Difference between revisions of "VLC GPU Decoding"

From VideoLAN Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 32: Line 32:
  
 
To be sure, check your GPU against this table on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_PureVideo#Table_of_PureVideo_.28HD.29_GPUs wikipedia] and check if you are VP2 or newer.
 
To be sure, check your GPU against this table on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_PureVideo#Table_of_PureVideo_.28HD.29_GPUs wikipedia] and check if you are VP2 or newer.
 
  
 
=== ATI ===
 
=== ATI ===

Revision as of 16:08, 22 July 2010

Introduction to GPU decoding in VLC

The VLC media player framework can use your graphic card (aka GPU) to decode H.264 streams (wrongly called HD videos) under certain circumstances.

VLC, in its modular approach and its transcoding/streaming capabilities, does decoding in GPU at the decoding stage only and then gets the data back to go to the other stages (streaming, filtering or plug any video output after that).

What that means is that, compared to some other implementation, GPU decoding in VLC can be slower because it needs to get the data back from the GPU. But you can plug ANY video output (sink) to it and use all the VLC video filters.


Windows

VLC 1.1 supports DxVA in its version 2.0. That means that Windows Vista, Windows 2008 or Windows 7 are required. If you are using Windows XP, VLC cannot work for you yet.

Linux

On Linux, there is code for VDPAU and VAAPI. There is also some code for a VAAPI video output, that isn't merged in the current Git.

Read VLC_VAAPI and [thresh's blog|http://strangestone.livejournal.com/107092.html] for more details.

Mac OS X

Mac OS X (X.6.3) provides a new API for decoding in GPU. This isn't working yet with VLC. Help is welcome.

Requirements for Windows DxVA2 in VLC

To check your DxVA compatibility, please download DxVA Checker

Graphic card

VLC developers recommend to use nVidia cards so far to have the best performance.

nVidia

For nVidia GPU, you are required to use a GPU supporting PureVideo in its 2nd generation (VP2 or newer), which means that you need a GeForce 8, GeForce 9 (advised), GeForce 200 or newer.

To be sure, check your GPU against this table on wikipedia and check if you are VP2 or newer.

ATI

For ATI GPUs, you NEED Catalyst 10.7, that will be out at the end of July 2010.

Then, you are required to use a GPU supporting Unified Video Decoder.

We believe you need a GPU supporting UVD+, but you might require a UVD2 compatible GPU. We don't have the hardware to test so far. We have tested against Radeon 4K so far.

Intel

We haven't tested any Intel implementation so far.