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  • NVIDIA 169.04 Driver Improvements

    Phoronix: NVIDIA 169.04 Driver Improvements

    Last week NVIDIA introduced the 169.04 Beta Linux driver for their GeForce and Quadro graphics cards. This X.Org driver contained a number of GeForce 8 fixes, initial support for the GeForce 8800GT graphics card, monitoring of PowerMizer state information, and other changes. What we had not tested, however, at that time was a performance comparison of the new driver and the previous 100.14.23 driver. The undocumented fact we have found is that this 169.04 Beta driver does deliver performance improvements for the GeForce 8 series on Linux.

    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
    The most cool feature of this release is XRender improvement. Speed up is very very much visible in render_bench application. In some tests it is up to 128x speed increase on Geforce 6150. I feel that since 169.04 work in KDE 2D desktop is much more comfortable.

    169.04 is the best driver since release when XvMC was introduced.

    The sad thing about Phoronix and all other IT news site or newspapers are 3D tests only. I would like to see some day feature review of GPUs in terms of video and 2D performance/features.
    (XRender; XAA; EXA; Xv max resolution , image formats; XvMC accelerated movie formats; DPMS)

    It would be interesting if recent 169.04 Nvidia driven hardware is faster in 2D than Matrox Parhelia with recent mtx driver, Radeon with recent fglrx driver, S3 chrome 20 with recently released Linux driver (it is initial release but with XvMC !!!) or Intel.

    There are test tools for 2D:
    render_bench (XRender performance)
    x11perf
    xvinfo to check what Xv caps are
    xvmcinfo app to check XvMC caps

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    • #3
      I think we can thank ATI for these recent improvements

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by remm View Post
        I think we can thank ATI for these recent improvements
        I am not so sure about that...

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by zbiggy View Post
          The most cool feature of this release is XRender improvement. Speed up is very very much visible in render_bench application. In some tests it is up to 128x speed increase on Geforce 6150. I feel that since 169.04 work in KDE 2D desktop is much more comfortable.

          169.04 is the best driver since release when XvMC was introduced.

          The sad thing about Phoronix and all other IT news site or newspapers are 3D tests only. I would like to see some day feature review of GPUs in terms of video and 2D performance/features.
          (XRender; XAA; EXA; Xv max resolution , image formats; XvMC accelerated movie formats; DPMS)

          It would be interesting if recent 169.04 Nvidia driven hardware is faster in 2D than Matrox Parhelia with recent mtx driver, Radeon with recent fglrx driver, S3 chrome 20 with recently released Linux driver (it is initial release but with XvMC !!!) or Intel.

          There are test tools for 2D:
          render_bench (XRender performance)
          x11perf
          xvinfo to check what Xv caps are
          xvmcinfo app to check XvMC caps
          xvinfo says maximum size is 2046 x 2046

          i have a few questions regarding this..

          is this the maximum size of video which you can play back via xv, or is it the maximum OUTPUT of xv? what i mean is, if i have a monitor capable of 2560x1600, and i for example attempt to play 1920x1080 video, will xv be unable to scale the 1080p video up to 2560x1440? or is it just that the video resolution i input may max be 2046x2046?

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          • #6
            It means the largest display size it can handle is 2046x2046

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            • #7
              do you know if it can handle more on a card supporting dual-link dvi? otherwise it kindof sucks.

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              • #8
                Does the video card adaptively decide when I needs to go on a higher performance level? Because I couldn't find an option to set it.

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