My graphics card has on board video decoding, does VideoLan support, or will it support this?
This post suggests it doesn't and isn't likely to in the foreseeable future viewtopic.php?f=14&t=44499&p=140451&hilit=Avivo#p140451
Is there anything similar for Linux and/or MacOS X?I found that VLC 0.8.6* does achieve hardware acceleration of x264-encoded streams on my Nvidia GeForce Go7300, in WindowsXP SP2. [...]
I haven't seen an announcement at http://ffmpeg.mplayerhq.hu/ffmpeg doesn't implement multithreaded video decoding yet. So you might get some slight performance changes due to optimizations but nothing fancy.
They're currently experimenting a multithreaded implementation of their H264 decoder ... so it should be merged in the official SVN in the near/middle future.
Maybe you will run into harddrive bandwidth problems too...Unfortunately it isn't. In case there is some heavy h.264 stuff coming in. Like direct Blu-ray / HD-DVD rip. -> 45 gigabytes of data for 1.5 hour of stuff. It got pretty hefty bitrate so it totally kills my Q6600 CPU. And everything turns to very slow slide show.VLC lag out on H.264 quite often myself. It's decent.
Those settings are barely adequate for ~4 Gbytes / 1.5 hour rips.
Most probably not. Harddrives easily transfer 80-100 megabytes / second.Maybe you will run into harddrive bandwidth problems too...Those settings are barely adequate for ~4 Gbytes / 1.5 hour rips.
I haven't seen an announcement at http://ffmpeg.mplayerhq.hu/ffmpeg doesn't implement multithreaded video decoding yet. So you might get some slight performance changes due to optimizations but nothing fancy.
They're currently experimenting a multithreaded implementation of their H264 decoder ... so it should be merged in the official SVN in the near/middle future.
However, the SoC 2008 project was completed and has been available since September 4, 2008.
Alexander_Strange.tar.gz Frame-based multithreading patch Sep 04 27.0 KB 118
http://code.google.com/p/google-summer- ... loads/list
Thx you saved my life!H.264 codecs are pretty CPU intensive and VLC can't use multi-cores to decode it yet.
So if your computer is dying when decoding 1080p samples from H264, do the following.
DON'T ASK help about this on IRC or I may kill you
- Open the preferences
- Tick advanced in the lower right corner
- Go to "Input/Codec"
- Go to "other codecs" subcategory
- Go to "FFmpeg"
- Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
- Restart VLC
Edited on public intrest by MetalheadGautham:
to the guys complaining that C2Q Q6600 and AMD Phenom can't run HD H.264:
Only ONE CORE among their 4 cores is used. Their indivudual core power is quite average. You would have a better performance with a high power per core CPU like C2D E8400.
...Thats UNLTIL multicore support appears on H264 decoder
H.264 codecs are pretty CPU intensive and VLC can't use multi-cores to decode it yet.
So if your computer is dying when decoding 1080p samples from H264, do the following.
- Open the preferences
- Tick advanced in the lower right corner
- Go to "Input/Codec"
- Go to "other codecs" subcategory
- Go to "FFmpeg"
- Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
- Restart VLC
Hey you Q6600 guys, why don't you overclock it?I found higher bitrate H.264 videos which still won't run on with Q6600 CPU.
Weird
I have e4300 (overclocked to 2,7GHz) with Vista64, 8800GT and 2GB RAM.
When I tried to play Transformers.2007.1080p.HDDVD.x264-hV.mkv on beginning scene (with cube spinning from space) movie transformed to slideshow and sound was 10 sec behind picture.
I tried warious codecs, players, nothing worked. From sidebar I saw movie always used only one core.
Then I reinstalled Vista and installed ONLY VLC from 0.86. series. No tweaks, no default changes and movie played perfectly. CPU load was 30-50%, both cores used. I don't know if GPU kicked in, but movie was perfect...
Looks like using other players with load of codecs spammed into system corrupts VLC.
I'm not using ANY other player, not even PowerDVD, since 0.9.0 handles even DVD well. If anyone have issue with playing HD movies in VLC, try to clean system first, throw all other codec packs to garbage with good uninstaller and try to get rid of all codec settings left from other players.
No, it cannot (yet)Just a question.
VLC uses as much gpu power as possible with default configuratiuon right?
So if you got a say nvidia graphics card, with hardware h.264 decoder in it, then i suppose vlc is using that instead by doing it the software/cpu way right?
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