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VA-API's Libva 2.18 Released With Windows WSL D3D12 Support, Optional Disabling DRI3

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  • #11
    Originally posted by andreduartesp View Post

    Redhat? Who in here (https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules) works at Red Hat? I didn't find anybody.

    Any hardware produced by NVidia I have I can use with Linux (even old ones from 2004/2005), the same is not true about some old AMD hardware.
    Did Nvidia mainline anything? Are there mesa drivers that wasn't developed by Redhat?

    At the moment popular distros still crash and burn using open source software on many Nvidia devices that I used.

    Did something change that I wasn't aware of?

    Comment


    • #12
      Originally posted by loganj View Post
      MS should discard windows and focus on linux only. port their close source dx and whatever and focus on linux only.
      How will Microsoft sell their spyware if people can just disable things that they don't want to run on their computer?

      These are some things that have been a pain in modern Windows:
      • Telemetry AKA spyware that you cannot disable without using 3rd party software even with that it changes to bypass 3rd party software
      • Virus scan with auto uploads by default that can upload any file on your system, you can at least disable this
      • Microsoft Edge making desktop icons and taking over default browser, every time you delete the desktop shortcut then it gets restored automatically
      I don't see these things working in Linux and Microsoft wants these things to work.

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      • #13
        Originally posted by pieman View Post
        i'd love to see microsoft release direct x as completely open source. along with opening up win32 api. with them moving heavily towards software as a service i don't see the point in keeping everything closed source.
        win32 api - ah, yes pandora's jar I wonder what kind of monsters are lurking in that code base.

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        • #14
          Originally posted by andreduartesp View Post

          Any hardware produced by NVidia I have I can use with Linux (even old ones from 2004/2005), the same is not true about some old AMD hardware.
          ATI R300 was released in 2002 and is still supported in current upstream Linux kernel and Mesa.

          Comment


          • #15
            Originally posted by Jabberwocky View Post

            Did Nvidia mainline anything? Are there mesa drivers that wasn't developed by Redhat?

            At the moment popular distros still crash and burn using open source software on many Nvidia devices that I used.

            Did something change that I wasn't aware of?
            the original quote was that nvidia didnt help with anything, this is blatantly wrong nvidia releasing their open drivers is a big help, even if in terms of "documentation" alone

            Comment


            • #16
              I am using version 2.15 in fedora 37,but I don´ t see hardware acceleration..
              Code:
              libva info: VA-API version 1.16.0
              libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib64/dri/radeonsi_drv_video.so
              libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_1_16
              libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
              vainfo: VA-API version: 1.16 (libva 2.15.0)
              vainfo: Driver version: Mesa Gallium driver 22.3.7 for KAVERI (, LLVM 15.0.7, DRM 2.50, 6.2.8-200.fc37.x86_64)
              vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
                    VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :    VAEntrypointVLD
                    VAProfileMPEG2Main              :    VAEntrypointVLD
                    VAProfileNone                   :    VAEntrypointVideoProc​
              However I do have hardware acceleration on Debian stable, strange thing..

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              • #17
                Originally posted by Jabberwocky View Post

                Did Nvidia mainline anything? Are there mesa drivers that wasn't developed by Redhat?

                At the moment popular distros still crash and burn using open source software on many Nvidia devices that I used.

                Did something change that I wasn't aware of?
                The project is open source, any distro can build and distribute it (as far as I know this is the reason any distro exists in the first place).

                The plan is to mainline the drivers to the Linux kernel repository, but this takes time, as far as I remember, AMD took many years before the first stable open-source driver (their closed-source driver was never stable)

                Most distros don't use the official open-source drivers from NVidia, but it is not NVidia's fault, the driver is at GitHub, and with a good license, any distro can grab it and bundle it.

                And most end users just don't care if the driver is open source, they want it to work, NVidia still updating Linux drivers for ancient hardware to work with new kernel versions, and any AMD depending on an old closed-source driver doesn't work for years now

                Comment


                • #18
                  Originally posted by MrCooper View Post

                  ATI R300 was released in 2002 and is still supported in the current upstream Linux kernel and Mesa.
                  Supported is very different from works. The R300 only works great with the closed-source driver, and good luck to use it in a modern Linux kernel. At that time the open-source drivers for AMD were not official and the closed source is not supported anymore

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                  • #19
                    Originally posted by andreduartesp View Post

                    Supported is very different from works. The R300 only works great with the closed-source driver
                    Source? My understanding is that the OSS drivers were way better than fglrx, and were partially developed with open documentation/help from AMD back then. It was R600 that was questionable for a while, but i think those are in good shape now too.

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                    • #20
                      Originally posted by smitty3268 View Post

                      Source? My understanding is that the OSS drivers were way better than fglrx, and were partially developed with open documentation/help from AMD back then. It was R600 that was questionable for a while, but i think those are in good shape now too.
                      I had an R300 back then, and it just not worked with Linux, as far as I remember AMD started to share documentation with the R500 series, and the project to release documentation started in 2008, we are talking about hardware from 2002 (this time only NVidia closed source driver worked for Linux users with real open GL)

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