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Reasons Mesa 9.1 Is Still Disappointing For End-Users

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  • Reasons Mesa 9.1 Is Still Disappointing For End-Users

    Phoronix: Reasons Mesa 9.1 Is Still Disappointing For End-Users

    While Mesa 9.1 represents a number of improvements to this open-source graphics stack that were made over the past six months, as far as end-users are concerned, there's still a number of shortcomings...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    I dont get what is so problematic with floating point. Even Debian enables it by default for since 2011-09-24.



    s3tc is only a tiny problem - first of all when you use precompressed textures it does not matter at all when only s2tc is installed. s2tc could look a bit worse than s3tc but even Ubuntu ships it by default now - and current Kanotix test images do as well.

    Ok, there is OpenGL 4, but when you forget Unigine engine which Linux game uses it? Most likely no major game at all. I just want more complete OpenGL 3 support that at least Doom 3 BFG (via wine or RBDoom3) or Rage can run. Speed is a much more interesting thing - mainly Intel is too slow compared to Win drivers when you play games (if they run) - when you forget the extra simple OSS games - a game with > 60 fps @ 1080p is boring to benchmark anyway when it is locked to 60 fps without benchmark mode. Ok, you can buy 120 hz tft but how many use em? Nouveau is nice to have but it is not critical for gaming as you can still can use Nv 304 drivers for Geforce 6/7 on current distros. Ok, then when you look at radeon, those drivers are a requirement for cards below HD 2000 or when you want to use a newer xserver than 1.12. Basically you gain nothing with a new xserver for binary drivers so you could still downgrade it and you lose nothing - not so nice to do however but basically possible.

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    • #3
      To be fair, there is a reason that they stopped work on VA-API using shaders. It took more CPU and GPU power than it was worth. While it seemed like a good idea to begin with, the shaders themselves really aren't suited for the job.

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      • #4
        Unless there's some fundamental change to how Mesa is developed or the rate at which new OpenGL specifications are ratified, it will be quite a while before Mesa is caught up with the proprietary drivers that are already doing OpenGL 4.x.
        Mesa may be behind Khronos, but they will always be behind the spec. As Kano alluded to, it's more important to look at the gap between Mesa capability and the requirements of apps that most users want to run. That gap has been steadily decreasing over the years and having full OpenGL 3.3 support impresses me after seeing how long it took to get to full OpenGL 2.1. I don't know, but it seems that Mesa IS being developed at a faster rate

        Performance Parity with proprietary drivers
        Unrealistic goal, so of course anyone expecting this is going to be disappointed. I didn't find a million dollars on the sidewalk today either...

        Personally, the most disappointing thing is radeon VDPAU acceleration, because it's being held up by legal reasons. The fruit's in the tree, but a team of AMD lawyers are guarding it waiting to put their wingtips up anyone's rear who gets near it. Not cool.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by LinuxID10T View Post
          To be fair, there is a reason that they stopped work on VA-API using shaders. It took more CPU and GPU power than it was worth. While it seemed like a good idea to begin with, the shaders themselves really aren't suited for the job.
          I still don't understand the reasoning behind it. It's a VideoAudio API for decoding (and encoding?) of media. It doesn't have anything to do with shaders really. It can use shaders, but also can use hardware (intel only atm? with vpdau backend too). You should be able to plug in any decoder backend.

          Unless of course this is simply about a VA-API shader backend, to which the article wasn't clear and then my comment becomes moot

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          • #6
            Originally posted by oliver View Post
            I still don't understand the reasoning behind it. It's a VideoAudio API for decoding (and encoding?) of media. It doesn't have anything to do with shaders really. It can use shaders, but also can use hardware (intel only atm? with vpdau backend too). You should be able to plug in any decoder backend.

            Unless of course this is simply about a VA-API shader backend, to which the article wasn't clear and then my comment becomes moot
            The reasoning behind removing VAAPI was that no one was really working on it. Everyone was focusing on VDPAU, and since it provides (roughly) the same features that VAAPI was there didn't seem much point in keeping it around. Especially since, as i mentioned, no one was putting any effort into it.

            I suspect that if VDPAU support in Mesa ever really matures, someone will add VAAPI back in and utilize the same backends that are created for VDPAU. But that probably won't happen anytime soon, because the VDPAU support is still needs a lot of work before it can be considered done, and until then it makes sense for the video acceleration guys to keep working on it rather than spreading the work around elsewhere.

            The work on it for radeon hardware has focused on using shaders (at least publicly). There might be a private branch somewhere that uses the dedicated hardware, but who knows if that will ever see the light of day. I think the nouveau folks, though, were working on reverse engineering the purevideo hardware on nvidia cards. So they wouldn't have to use shaders except for post-processing, just like the proprietary drivers do.
            Last edited by smitty3268; 15 February 2013, 05:05 AM.

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            • #7
              Michael you can add that some ditros disable Intel support for floating point textures. Could not believe it, but seen patches for mesa in Fedora Package Database

              No idea why Fedora do it (as its not working UNTILL you install lib that is not present in Fedora official repo...).

              ---

              Of course WE NEED OpenGL 4.x!!
              There are plenty of games ON WINDOWS that use DX11, READY FOR PORTING.

              However rise of MOBILE may shift focus on OpenGL ES 3.0, which is already supported in MESA.

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              • #8
                Two branches of OpenGL

                Originally posted by przemoli View Post
                However rise of MOBILE may shift focus on OpenGL ES 3.0, which is already supported in MESA.
                Exactly what I was thinking... If OpenGL ES 3.0 is a modern API with good features (including patent free texture compression), compatibility with both mobile and desktop, ... why have two OpenGL "branches" ?

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by wargames View Post
                  Exactly what I was thinking... If OpenGL ES 3.0 is a modern API with good features (including patent free texture compression), compatibility with both mobile and desktop, ... why have two OpenGL "branches" ?
                  Because I define MOBILE as tight power budget, with even smaller battery.

                  Even netbooks can have enought battery to sustain power-hungry gpu's. MOBILE can not.

                  That is way we need "full" OpenGL, and "power efficient" OpenGL ES.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by przemoli View Post
                    Because I define MOBILE as tight power budget, with even smaller battery.

                    Even netbooks can have enought battery to sustain power-hungry gpu's. MOBILE can not.

                    That is way we need "full" OpenGL, and "power efficient" OpenGL ES.
                    OpenGL 4.3 was specifically designed to interoperate with OpenGL ES 3.0

                    OpenGL 4.3

                    Released on 6 August 2012
                    Supported Cards: Nvidia GeForce 400 series, Nvidia GeForce 500 series, Nvidia GeForce 600 series, Nvidia GeForce 700 series

                    • Compute shaders leveraging GPU parallelism within the context of the graphics pipeline
                    • Shader storage buffer objects
                    • Texture parameter queries
                    • High-quality ETC2/EAC texture compression as a standard feature
                    • Full compatibility with OpenGL ES 3.0 APIs
                    • Debug capabilities to receive debugging messages during application development
                    • Texture views for interpreting textures in different ways without data replication
                    • Increased memory security
                    • A multi-application robustness extension
                    Doing the heavy lifting between 3.3 and 4.0 with the focus on 4.3 isn't work wasted. If Linux plans to ever garner desktop marketshare and thus create a robust native set of user applications that can even offer support contract services for new feature requests, etc., then MESA is the only chance for this to happen.

                    Following the R600 branch natively now in LLVM makes it clear how much sooner OpenCL/OpenGL quality will arrive than if Tom never worked to get it into the mainline of LLVM/Clang. The extra input and commits by other members [including architecture design solutions] is well worth the effort. Linux will get it for free.

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