Recently, prompted by the call quality issues and occasional call drops or audio loss, I started looking into various causes of my system performance. I came across some posts talking about IRQ conflicts and zttest timing performance.
So I started taking a closer look at my systems none of them have any FXS/FXO cards. As I suspect, they all have some degree of IRQ sharing (from lspci -vb command). I've got about 3-4 system. All are sharing USB with either the onboard VGA or onboard ethernet, or VGA sharing with Ethernet and IDE interface. They are all former Dell desktops or server's with P4 2.4-3.0ghz CPU and ~1gig of ram. 3 of the systems run updated Piaf 1.1 the other system run Piaf 1.2
Worse yet, all of them have zttest results that are horrendous, average of 99.954
Looking in the MB Bios doesn't give me options to move those conflicting IRQ's.
What other options should I look at to improve those zttest results?
Joe,
you said in one of your posts that ztdummy uses USB for timing... is that still true in Piaf? all of my systems are running kernel 2.6.18 which I thought does not use the USB for timing? If that's the case, I wonder if disabling USB would help?
So I started taking a closer look at my systems none of them have any FXS/FXO cards. As I suspect, they all have some degree of IRQ sharing (from lspci -vb command). I've got about 3-4 system. All are sharing USB with either the onboard VGA or onboard ethernet, or VGA sharing with Ethernet and IDE interface. They are all former Dell desktops or server's with P4 2.4-3.0ghz CPU and ~1gig of ram. 3 of the systems run updated Piaf 1.1 the other system run Piaf 1.2
Worse yet, all of them have zttest results that are horrendous, average of 99.954
Looking in the MB Bios doesn't give me options to move those conflicting IRQ's.
What other options should I look at to improve those zttest results?
Joe,
you said in one of your posts that ztdummy uses USB for timing... is that still true in Piaf? all of my systems are running kernel 2.6.18 which I thought does not use the USB for timing? If that's the case, I wonder if disabling USB would help?