Questions & Answers

closed CPU multicore support is needed. Especially for Multi Instruments.

+1486 votes
22,210 views
asked Sep 30, 2016 in Completed Feature Requests by LBH (4,330 points)
closed May 23, 2019 by lawrencefarr
Feature request.
CPU multicore support is needed. Especially for Multi Instruments.
closed with the note: 4.5

43 Answers

+106 votes
answered Nov 9, 2016 by LBH (4,330 points)
selected Nov 20, 2016 by ghasenbeck
 
Best answer
Actually it looks like it's more of a distribution of the load between CPU cores/ threads/ hyperthreads issue. The load distribution is uneven and unstable.
Especially Studio Ones Multiinstruments put most load on a single core even if there are more applications that could be distributed to other cores. This makes bad use of a CPU.
+53 votes
answered Oct 1, 2016 by LBH (4,330 points)
edited Dec 16, 2016 by LBH
Perhaps i should add, that for instance one instance of MAI TAI and other quality plugins allready can max out a single core. So when multiinstruments also only use one CPU core, then we easily are in deep trouble. MAI TAI alone could use multicore support.

By a request in this thread https://forums.presonus.com/viewtopic.php?f=213&t=22791 i add this here as i could'nt edit the request, and could'nt create a new answer.:
 

The distribution to the multiple cores is not working well.
Most load is put on CPU Core 0 even when using multiinstruments, and/or when using multiple plug-ins and actualy in generel. The overall CPU efficiency in Studio One will be highly improoved if this CPU core distribution issue for multicore and hyperthreading CPU's get fixed, no matter how you use Studio One.
Please read the thread and the comments below in this request.

Feel free to describe things your self in an answer.
+13 votes
answered Feb 16, 2017 by williamcook1 (1,630 points)
I do know that Kontakt 5 runs terribly in Studio One compared to Cubase and Logic.  I'm assuming maybe this is the same reason?  I'm not "computery" enough to know why I have to raise my buffer to max to use Kontakt, but it's unacceptable given how decent my computer is and 32 GB of ram.
+8 votes
answered Feb 17, 2017 by LBH (4,330 points)
@Williamcook1

Yes i think it can the same issue with Kontakt. Especially if you use Kontakt as a multiinstrument using more instruments in one instance.
The problem is Studio One put all the load on a track on one CPU core as it is now. The track load need to be distributed between CPU cores to be efficient.

Presonus should at least have made it so with Studio One 3 when they introduced things like their own Multiinstruments, FX features, MAI TAI and Presence XT as major sales points.
+11 votes
answered Apr 5, 2017 by violetpow (1,150 points)

I agree with anybody, that S1 3.4 does not use the CPU efficient. In my case its more the balance between the CPU cores.

I'm working with a 6 core Mac Pro 2013 and for example a "only Audio Tracks" song with several plugins in different tracks uses first 1 core and if the core is maxed out, then it uses the other. But why not like in Logic or Live where the cores are spread around the tracks. In Live i know that it uses first one core per track (i.e. 4 channels for 4 cores) and afterwards more tracks will be spread the tracks to the cores on top. I wonder why S1 is so behind with its "modern codebase"

+13 votes
answered Apr 11, 2017 by matthewcasey (470 points)
I am maxing out one core with pretty lightweight projects and it is causing audio glitches.  Also, the CPU usage meter seems to display only the load on one core rather than the aggregate balanced usage of all cores.  Nothing really extensive or knowledgable to add, other than to request this be updated to a more usable configuration.
+29 votes
answered May 7, 2017 by scmrecordings (1,520 points)

First, let me say that I completely agree that the CPU efficiency in Studio One is definitely behind that of other DAWs.  Coming from Sonar and Pro Tools, I would say Sonar, at least, is 2-4 times more efficient than Studio One with large projects.  Sonar just did a huge overhaul of it's CPU efficiency and specifically it's multi core efficiency and it's just incredibly powerful now.  I see no reason why Studio One shouldn't be able to do the same.  Also, I believe Sonar has a feature that temporarily bypasses plugins automatically during playback for tracks that have no content or something like that.  Really smart way to save CPU.  So yes, PLEASE update the engine to be more CPU efficient!

All of that said, I love Studio One so much I just can't get away from it. cheeky

But I'm writing here for another reason that hopefully helps people until CPU efficiency is fixed.

I came to this thread and (the other similar feature request) when I searched CPU spikes in Studio One on Google.  I was having horrible CPU spikes that would only show up with larger projects and it was driving me insane.  I'm running an I7 6800k with 64gb of Ram, multiple SSDs, etc. and should not be having random CPU spikes.  I tried running Latency Mon, disabling all my drivers, reinstalling Studio One, killing all my processes, Disabling C states and EIST in BIOS - everything I could find.  Still, the spikes were killing my workflow and making it really hard to get stuff done.

I had read in a few places about disabling Turbo Boost in BIOS (and Turbo Boost Max) but had decided that there was no way I was going to sacrifice CPU power.  Well, it got bad enough that I decided to try it and VOILA - for the first time ever for me in Studio One - NO CPU SPIKES!

My CPU is about 10-15% higher without Turbo Boost on but finally I have rock solid consistent numbers.  If it's hovering at 35%, it will go up and down maybe 3% but that's it.  Before it would spike to 100 every second or so.  This should be considered a bug in it's own right because no user should have to go into BIOS and disable a CPU feature hat makes it run a lot faster but at least I have a fix that allows me to get work done.

Anyway, I know this was a super long post but this helped me so much and I figured it could help some of you out there as well - at least until the CPU issues with Studio One get ironed out.  Have fun!

+13 votes
answered Aug 2, 2017 by lorenzosempio (750 points)
edited Aug 2, 2017 by lorenzosempio
Totally Agree!

 

I did many tests in Studio One 3.5.1 and I came to the conclusion that Studio One DOES NOT use more CPU than other DAW's, simply it is UNABLE to use the same amount of CPU as other DAW's and to spread the calculations over multi-cores;

 

comparing to Digital Performer on the same 8 core Mac Pro :

 

I can push S1 to an activity monitor CPU usage of 350% with the cores going from 35 to 70 % each (measured with menu meters app)

 

DP can load a ton more plugins and arrive to an activity monitor CPU usage of 600% with the cores going from 71 to 85 % each

 

after that both apps give me dropouts

 

this is the only reason I'm not switching to S1 as my main daw !!!

so what's up?
+29 votes
answered Sep 11, 2017 by pauldecesare (5,720 points)
Wait, WHAT? In 2017, S1 is not true multi-core? I cant even wrap my head around that. I've been doing small piano & vocal projects so S1 has been a dream. I'm now finally going down the road of film scoring and Orchestration and have fully planned on S1 being my DAW... This is really disappointing. Here I thought my 6-core i7 and 64gb ram investment had given me a great starting environment, yet the DAW can't do it.

PreSonus: you have a huge dedicated user base. This is 2017, no multi core support is insane. Please make this #1, you really owe your fans that one.

I never understood why in polls Studio One doesn't rank higher. This amazing DAW should be blowing the competition out of the water. Now I know why. Ugh.
+8 votes
answered Sep 27, 2017 by alancloughley (3,060 points)
I've experienced the same problem with big Kontakt instrument libraries and even VST plugs on audio channels. Small projects with the CPU in windows are sitting at under 20% but maxing out the performance of a core causing sessions to be unusable. Is this fixed in 3.5? As suggested turbo off in the BIOS seems to make things a little better. It would make a huge difference if Studio One performed better with VST instruments and FX, that in combination with the new 3.5 dropout protection would be a killer combo! Awesome product in so many ways, I've been using it for a year or two now and nothing else bad to say about it, best DAW I've come across in almost every respect. Some new projects need a little more grunt though and something that works on the hardware I have so will probably end up using another DAW until this is sorted.
+6 votes
answered Dec 18, 2017 by PreAl (2,710 points)
A tip for Kontakt users. Delete any convulution reverbs from plugin presets, that kills CPU in Kontakt. Set up a bus in Studio One for reverb.
+8 votes
answered Jan 22, 2018 by simonmatele (300 points)
Wow, didn't know it was this bad.

Either Presonus release a fix for this ASAP, or I will sell my Pro license and go for a modern DAW to host my plugins.

This and the inability to sync (Ableton Link support please) to other apps and platforms.

Hello?
+2 votes
answered Jan 26, 2018 by davidbaker3 (300 points)
I do not yet run Studio One 3 on a PC and this is not the fix, but if on a PC you can try something like Process Lasso. You can assign CPU priority, memory priority and I/O priority, etc.

This isn't going to utilize cores more effectively but will allows you to give it more priority on your machine.

Also, make sure there is no power profile running that can limit access to the cores. If in doubt you can assign the number of cores during boot using msconfig->advanced->boot. To make sure the OS is hitting them all, Task Manger->Performance->right click on the CPU graph and select 'logical processors' and it should show all the cores as they run.
+8 votes
answered Feb 16, 2018 by Rico Sergeant (990 points)
+1 On this request, the one thing I find really bad on Studio One is the CPU performance generally, I have a powerful mac pro but it is still very bad compared to all the other daw's, so if this would help then it gets my vote.
+9 votes
answered Feb 27, 2018 by neiljordan1 (18,370 points)
Would definitely love to see this. Getting pretty frequent momentary CPU spikes on even simple sessions - often just when it's sitting idle!
+3 votes
answered Mar 21, 2018 by alexandergleich (4,780 points)
I didn’t know it’s actually that bad ... I’ll stick with Ableton Live and DP 9 then until this and the so-so MIDI implementation are fixed. I rely heavily on Kontakt for composition and sound design.
+1 vote
answered May 23, 2018 by neiljordan1 (18,370 points)
Has anyone been able to review so far and confirm if this is improved in Studio One v4?
+10 votes
answered May 24, 2018 by soupiraille (1,480 points)

Unfortunately, it seems according to tests that Studio One 4 didn't improve on the subject; v4.0 and v3.5 behave the same, which is an IMMENSE shame.

It's a load balancing issue with BUS and FX channels; load balancing with TRACKS does work. 

If you want to have more technical clues about the issue, head over to this thread I created a few months ago: https://forums.presonus.com/viewtopic.php?f=151&t=28204

+5 votes
answered May 24, 2018 by diapasonprodues (2,560 points)
edited May 24, 2018 by diapasonprodues

Copying over from another related thread. Not sure about Multi Instruments, but I achieved pretty even usage across cores with a simple change in settings.

.

.

Just built a system with a 8700k all cores running at 5GHZ but Studio One is only using 80% one thread and ~15% all other 11 threads!! Imagine the POWER it can achieve if it could use all cores equivalently!

This is still way better than my previous systems (4th gen i7). The new system runs a full session of nearly 100 tracks with full editing, mixing and mastering online, in realtime, with several pretty heavy plugins, melodyne, audio bend, and multiple virtual instruments, with barely any clicks and dropouts. But "barely" is still not enough, I want to be able to activate the Softube Tape MixFX without deactivating anything else and still hear clean playback.

[ HINT (Solution) !!! ]
Right after typing my previous, I was reading on the web about this and had an idea. To decrease the buffer size of my audio device (StudioLive 32). Because I read presonus saying multicore was improved when they introduced the Dropout Protection and Low input monitoring (v3.5) and it separates the processing in different process blocks or something like that. I previously had SLive at 2048 samples and maximum dropout protection, when getting those results I mentioned before. But noticed the processing tab in SOne Options does not enable multiple block sizes when set up like that. I thought hey let's try putting SLive at 128 samples. And voila, my thread that was previously getting 80% usage was a little lower, and all other cores were a little higher. Already no more clicks and dropouts. So I though hey maybe if I set the hardware's block size as big as I can while not disabling Dropout Protection multiple block sizes, it works even better! So now my SLive is at 1028, and SOne at maximum dropout protections says 2048 samples block size, and I can see different monitoring latencies below that. Result is now I see half the threads running higher moving all over the place within 30%~50% usage, the other half is at about 30% usage, and that thread that was previously 80% usage is most often a bit higher than the others but never over 60%.
Since I observed I start to get a few clicks&pops when the highest usage thread gets to about 80%, I can say I now have those 20% spare room to add even more before realtime playback gets glitchy. I am running that same whole huge session even with mix fx softube tape active (which is VERY HEAVY on the CPU). BEAUTIFUL! Everything is online and running in realtime with zero glitches.
SET YOUR AUDIO DEVICE BLOCK SIZE LOWER THAN 2048 AND DROPOUT PROTECTION TO MAXIMUM.
(You should see different monitoring latencies for standard and low latency in the table at Options > Audio Setup > Processing. Looks like to me that setting the device's block size to the same number as the process block size causes Studio One to not use the multicore optimization from Studio One v3.5. Maybe they could fix that to still use multiple processing blocks even when the two blocks are the same size? Or perhaps set Process Block Size to 4096? Or maybe it is just that the Audio Device's buffer is still single-core and only the "virtual" internal processing buffer has been multicore optimized? In that case, is it possible to also optimize de Audio Device's buffer so we can get multicore efficiency even when not using Dropout Protection to have a bigger processing block size than the device's?)

+8 votes
answered May 30, 2018 by brconflict (2,040 points)
Has this CPU issue been addressed in Studio One 4? Other than being able to copy a mix from song to song, CPU performance is single biggest issue I have, where CPU Core 1 is picked on more than the other cores, regardless what I do. Even disabling Hyper-threading had no impact. I have no desire to gain more features until I can work on a mix without CPU issues. I'm having to use Sonar for some songs as a result. Sorry, I don't mean to troll, I just feel this thread has been voted highly, but I don't see it addressed at all in S1 4 notes/features.
+3 votes
answered Jun 1, 2018 by mathisgerard (200 points)
I have an AMD FX8350 and S1 use 60% when my task manager show me 10%. It's just unacceptable and i think that S1 3 will no longer be updated now with the version 4.

(sorry if my English is bad i'm french :) )
+4 votes
answered Jun 7, 2018 by brconflict (2,040 points)

Workaround to try:

So, Waves offers the SoundGrid Impact Server (I have one of the new models on pre-order; I need the CPU). However, if you use Waves, Flux, Sonnox, and maybe one or two others' plugins, if you're only needing a few plugins to be offloaded to other CPU cores, try this:

1) Download the Waves SG Studio and Studio Rack. Install them. They're free.

2) Follow instructions for installation and deployment into your DAW as normal. The only difference is, you will use your Local CPU, not an external SG Server.

When you add the Studio Rack to your plugin Chain on a channel and then add Waves plugins to it, the Studio Rack will balance the plug-in(s) across all CPU cores you have. Unfortunately, some plugins are just simply too heavy (Waves Abbey Road Plates, or CLA Signature plugins, for example) for this, so you could only use maybe one or two of them, but others can be added pretty easily. 

+7 votes
answered Jun 14, 2018 by axxessdenied (380 points)
C'mon presonus please fix this ! :(
+2 votes
answered Jun 16, 2018 by bennyr1 (2,620 points)
it seem studio one synths work only with AVX support in CPU good. My old CPu i5 760 4*2.8 GHZ have no AVX, only sse. the multi instrument fifths symphonie need when press 1 key 70% CPU. when press another key fast after release, it crackle horible and cpu load get near 100%. now with the i5 8600k with 6*4.1 GHZ i can use 7 fifths symphonie tracks that all play own fifths symphnie multi instrument and never get mor than 40% CPU load even if notes are fast repeat. i test with s1 4

only problem i get is that every 5-10 sec a click happen. happen in windows audio 20 ms latency and asio soundblaster z Asio with 10 ms. asio with 20 ms work good. dropout protection minimal give best results. with other settings get cpu load 100 % and sometimes instead 1 click there happen 5 or more clicks in series until it work ok. but all in all the instruments i use in songs work good. so with fast cpu that support AVX need no multicore support
+1 vote
answered Jun 18, 2018 by bennyr1 (2,620 points)
I get now with 7 fifths symphonie tracks no crackle and CPU load is around 30%. before the CPU clock down with intel speed step. which is enable by default. when set in windows prefs power plan, high performance solve the problem. i find only fast this for win 7. but is in win 10 same https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/9090/learning-windows-7-manage-power-settings/

it is amazing how fast s1 synths can be. my old pc have also crackle on high performance. so i tried it first not.
+1 vote
answered Jul 1, 2018 by brconflict (2,040 points)

Something to try when plug-ins cause drop-outs due to high-CPU:

Tested in 3.5:

If your sampling rate is 96Khz, it will require more CPU for your modeled plugins, such as Waves Abbey Road Reverb Plates (up to 30% CPU). Studio One can tolerate, in some cases, a lower clock speed. If you set your external clock speed to 48Khz, and set the song itself to 48Khz, you can still playback the audio and gain more CPU for the plug-ins. When you're ready to export the mixdown, simply switch back to 96Khz, and export. I don't recommend recording at different clock speeds.
 

+5 votes
answered Jul 3, 2018 by jonahwalton (500 points)
Have these issues been fixed in S1 v4? It's not good business when a company completely ignores its users and doesn't even acknowledge...
+8 votes
answered Aug 13, 2018 by cephasstorm (310 points)
Why is this not fixed? It has almost been two years! And it the most requested item and yet no one seems to care, why PreSonus?? I have so many random CPU spikes for no apparent reason, I have to often close and reopen the program and it is quickly making me reconsider this program and switching to Sonar or something. I use Kontakt and Izotope Nectar very frequently and yet every time I have either of them open, I am forced bounce the tracks or else I cant get anything done. The worst part is, when Study One is freaking at 100% CPU usage, my computer says it is using less than 20%. Please, please fix this! I love program, but this is quickly becoming a deal breaker for me. Stop the new, shiny features and fix the core (get it?) issue!
+3 votes
answered Aug 16, 2018 by LaurynasG (1,280 points)
Agree! My work is usually recording so I don't need a lot of plugins but cpu load is really uneven.
+8 votes
answered Aug 29, 2018 by pauldecesare (5,720 points)

It's 8/29/2018, I'm on Studio One 4 Pro, and I recently rebuilt my tower with an i9-7940X which is 14 cores/28 threads. I loaded up one of the demo songs from Phat Hat with dozens of tracks and I set the Block Size at 16 so the CPU would get hit the hardest during playback. All 28 threads in the Win 10 Performance Monitor showed activity, EVENLY, all the way across. Please correct me if I'm wrong but are people still saying Studio One isn't true Multicore? Core #1 wasn't getting hit any harder than #28. Now granted, the i9 is a serious powerhouse, and even at a Device Block Size of 16 I have no crackling and 3.74ms latency, but that's because Studio One is using ALL threads evenly, at least in my world. Granted, the CPU load in Perf Mon is 1t 5% and Studio One's monitor says 14% but that's not a showstopper. Now, If I'm completely missing it and we all know Studio One is a multicore DAW finally, then disregard this goofball post. But if someone is still trying to say they aren't getting multicore performance, maybe the age of the motherboard and processor being used needs to be considered. OR, is it an issue on OSX? Because Win 10 in my world is fine. You may commence throwing darts my way now. cool

+2 votes
answered Aug 31, 2018 by robertgray3 (42,610 points)
Thanks pauldecesare!

It sounds like it has been improved some on Windows for sure. I’m going to be upgrading to the iMac Pro soon so I should be able to compare allocation on Mac OS X between two different CPUs.
+1 vote
answered Oct 4, 2018 by alanbranch (690 points)
Logic uses 1 Channel strip per core I presume Studio One is the same is it not? I think thats limitation of DAW mixing, they can't code for a single channel strip to access multi cores.
+15 votes
answered Oct 19, 2018 by tesluk (490 points)
Switched over to Studio One Pro 4 on Windows 10 Pro from Logic Pro in the summer of 2018. Built a 16-core i9 7960X, 64GB RAM spaceship to run S1 on. Bottom line: in no way does S1 take advantage of this extremely powerful multicore system. Running one instance of Omnisphere and a few UAD plugins almost pegs the CPU meter. You know what DAW does take full advantage of multicore? Reaper. Yeah, that's right. The $60 shareware. Running a dozen instances of Omnisphere and dozens of UAD plugins on Reaper 5.9.3 shows CPU usage of less than 5%. Rock solid, with no glitches or spikes. I like many things about Studio One, in particular its intuitive workflow, Melodyne integration and sophisticated quantize functionality, but its abject lack of multicore capability is a definite dealbreaker. I'm rooting for you, Presonus, but I will be selling my license if this major structural problem is not fixed soon. It makes the DAW unusable.
+8 votes
answered Nov 20, 2018 by neiljordan1 (18,370 points)
This one now has so many votes, the website can't even display the number properly!

Definitely an indication of what S1 users want most of all. Here's hoping it's in v4's near future. Surely with this much focus, PreSonus have someone looking into all the great research people have done here... right!?

I, for one, think there are some great ideas for new features on here, but would be happiest to see what is already a great tool made more stable & efficient.
+5 votes
answered Dec 7, 2018 by pablohernandez7 (460 points)
This is improvement that would probably see more people switching to S1. There are people who do not use just because it appears to be a heavy on the processors. This is really noticeable especially if you are using non-native compressors, etc. I would like to see this. If not, an overall improvement of the CPU usage.... Virtual Instruments are taking over.
+2 votes
answered Dec 8, 2018 by aurelngo (770 points)
It's been 2 years. I recently bought my copy months ago. I will sell my license before the middle of next year if this doesn't get solved. No reason for this. I'm on OSX Mojave.
+5 votes
answered Jan 22, 2019 by ionian (2,110 points)

Definitely a frustrating thing.  I just went to move an older project from Sonar over to S1 4.1.2 and with all the same VIs and audio tracks, the project hit about 20% in S1, meanwhile the same exact project in Sonar was between 2 and 3% and the multi-core meters were barely even appearing.  

The one thing Sonar definitely has down to a science is using multi-core in a DAW environment.

+6 votes
answered Jan 25, 2019 by gordonseward (270 points)
Another Sonar covert here - I have added my name to the feature request

Really enjoying Studio One, but recently stumbled over this problem when inserting one instance of Mai Tai on a track

also getting the same problem with Kontakt - I have a newish I7 7700k 4.2ghz pc with 16 gb Ram it seems a bit silly that the cpu meter is spiking when monitoring such a small load - hope they fix it soon!!

Great to be using a DAW that doesn't fall down all the time though

Gordon
+3 votes
answered Mar 3, 2019 by robinsteinbach (320 points)
Good idea. Hopefully the start-up time will also increase by improving this. It's really slow. Even with my ryzen 2700 CPU and gtx 1070 it takes about 30 seconds.
+5 votes
answered Apr 8, 2019 by alekseymartynenko (1,660 points)
I now have a Core i9 10 core monster processor, but S1 can't utilize more than 50% of it's power! This definitely needs to be improved.
+4 votes
answered May 11, 2019 by miratonemoog (320 points)

That was 2016 !!!angry
... still no multicore and no NKS !!!
... either hire more people or work overtime, or qualify higher, but that's business damaging!
... I'll try it again with Cubase 10pro, which was down to lousy V.9.0 in free fall, and S1 could have been V3.5 through V4, Number.1 of all DAWs, but Steinberg got it, and Presonus slept !

+2 votes
answered May 21, 2019 by neiljordan1 (18,370 points)
edited May 21, 2019 by neiljordan1
Really looking forward to hearing how much this has been improved with the CPU enhancements in v4.5.
+5 votes
answered May 21, 2019 by alancloughley (3,060 points)
I downloaded the S1 4.5 update and have to say well done Presonus for giving us a minor performance boost in 4.5 release very much appreciated and a step in the right direction, nothing to complain about this is a good start. Although very much appreciated in a real world scenario however it's not dramatic. I get a drop of roughly 10% on the performance meter across busy projects but sadly it still leaves me disabling VSTs or struggling to play a couple of VSTs when there's a few VST FX on each channel of a typical 30-40 track project. I was hoping for more but happy there's been an improvement so big thank you from me.Some other great little improvements to what is already an awesome DAW! Dropout protection is sill a complete disaster when the PC is loaded which is a shame would have been good if this had been fixed at the same time, it will remain firmly switched OFF. Good on you for having a bash at it Presonus definitely an improvement!
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