This page will be deleted after the valid parts are moved to other places - the wiki aims to be an exhaustive reference, not a promo or a beginner's manual.
(parts about applications from here could be integrated into a use-case based page…)
These are just a few examples, more at apps.linuxaudio.org Not sure if a tool you need is available or don't know which one suits your needs best? Ask advise and user experiences on the forums or mailinglists!
Next to the many free open source audio software on Linux, there is also commercial audio software available for Linux. Some examples are:
More on commercial software and VST plugins here. Our efforts on our support channels (forum, wiki, IRC), is, as you'll understand, focusing mainly (but not exclusively) on the Free and Open Source software. For support on commercial software, we'd suggest you to go to the particular software support service offered by the companies.
Within audio production, most software has standardized on JACK/ALSA; however, several competing approaches towards general desktop audio still exist.
Audio drivers provide the OS with access to the audio hardware (onboard sound, sound cards/audio cards or external USB/FireWire devices). For quite a few years all applications communicated directly to the drivers, but many problems in real-world usage have emerged with this approach. Drivers are still essential – without drivers, there is no way for the OS to talk to hardware at all – but one or more layers are often used now between application and driver, and the result is very good if done well.
ALSA - the standard Linux audio interface today, for non-FireWire audio devices. It emulates OSS when required by applications.
FreeBoB/FFADO - interface for FireWire audio devices.
OSS - an audio interface that was formerly the standard in Linux. Its development is now continued outside the Linux kernel.
PulseAudio, GStreamer - these serve various desktop audio needs, and have lots of overlapping functionality, but are not specifically focussed towards audio production like JACK. Increasingly standard in distros is PulseAudio, it emulates others for compatibility, and is a straightforward route to get many essentials (e.g., Adobe Flash) to work easily.
JACK - conceptually similar to a patch panel. It pipes sound between different applications and is standard for most audio production apps. When Jack is used, applications connect to Jack, and Jack connects directly to audio drivers. It can provide very-low-latency communication, high-quality mixing of streams, excellent controllability, transport synchronization with built-in timestamp distribution, and other features essential for pro audio.
NetJack allows to send and receive JACK data on an IP network.
See also: Audio layers overview
Due to the modularity of the Jack audio infrastructure there is some demand for a single point where sessions can be saved and restored. Quite the collection of GUI session management systems exists: LADCCA and its successor LASH, ladish, JACK_Session, and the Non Session Manager. The Non Session Manager and the Ladish systems are known to be in heavy development with active support.
Another option is writing shell scripts that restore a session. A newbie introduction to this can be found here.
A more recent system using shell scripts with a tool called aj-snapshot, being used for live stage use, is documented here. GUI tools are used for patch design and confirmation, scripts are written to replicate the patches.
Linux-native plugins are fairly well standardized. Unfortunately, most softsynths on the freeware or commercial market are in VST form and thus are harder to use or less compatible.
LV2 Host - low level Linux audio plugin format.
LADSPA - predecessor of LV2 Host.
DSSI - a higher-level API extending LADSPA. Geared towards instruments rather than effects.
Vamp - audio analysis and feature extraction plugins.
VST - a commercial format that is supported through various wrappers.
Two MIDI systems coexist – Jack-Midi and Alsa-Midi. They are more elaborately explained in the corresponding FAQ section.
Numerous audio players exist for Linux. The few selected examples below are supposed to just give some useful hints besides the more comprehensive list of players. All the apps listed (except aplay) behave well with JACK, the otherwise popular VLC is omitted due to issues with its JACK output.
Dave Phillips Article The Linux Soundfile Editor Roundup perfectly covers this subject.
The category Soundfile Editors lists available software.
Sampling can be used in many ways. Playback of just one audio sample, triggered by a MIDI event, could for instance be done using the DSSI plugin trivial-sampler. More feature rich is e.g. Tapeutape, a midi controllable sampler designed for live performance. Hydrogen is a full featured sample based drum machiene, it allows to easily build custom sample kits from WAV and FLAC files. A tutorial for doing so is here.
FluidSynth is a command line application playing sf2 SoundFonts. There is a GUI called QSynth and there is FluidSynth-DSSI, a DSSI wrapper for fluidsynth, offering a GUI as well. Visit the SoundFonts page for more information and links to external resources.
Linuxsampler supports sample libraries in GIG, DLS, and Akai formats. For a GUI there is QSampler.
Swami allows editing Instrument formats such as SoundFont, DLS and GigaSampler.
There is an Article by Dave Phillips: Loop-based Music Composition With Linux. Part one covering use of Rosegarden and Freecycle, Part two covering Ardour and Audacity.
SooperLooper and Freewheeling, both well documented on their websites, are two applications very much dedicated to live looping.
While most onboard soundcards are supported under Linux, they usually don't give the quality required for more ambitious needs.
Whether a device is supported or not largely depends on the vendors' willingness to either comply to standards or publish the specs to Linux developers. If you have an unsupported device, feel free to contact the vendor and ask for Linux support—with growing user demand some might change their mind. For the lucky ones who are just planning to buy one there are many well supported soundcards to choose from.
For devices connected via the PCI, PCIE, PCMCIA or USB port the Alsa Soundcard Matrix lists the support status.
PCI devices usually give a good price/quality ratio. Devices with a breakout box allow to keep the analog signal away from the computer and all its electromagnetic emissions.
Most USB 1.0 cards are class compliant devices. All class compliant devices work under linux. USB 2.0 lacks an adopted standard, so it's up to the vendors again to publish their specs.
FreeBoB and FFADO are the drivers for FireWire cards. The FFADO project supersedes the FreeBoB project and adds support for many devices. Though FFADO does not yet provide a stable release it is reported to work very well. It is just rarely packaged for distributions so users are on their own installing it.
Applications are listed in the Applications section. As that list is quite complete it includes unmaintained and experimental software.
The examples introduced below are – if not stable (Ardour, ecasound) – at least well usable. This certainly doesn't mean the ones not mentioned here are necessarily unstable, some are e.g. just less popular or more specialised.
For most general composition needs a workstation keyboard combined with a MIDI sequencer such as Rosegarden will work fantastically. The keyboard can provide sounds through General MIDI; later, softsynths can be introduced to improve the production quality.
With USB MIDI, most devices will be recognized soon after they're plugged into a USB port and turned on. However, if they contain proprietary software (for patch editing or otherwise), and the software is only for Windows or OSX, that software may not work correctly.
A software-only studio has two problems to solve: softsynth availability, and low latency audio. Without resolving both, production will not be feasible.
If you want to get high quality notation or want to set more exotic scores (gregorian chants f. e.) your best bet is LilyPond.
Due to the flexible routing capabilities of the Jack Audio Connection Kit there is no need for synths to come in a plugin format. Any JACK-aware app is kind of a 'JACK plugin' and may recieve input from or send output to any other.
Three synthesizers – ZynAddSubFX, Phasex and Minicomputer – are introduced in the softsynths section of Lieven Moors Introduction to Linux & Audio The category Softsynths And Samplers lists many more.
LADSPA is the oldest audio plugin standard in Linux. The plugins do not have their own GUI, host applications can generate one. No LADSPA plugin makes up a full-featured softsynth, the majority are effect plugins as well as some signal generating ones.
With host applications like Alsa Modular Synth or gAlan, modular synthesizers can be built using LADSPA plugins. Both provide example patches for exploration.
DSSI, the Disposable Soft Synth Interface, is a higher-level API that builds on LADSPA. DSSI-plugins may (and mostly do) provide their own GUI. There are softsynths available, for instance nekobee, a Roland 303 emulatur, and hexter, emulating a Yamaha DX7.
The LV2-plugin standard is the most recent development. Since version 2.5 Ardour includes support for LV2.
VST/VSTi plugins are partially supported through various wrappers. See the FAQ for more detailed information.
For live electronic music and effects try Pure Data, a system related to MaxMSP.
Highest-Quality Non-Realtime-Synthesis, all kinds of synthesis flavors, still backward-compatible with the version from 1978 and many front-ends: CSound.
For an object-oriented, more general-programming-language-like syntax and live-coding abilities try SuperCollider or ChucK.
Linuxaudio is great, make sure you get the best out of it. It's impossible for us to keep the documentation up-to-date. So little annoying issues with a (combination) of certain software, are not documented and might cost you way too much time. Therefore, it's highly recommended to join one or more support channels, so you know what's going on in the world of Linuxaudio and are able to ask support for issues you're confronted with. Join our forum, the Linuxaudio mailing-list (LAU) or the support channels of the distribution you use (forum or mailing-lists). For most people it's the only way to find a pleasant workflow on Linux and get the best out of it! Do it!