T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1365.1 | Good in performance, dangerous in studio | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | A wizard is someone who's been doing something for a week longer | Tue May 10 1988 11:35 | 30 |
| Active sensing is having a sending device transmit a code that signals
"I am alive and sane" every 1/3 second, if no other MIDI traffic
has happened in the meantime. A recieving device with active sensing
wants to see some sort of MIDI traffic every 1/3 second, whether
or not it's note traffic, pitch-bend, or just a "I'm alive" code.
If it doesn't see the traffic, it assumes the device immediately
upstream has crashed or the cable has fallen out, and it executes
an ALL NOTES OFF.
Why have this "feature"? Well, in certain performance situations,
it is much safer to have a keyboard go dead than to have a drone
sound continue, with no obvious shutoff method, for several minutes.
Performers can always switch to another keyboard when they realize
that they aren't getting any sound, whereas it's infeasible to go
around power-cycling all of your modules to kill the stuck note.
Can this cause you problems? Yep. Say you have a sound-generator
rackmount module that implements active sense on reception and you have
a controller keyboard that doesn't implement active-sense transmit.
Well, that rackmount and that controller won't talk correctly, because
no note on the rackmount will sound for longer than 1/3 second (because
the controller isn't sending "I'm alive and sane", the rackmount will
be timing out on active sense and executing an ALL NOTES OFF on any
sustain.
----------
N.B. Please somebody, check the amount of time on active sense.
I think it's 1/3 second but I could well be wrong.
|
1365.2 | That's one possibility. | PANGLS::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Tue May 10 1988 18:33 | 17 |
| > Well, that rackmount and that controller won't talk correctly, ...
Actually, the way I have always seen active sensing implemented,
a module will not freeze (kill all notes) after not seeing a message
for the prescribed period of time (I thought it was 600 ms) ONLY
if it has already seen an active sensing message. So if your master
doesn't transmit active sensing messages then things still work
because the slave module will never enter an ``active sensing mode''.
I don't think the MIDI spec requires one or the other of these
behaviors (the old syntax vs. semantics problem again), but the second
one seems more rational. I don't doubt that there are synths which
behave as Bill described, however, but I can't cite an example. My DX7
works as I described, and my other equipment doesn't seem to care.
Check your local paper for listings and further information.
Steph
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1365.3 | Here I am, No I'me Not | MINDER::KENT | But there's no hole in the middle | Wed May 11 1988 04:55 | 17 |
|
I have heard of a couple of wierd problems recently caused by active
sensing in a studio environment. One was mentioned earlier somewhere
in this file and related to using an FB01 with pro-24 which suggested
that all notes on the FB01 were clipped after .3 sec or so unless
the sequencer was running. Annoying but understandable I guess.
The second was a little wierder and came from the U.K. version of
MT. It said that Roland (Ithink it was a D50) has a standard of
sending an all "notes off" everytime that there is no keyboard key
being held down. The user was trying to record, also into an atari.
His left hand part and then his right hand seperately.
I guess you could imagine the result.
Paul
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1365.4 | MCS2 temporarily loses consciousness | AKOV88::EATOND | Where is he when the music stops? | Wed May 11 1988 09:49 | 33 |
| O.K., here's the specific problem behind my entering this topic.
I picked up a Yamaha MCS2, which is a device that allows midi continuous
and switch-type control for units that don't have them (i.e., my RD200). I
wanted to be able to sequence and play live leads with pitch bend and the like,
and also to be able to use breath control. This unit allows for control of
any control change (even those not yet defined). A variety of switches, foot
pedals and sliders may be mapped to any of the midi copntrol change parameters.
When I set it up at home, I noticed that the display would periodically
'blank out', and when that happened, no midi information would be allowed to
pass through it (it has two inputs, which are merged with the control info
produced internally, and outputs all to the MIDI OUT). I refigured the network
a number of times, all to no avail. Finally I checked the output of the
sequencer alone going into it, which I suspected as being the culprit (the MIDI
DJ is a somewhat mongrel device, having many non-standard features and quirks).
Nope, it wasn't causing the problem. Next I hooked the RD200 alone into the
MCS2. It happened. The RD200 was the transmiter that caused this device to
lose consciousness.
Next, I timed the intervals between blanking out states. They only
happened when the keyboard was not being played (suspect active sensing). The
intervals were varying. 8 seconds, 10 seconds, 20 seconds, 30 seconds, all at
random (or so it seemed, I didn't take more than 5 readings at a time). Since
the MIDI spec allocates 300 ms intervals, I don't know what to think of the
quirk.
Anyway, I was able to bring the beast back and get the store credit.
Anyone have a clue as to what might have been going on?
Dan
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1365.5 | Active Sense has bugs! | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | You're walking along the beach and you find a tortise... | Wed May 11 1988 12:15 | 37 |
| re: only activating the 300 ms sanity timer after seeing an active
sense message...
Depending on the implementation, you can still get nailed. Example:
You power up controller A, controller B, modules M and N, and
a MIDI router. Controller A sends active sense, controller
B doesn't. The modules set an internal flag saying active sense is
recieved and enables the 300 ms timer.
Initially, you have the router actively merging A and B, so
M and N see an active sense signal (from A). You then change patches
and now the router routes A to M and B to N.
But now N still has the timeout flag set, so it starts the timeout
timer. However, B doesn't send active sense so .3 seconds later,
module N goes silent. This happens repeatedly every time
an N chord is held for .3 sec.
----------
You say "Ahhh, you should turn on active sense transmission
on B". Well, if you do that, then you _lose_ the usefulness
of active sensing when A and B are merged. Say you're holding
a note on A and the A controller crashes. The B controller
continues to stave off active sense note-off and hence the note from
A stays stuck!!
A "better way" might be to enable the timeout whenever active sense
is seen- and _disable_ the active sense timeout whenever it actually
executes an all-notes-off. At least that way, during a live
performance, you'll get glitched (once) but not permanently nailed.
-Bill (who doesn't have any active sensing equipment)
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1365.6 | well, whadyaknow! | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | Baron of Graymatter | Tue May 17 1988 09:48 | 6 |
| I never even *heard* about active sensing until I read this file.
Then, I saw a software switch for it on my S-10. Haven't noticed
anything on my other stuff that supports it. But, maybe someday
I'll use/abuse it... ;-)
Steve
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1365.7 | This may be in the wrong topic, but ... | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Tue May 17 1988 16:50 | 5 |
| You can turn *OFF* active sensing on the KX76/88 boards by powering up
while depressing the MODE switch. This also disables MIDI clock, for
what it's worth.
-b
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1365.8 | No problem found, but it's still not working right... | AKOV68::EATOND | Where d' heck a' we! | Mon Jun 27 1988 09:44 | 43 |
| I've been dealing with this more, so I thought I'd open it up for
discussion...
Last Friday I called Roland Corp in CA to get some idea if my RD200 is
sending out bogus MIDI messages or 'spikes' that cause my other equipment
periodic heartburn. If you recall, certain other units in my setup were
reacting funny when hooked up to my RD - displays blanking out, missing or
stuck notes... Well, I hoped to find out if there was some kind of software
reset procedure to tell the RD to smarten up and leave the others alone.
No reset. They had never heard of a problem with the RD's.
They had made a suggestion that the active sensing implementation
between Roland and other manufacturers might have been the problem. Seems that
Yamaha's active sensing doesn't wait the full 300ms before activating (or
expecting) active sensing. I'm not really sure what problems that would create.
All I know is that the MCS-2 would blank out at random intervals. Could it be
that the MCS2 (Which I returned), my MIDI DJ (which has a seemingly different
approach to MIDI in many of its implementations) and my C64 all react to active
sensing differently than Roland expects of them?
Anyway, I found out I had a MIDI Monitor program this weekend and fired
it up in the C64 to watch what the RD was spitting out. It's kind of funny
watching the way different manufacturers implement the MIDI specs (there was a
long discussion about this elsewhere). The RD sends out a note on with velocity
value (which, btw, for a note-on command was never lower than 10). For
note-off's, it sent out a note on with a velocity of 0. And then, any time all
the keys were lifted, it would send out a control change 123, which I gather is
an ALL NOTES OFF command (not the same thing as active sensing).
Switching over to Yamaha (DX-21), it would send a note on, with velocity
of 64 (since it is a non-velocity-sensitive keyboard) and then a note-off
command. No ALL NOTES OFF command.
The point of the excercise was to find out if the RD was sending
strangeness out to the network, causing other devices to misfire. I didn't see
anything out of the ordinary. But I still can't get reliable results when I
plug the MIDI OUT of the RD to the MIDI IN of either the C64's sequencer or the
MIDI DJ sequencer.
Sigh.
Dan
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1365.9 | Syntax/semantics again. | PANGLS::BAILEY | | Mon Jun 27 1988 15:47 | 13 |
| I think that what the Roland guy suggested about the Yamaha equipment
[not waiting long enough for active sensing] is probably hog-wash.
This type of finger pointing always occurs in cross-vendor
compatability situations.
Either a note-off message or a note-on with zero velocity are valid
at the release of a note. The all-notes-off message when all the
keys are released is a cute idea. It should hardly be harmful one
way or the other, though.
How frequently do you get a glitch?
Steph
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1365.10 | | AKOV68::EATOND | Where d' heck a' we! | Mon Jun 27 1988 16:06 | 10 |
| re < Note 1365.9 by PANGLS::BAILEY >
Yeah, I sensed a bit of the 'it's their fault' syndrome...
The frequency of the problem is entierly random. When I had the MCS2,
I clocked it anywhere from 2 to 30 seconds (it was easy to clock because it made
the display blank out). And that was with NO MIDI network activity.
Dan
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1365.11 | How automatic all-notes-off can bite back | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | The brain of Homo Sapiens is mainly composed of cabling. | Mon Jun 27 1988 17:04 | 16 |
| All-notes-off whenever nothing is down is a _bad_ idea.
Here's why:
Scenario- two of these ANO keyboards, being played into a chain of
ESQ-M's (or any other module that supports overflow mode). Merging is
done either in an external box, or via a soft switch in the 2'nd
keyboard (merge MIDI-IN with KB onto MIDI-THRU)
Now, what happens when the second keyboardist lifts all fingers
when the first is holding a long, sustained chord? Why, the second
keyboard sends an all-notes-off, which silences the extended chord
from the first keyboardist, who now wonders if his sustain pedal
has a bad connector.
-Bill
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1365.12 | What good *is* active sensing? | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Mon Jun 27 1988 19:17 | 13 |
| Dan/Steve -
There are problems with Y-gear "turning off" if active sensing is
deemed to be improper. In other words, if Y-word gear sees active
sensing but can't "sync" or understand it, it will shut down.
I just read this in a Yahama manual the other day. Since the MCS was
shutting down on Dan, my guess is that the RD was sending something
that made the MCS become confused, sending into catatonia.
I wonder if there's a market for MIDI psychologists?
-b
|