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ZITA-NJBRIDGE(1)	    General Commands Manual	      ZITA-NJBRIDGE(1)

NAME
       zita-j2n,  zita-n2j - Jack clients to transport multichannel audio over
       a local network.

SYNOPSIS
       zita-j2n	[ options ] ip-address ip-port
       zita-n2j	[ options ] ip-address ip-port
       zita-j2n	[ options ] ip-address ip-port interface
       zita-n2j	[ options ] ip-address ip-port interface

DESCRIPTION
   General
       The zita-j2n (sender) and zita-n2j (receiver) applications allow	to ex-
       change up to 64 channels	of full-quality	uncompressed audio streams be-
       tween two or more systems running the Jack audio	 server.   Sender  and
       receiver(s) can each have their own sample rate and period size,	and no
       word clock sync between them is assumed.	The receiver uses adaptive re-
       sampling	to convert the audio stream(s) to its local sample rate.

       There  is  no master/slave relationship between sender and receiver(s).
       This is an explicit design goal.	In all respects	the net	result of  us-
       ing zita-njbridge is similar to having analog audio connections between
       the  sound  cards of the	systems	using it. Nothing a sender can do will
       affect the receiver(s), apart from the audio signals being available or
       reverting to silence if there is	no sender.  Xruns  or  skipped	cycles
       will not	affect the synchronisation or resampling. Jack freewheeling on
       either end will temporarily suspend operation.

       Zita-njbridge  can  be  used  in	 two ways: one-to-one, or one-to-many.
       Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported.

       For a one-to-one	setup the first	 form  of  the	commands  shown	 above
       should  be  used.  The protocol used is UDP and the ip-address argument
       required	for both sender	and receiver is	that of	the receiver.  A  host
       name  can  be  used  instead  of	 a numerical IP	adresses, this will be
       looked up using getaddrinfo().

       For a one-to-many setup the second form must be used The	ip-address ar-
       gument should be	a valid	multicast address, and the mandatory interface
       argument	selects	the network interface to be used.

   Resampler filter length.
       The receiver uses the zita-resampler library to resample	signals	to its
       local rate. The length of the multiphase	low-pass filter	used  as  part
       of the resampling algorithm determines the audio	bandwidth, and adds to
       latency.	 It  can  also	have  a	significant impact on CPU load if many
       channels	are received.

       Zita-njbridge will select a filter length based on  the	lower  of  the
       sender  and  receiver  sample  rates.  For sample rates of 44.1 Khz and
       above the value chosen will result in an	attenuation of	no  more  than
       0.1 dB up to 20 kHz. The	--filt option allows to	override the automatic
       configuration, but this will normally not be necessary.

   Latency issues.
       When  connecting	two Jack systems with unsynchronised periods the mini-
       mum additional latency under worst case conditions is the  sum  of  the
       two period times. Additional latency means any latency required to make
       the  connection work without interruption.  The round-trip latency from
       an ideal	(zero excess latency) analog input on the sender to  an	 ideal
       (idem)  analog  output  on the receiver will be twice this value. Worst
       case conditions means that the both sender and receiver can run at  ar-
       bitrary times within their respective periods.

       Zita-njbridge  is designed to provide a defined and constant additional
       latency.	The target value is the	sum of the two	periods,  plus	resam-
       pling delay, plus any extra buffering specified by the user. The	actual
       latency	will  be this value plus the average network delay. The	latter
       is unknown so there is no way to	compensate for it. This	would be  pos-
       sible  using either a return channel, or	some way to sync clocks	on the
       two systems which could then be used to measure the average network de-
       lay. The	current	release	of zita-njbridge does not provide this	as  it
       is  meant for use on a local network. A dedicated or lightly loaded gi-
       gabit Ethernet can provide typical network delays  well	below  a  mil-
       lisecond.

       The --buff option of zita-n2j adds the specified	number of milliseconds
       to  the	target	latency. The default value is 10 ms which is more than
       enough on a moderately loaded Gigabit local network. This can be	set to
       zero, for example when it is known that the sender will always run near
       the start of its	Jack period and	the network delay jitter is less  than
       this period.

       If  there  is any network delay jitter above 10ms, increasing the extra
       buffer time will	be necessary to	avoid occasional interruption  of  the
       received	audio streams.

       The  latency does not depend on the when	exactly	the sender runs	within
       its Jack	period.	This is	similar	to playback to a soundcard:  when  the
       playback	samples	are written well before	they are due this does not de-
       crease  the latency, the	data is	just buffered until the	end of the pe-
       riod. In	the case of zita-njbridge the remaining	time is	available  for
       network	delay. This is why, when the sender is only lightly loaded and
       network delay is	small, it is possible to  use  --buff  0  at  the  re-
       ceivers.

   Use on wide area or wireless	networks.
       The  current  implementation  is	 designed to be	used on	local networks
       that provide more or less reliable delivery of  packets,	 with  low  or
       moderate	 delay.	Occasional lost	packets	will not impact	the synchroni-
       sation or resampling, but any samples arriving out of order will	be ig-
       nored (they will	have been replaced by silence before). Extra buffering
       (using the --buff option) will allow an	uninterrupted  signal  in  the
       presence	 of  delay  jitter,  at	the price of additional	latency. Zita-
       njbridge	may be usable on long distance internet	connections, but  keep
       in mind it was not designed for this.

       Performance  on	wireless  networks is purely a matter of chance. Again
       zita-njbridge is	not designed for such use.

OPTIONS
   Common options
       --help
	      Print command line and options summary.

       --jname name
	      Select the Jack client client name.  Default  is	'zita-j2n'  or
	      'zita-n2j'.

       --jserv server
	      Select the Jack server to	connect	to.

       --ipv4 --ipv6
	      Use only the specified IP	address	type.

   zita-j2n options
       --chan channels
	      The number of channels to	transmit, the default is 2 channels.

       --16bit
	      Send audio as 16-bit signed integer samples.

       --24bit
	      Send audio as 24-bit signed integer samples. This	is the default
	      format.

       --float
	      Send  audio  as  32-bit  floating	point samples (Jack's internal
	      format).

       --mtu MTU
	      Inform zita-j2n of the path MTU, allowing	it to use  packets  up
	      to  that	size.  The  default value is 1500. Note	that large MTU
	      values on	a shared network may increase network delay jitter.

       --hops hops
	      Set the maximum number of	hops for multicast packets.   Defaults
	      to one, i.e. multicast is	to the local net only.

   zita-n2j options
       --chan list
	      A	 list  of channels numbers in ascending	order and separated by
	      comma or dash characters,	the latter indicating a	range.	 Chan-
	      nel  numbers start at 1. Only the	requested channels will	be re-
	      sampled and have a corresponding Jack port.  Channels  not  pro-
	      vided  by	 the  sender  will output silence. The default channel
	      list is '1,2'.

       --buff time
	      Increase the target latency by the given time, in	 milliseconds.
	      The default is 10	ms. See	the description	above for what exactly
	      this means.

       --filt delay
	      Set  the	resampler filter delay,	in samples at the lower	of the
	      two sample rates,	in the range 16..96. See above for details.

       --info
	      Print additional diagnostic information.	Four  values  will  be
	      printed four times per second: the number	of jack	periods	during
	      the last 1/4 second, the average resampler control loop error in
	      frames,  the  average resampler ratio correction and the minumum
	      number of	frames available in the	receive	buffer.

AUTHOR
       zita-j2n, zita-n2j and this manual page were written by Fons Adriaensen
       <fons@linuxaudio.org>.

				   July	2014		      ZITA-NJBRIDGE(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=zita-n2j&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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