![]() ![]() usr/lib/vst/carla.vst/carla-bridge-lv2.so usr/lib/vst/carla.vst/libcarla_interposer-jack-x11.so usr/lib/vst/carla.vst/libcarla_native-plugin.so : Ignoring LV2 plugin “Big Meter” because its buffer-size requirements cannot be satisfied. : MIDTest: no history file “/home/javier/Ardour/MIDTest/MIDTest.history” for this session. : Loading history from /home/javier/Ardour/MIDTest/MIDTest.history ![]() : Loading 88 MIDI patches from /usr/share/ardour5/patchfiles ![]() : Loading bindings from /etc/ardour5/ardour.keys I just tried that a couple of times but got these errors in the Ardour Log… : Ignoring LV2 plugin “Big Meter” because its buffer-size requirements cannot be satisfied. (You will also most likely find that any Windows plugins which rely on copy protection methods - especially hardware - will likely never (legitimately) work successfully and / or reliably on Linux) I’m not trying to be anti-linux or pro-windows, but believe me (as someone who develops professional audio software for - and uses - Linux, Windows and Mac) you will save yourself a lot of pain. The best OS to use for Windows plug-ins is Windows (it comes free with most PCs) and now Ardour runs on Windows too - so if for some reason you must use Ardour, the best place to do so with Windows VSTs would be on Windows. Even if they appear to work, the complexities of running software for a completely different OS is inevitably highly dependent on a lot of quirks, and therefore fundamentally less reliable / predictable than most of the native linux plug-ins (which some might say is actually quite an achievement in itself) There is absolutely nothing to be gained from trying to use Windows plug-ins on linux. ![]()
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