There are a number of ways to save Sessions in Ardour, so that each session can be use later on. The simplest way is to save the entire session just like you would save other documents: hitting Ctrl+S.
A new session is first saved at the moment you create it. While you are working on it, you should save it frequently. Get into the habit of hitting Ctrl+S (or Command+S on a Mac) every few minutes.
Avoid using any characters other than letters and numbers when naming your session. Avoid white spaces, accented letters, !@#$%*()+, periods, commas, etc. Use dashes or underscores if you like. For example, instead of “My Great Session!”, prefer “My_Great_Session”, or “MyGreatSession”, or “my-great-session”. Instead of “Açaí”, write “Acai” (without accented letters), etc. Once you have created your Ardour session, do not manually rename any folders or files that belong to the session.
The contents of a typical session’s folder on your hard drive might look something like this:
A bit of information about some of the components inside that folder:
my_session.ardour
. The session file is
periodically backed up by Ardour with a .bak
extension..history
file keeps a record of changes you have made during your
session, and is also periodically backed up.interchange
folder contains the actual audio data of all the regions
used in your session.export
folder is where exported files are saved by default.If double-clicking on the session file does not launch Ardour, use the standard method of first opening the application itself, then choosing a session from the Session Setup dialog.
If you need to move your Ardour session to another computer, or if you would
like to make a backup of it on an external drive, you must copy the entire
folder containing all of the files mentioned above. It is not enough to copy
just the *.ardour
file.
The convenient way to do so is to use Session > Archive...
command. A single
ZIP file with all data will be created. Please note that this will drop
snapshots, only the current state will be saved.
When copying an Ardour folder to another computer or drive, do not manually change its name or the name of any of the internal files.
Saving an entire allows you to open it again at a later time. However, if you would like to preserve a certain state that your is in, to be able to return to that state later on after you have made changes, then please continue to the next session called Saving a Snapshot.
Next: SAVING A SNAPSHOT