Home of the jammr Community
You can now try installing jammr for Linux as a Flatpak:
https://flathub.org/apps/details/net.jammr.jammr
Information on setting up Flatpak is available here: https://flatpak.org/setup/
jammr has only been available for Ubuntu so far and we don't want to leave out
users of other Linux distributions. Flatpak is a way of publishing applications
so they run on any Linux distribution. Future releases of jammr will only be
available as Flatpaks.
If you use the JACK audio system Flatpak 1.6.1 or later is required.
Linux users, please let us know what you think and whether installing jammr as
a Flatpak worked for you!
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I know Ubuntu is not your target distro list, and I won't go off on a tangent on how 20.04 seems to have broken flatpak in the Software Center, but I'll post this as an FYI.
After some finagling with flatpak I was able to install the Jammr flatpak from the command line - never did get it to install from the Software Center. I blame Canonical, not Jammr, for that experience though.
I probably should have used –verbose so I'd have more info for you (perfectly willing to do that if you want) but the (command line) install went without incident and Jammr is running smoothly. I'll install the flatpak on Studio 19.10 a little laer today and give you that info as well.
Edited julian_vickers (May 4, 2020 13:31:56)
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julian_vickers
I know Ubuntu is not your target distro list, and I won't go off on a tangent on how 20.04 seems to have broken flatpak in the Software Center, but I'll post this as an FYI.
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Update for Ubuntu Studio 19.10. Unfortunately this is the oldest version of Ubuntu I have, and I think by this point Canonical was already busy breaking flatpak installs in the Software Center, so my experience was pretty much the same as 20.04 above. Software Center didn't cooperate even after installing the required flatpak packages for it, so a command line install had to be done. I will say again I am relatively certain this is an Ubuntu issue.
I did do a –verbose this time, and it was absolutely without any incident - no errors, no warnings, and Jammr runs on both my installs… so your flatpak works for both GNOME and KDE… at least on my setup.
Good job, stefanha
Edited julian_vickers (May 5, 2020 14:05:58)
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Thanks for testing it, julian_vickers!
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Hi friends
I've installed the flatpak package on Archlinux. I can't set with JACK.
Flatpak version is 1.10.2-1
Saludos amigos.
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stefanhaI made a test with Linux Mint 20 OS installed on an older laptop and jammr flatpak was installed automatically. It worked nice with an usb sound card with normal audio settings but I didn't succeed to use my midi controller with linux vst plugin. The scan button did not give any result. I found for testing a vst file with .so extension but it was not recognized.
Linux users, please let us know what you think and whether installing jammr as
a Flatpak worked for you!
Edited adi (March 28, 2021 12:04:14)
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abnervous
I've installed the flatpak package on Archlinux. I can't set with JACK.Flatpak version is 1.10.2-1
$ git clone https://github.com/wahjam/wahjam.git $ git checkout 1.3.0 $ qmake CONFIG+=jammr CONFIG+=qtclient $ make
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adi
I didn't succeed to use my midi controller with linux vst plugin. The scan button did not give any result. I found for testing a vst file with .so extension but it was not recognized.
$ flatpak run --device=all --filesystem=host net.jammr.jammr
$ flatpak ps Instance PID Application Runtime 3244912216 36300 net.jammr.jammr org.kde.Platform $ flatpak enter 3244912216 /bin/bash -l bash-5.0$ ldd .vst/TAL-NoiseMaker.so ldd: warning: you do not have execution permission for `.vst/TAL-NoiseMaker.so' linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffd7a1a9000) libfreetype.so.6 => /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libfreetype.so.6 (0x00007ffb70dce000) libX11.so.6 => /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libX11.so.6 (0x00007ffb70c86000) ...
Edited stefanha (March 29, 2021 07:49:15)
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Flatpak for Linux is now available for testing, offering a universal packaging format that simplifies app distribution across different Linux distributions. It allows developers to package their best internet providers applications with all dependencies, ensuring compatibility across various systems. Users can easily install and update apps without worrying about system libraries, making software management more efficient and seamless for Linux users.
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