Right click on MULAB.exe -> open with wine (checkbox 'always open with this app' then you can open *.exe with a double click). Leave all other soundclients unchecked, confirm.Ĭopy the content of the MuLab archive to your home. If not, all you need to do is to click the checkbox ALSA in the 'Sound' tab.
The ALSA Raw MIDI support is mostly enabled by default. MIDI I/Os can be enabled with winecfg, a graphical interface for some WINE configurations. See the readme.txt of the WineASIO64 binary. See the readme.txt of the WineASIO binary.Ħ4bit version: You must start the 'jackbridge' with 8 fixed I/O for connecting with wineasio clients. wineasiocfg in your home dir and insert this: Register the wineasio driver in the Wine registry (with any terminal emulation):ģ2bit version: If you need more then two WineASIO I/O, make a file named. If you can't find this in your package manager, try this "universal" binary archives: Install wineasio with your package manager. Go to for more info.Īt least you need to have a running JACK system and WINE (->1.0).
The ways how to use Windows VST software are documented and supported by JackLab for openSUSE ( )įor Ubuntu you can use the Ubuntustudio metapackage for to have a kernel-rt and some audio apps for creative users. WineAsio is a simple translator telling Windows applications that they have a working ASIO driver, needed for realtime audio support. One of the good things about a VST host driven by WINE/WineASIO is that we can use nearly 90% of the existing Windows VST plug-ins. Although there is no official MuLab for Linux version (yet?), here is a possible way to use MuLab on Linux, thanks to Michael Bohle from JackLab: