support built in:
> dssi-vst
> ---- Previously dssi-vst required the SDK, but not anymore. Yay.
>
> (5) Native VST host. Native here means Linux-only. These VSTs are
> those that are compiled for the Linux system. There is only 1 such
> host to my knowledge - Jost. The collection of plug-ins (ported or
> otherwise) isn't all that great, but it feels really good being able
> to run VST instruments natively without any overhead or performance
> loss. The author's few plug-ins are of high quality; a talented
> programmer AND musician he is.
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://cm-mail.stanford.edu/pipermail/planetccrma/attachments/20081105/9178c787/attachment.html>
More information about the PlanetCCRMA
mailing list