manual/include/on-clock-and-time.html

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<p>
<dfn>Synchronization</dfn> in multimedia involves two concepts which are
often confused: <dfn>clock</dfn> (or speed) and <dfn>time</dfn> (location
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in time).
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</p>
<p>
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A <dfn>clock</dfn> determines the speed at which one or more systems
operate. In the audio world this is generally referred to as
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<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_clock" title="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_clock">Word Clock</a>.
It does not carry any absolute reference to a point in time: A clock is
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used to keep a system's sample rate regular and accurate.
Word clock is usually at the frequency of the sample rate&mdash;at 48&nbsp;kHz, its period is about 20&nbsp;μs. Word Clock is the most
common sample rate based clock but other clocks do exist such as Black and
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Burst, Tri-Level and DARS. Sample rates can be derived from these clocks as well.
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</p>
<p>
Time or <dfn>timecode</dfn> specifies an absolute position on a timeline,
such as <code>01:02:03:04</code> (expressed as Hours:Mins:Secs:Frames). It is
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actual <em>data</em> and not a clock <em>signal</em> per se.
The granularity of timecode is <dfn>Video Frames</dfn> and is an order of
magnitude lower than, say, Word Clock which is counted in
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<dfn>samples</dfn>. A typical frame rate is 25&nbsp;<abbr title="frames
per second">fps</abbr> with a period of
40&nbsp;ms.
In the case of 48&nbsp;kHz and 25&nbsp;fps, there are 1920 audio samples
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per video frame.
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</p>
<p>
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The concepts of clock and timecode are reflected in JACK and Ardour:
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</p>
<p>
JACK provides clock synchronization and is not concerned with time code
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(this is not entirely true, more on jack-transport later).
On the software side, jackd provides sample-accurate synchronization
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between all JACK applications.
On the hardware side, JACK uses the clock of the audio-interface.
Synchronization of multiple interfaces requires hardware support to sync
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the clocks.
If two interfaces run at different clocks the only way to align the
signals is via re-sampling (SRC&mdash;Sample Rate Conversion), which is
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expensive in terms of CPU usage and may decreases fidelity if done
incorrectly.
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</p>
<p>
Timecode is used to align systems already synchronized by a clock to
a common point in time, this is application specific and various
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standards and methods exist to do this.
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</p>
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<p class="note">
To make things confusing, there are possibilities to synchronize clocks
using timecode. e.g. using mechanism called <dfn>jam-sync</dfn> and a
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<dfn>phase-locked loop</dfn>.
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</p>
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<p>
An interesting point to note is that LTC (Linear Time Code) is a
Manchester encoded, frequency modulated signal that carries both
clock and time. It is possible to extract absolute position data
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and speed from it.
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</p>
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