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What do you want to achieve by moving the entire span up in user space unprocessed?<BR>
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Jan<BR><BR>> From: hselasky@c2i.net<BR>> To: freeswitch-dev@lists.freeswitch.org<BR>> Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2009 18:11:09 +0100<BR>> Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-dev] FreeSwitch + ISDN + analog phone adapters - status<BR>> <BR>> On Friday 30 January 2009, Michael Jerris wrote:<BR>> > Another useful advantage without the latency tradeoff is to read a<BR>> > full span or card every 1ms (or whatever sane interval) and chop up<BR>> > the bytes in userland. The latency argument dies if you are bridging<BR>> > to voip, so if you can handle bridging the tdm to tdm channels in<BR>> > kernel space, you could easily get away with 10ms reads to user space<BR>> > as well.<BR>> ><BR>> > Mike<BR>> <BR>> Hi,<BR>> <BR>> Got your point.<BR>> <BR>> In between:<BR>> <BR>> I see more in Jan's argument. 48x30 bytes = 1440 bytes, which is an <BR>> interesting size for full span E1.<BR>> <BR>> --HPS<BR>> <BR>> _______________________________________________<BR>> Freeswitch-dev mailing list<BR>> Freeswitch-dev@lists.freeswitch.org<BR>> http://lists.freeswitch.org/mailman/listinfo/freeswitch-dev<BR>> UNSUBSCRIBE:http://lists.freeswitch.org/mailman/options/freeswitch-dev<BR>> http://www.freeswitch.org<BR><BR><br /><hr />What can you do with the new Windows Live? <a href='http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowslive/default.aspx' target='_new'>Find out</a></body>
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