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Nouveau With Mesa 7.9 Is Better, But Still Slow

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  • Nouveau With Mesa 7.9 Is Better, But Still Slow

    Phoronix: Nouveau With Mesa 7.9 Is Better, But Still Slow

    Not only have we been busy testing Mesa 7.9 with the Intel and ATI/AMD drivers along with the Gallium3D drivers (including LLVMpipe), but the Nouveau driver that continues to be developed by the open-source community for NVIDIA GPUs received a fresh round of tests too. Our first published benchmarks of the Nouveau Gallium3D driver were back in February when it was nearing a decent state in terms of supported features and stability. Its DRM also finally entered the mainline Linux kernel earlier this year thereby allowing many Linux distributions to now use the Nouveau KMS driver even though not many have yet adopted the Gallium3D driver for OpenGL acceleration. We delivered updated Gallium3D benchmarks in June with the latest Mesa code at that point, but since then there was the integration of a new GLSL compiler into Mesa and many Nouveau changes, so here are our most recent OpenGL benchmarks from this open-source NVIDIA driver.

    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
    You can expect to double the frame rate when Power Management gets released to the public.

    Nexuiz is now playable on my laptop (NVS140M) with a framerate between 30 and 49fps.

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    • #3
      Whoah! Last time I checked the Nouveau driver was comming in at about (literaly) 3fps at Quake3.

      Very nice improvements!

      I guess the nVidia guys don't have to be pissed at State Trackers now

      BTW this also proves, next to how hard the Nouveau guys work, how great of an investment Gallium3D is!

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      • #4
        Nouveau vs Radeon PLZ?

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        • #5
          Originally posted by LinuxID10T View Post
          Nouveau vs Radeon PLZ?
          Seconded ^^,

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          • #6
            Nouveau 3D is not there yet.

            I run Fedora 13 with latest updates and have been using nouveau. 2D is great. 3D sucks. I have to disable shadows and reflections to play neverball and neverput - both of which will hang the system on occasion. When the system hangs, it won't boot properly unless I unplug the power cord and wait for a while - seems vaguely like a thermal problem. I'm running an NV44A fanless card. When enabling desktop effects, the dialog boxes drag OK vertically or horizontally, but diagonal dragging results in painfully slow repainting. BZflag renders fullscreen garbage.

            So for me it's been a fine 2D driver for some time, but 3D is just not reliable.

            And BTW phoronix. When you say the latest is faster than the older version, please include the old version in the benchmarks for comparison. Also, if you're going to compare multiple cards, please pick one from an older generation, not two NV50 generation cards.

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            • #7
              Nouveau drivers don't use any kind of buffer management that comes with Gallium, which helped us to get a lot of speed. For example pb_bufmgr_* managers are used only in r300g, r600g, and svga. u_upload_mgr is only used in those three plus i965. Maybe they have something in the kernel?

              I second the Radeon vs Nouveau proposal.

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              • #8
                This is just a general G3D question: How much of the performance optimization are shared between drivers? Are half the FPS from how well G3D is optimized and the other half for the specific card driver?

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                • #9
                  Mesa or Gallium?

                  Sorry, I am seriously confused. Wasn't Gallium a modern replacement for Mesa? This article seems to be about current Gallium, not current Mesa, right? (I know I may be totally off, I am not a graphics guru though I love to keep track of where things are heading)

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                  • #10
                    In other words, after like 3 years (after ATI started the open-source initiative) neither ATI nor Nouveau (not to mention Intel) have fast and complete open-source OpenGL 2.1 support, not to mention 3.x.

                    I say it's gonna take another 3 years until we got reliable and fast OpenGL 2.1 support but even today there's many folks already learning the new 3.x so in like 3 years the "fast and reliable" 2.1 version is gonna be too little too late. Not grumpy, it's true.

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