Problems, Bugs and Known Issues
Known Issues This section documents known issues with the all versions of Ardour up to and including 1.0. It is not a replacement for our bug tracking system, but instead summarizes some known issues that are likely to be encountered by users and are not in the process of being fixed. creating 3rd level feedback loops (e.g. bus 1 feeds bus 2 feeds bus 3; bus 3 feeds bus 1) may prevent a session from loading ardour's interpretation of "beats per minute" is different from most other programs and from convention. 1 "beat" is whatever the meter in effect defines. Thus, 120 bpm in a 4/4 meter is 120 quarter notes per minute; 120 bpm in a 3/8 meter is 120 eighth notes per minute. copying or cut-n-pasting two (or more) regions that have a crossfade between them to a new location or a new track does not copy the crossfade. Until a future version of Ardour changes this, you are advised to do region editing first, and create crossfades second. it is not possible to create pan automation control points using the mouse for stereo (or higher channel count) tracks and busses. you can create automation for these configurations by recording panning motion, and you can edit the data using the mouse. when importing an audio file directly into a track, there are no choices for the quality level of any necessary sample rate conversion. On any system that Ardour is running on, there is almost certainly a utility called sndfile-resample which uses the same sample rate conversion library as Ardour. This utility offers a great deal of control over the sample rate conversion process, including quality levels. Ardour uses the "best" quality internally. If you want a different quality, you can use this tool to produce a rate-converted file at the correct speed, and then import that into Ardour. when timestretch is used to alter the length of a region, any region-specific gain envelope is lost. The new region has the default unity gain throughout its duration. if you overdub on a playlist in an area containing cross-fades, the cross-fades will still be audible in spite of the newly overdubbed material being "on top" of them. Workaround is to mute or remove the crossfades before overdubbing. As a corollary to this, creating crossfades that span other crossfades will not work correctly in this version of Ardour.