Originally posted by birdie
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NVIDIA/AMD Linux Gaming Performance For Hitman 2 On Steam Play
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Originally posted by birdie View Post
[...] the graphics stack in Windows works close to the kernel and in X.org works as a user process in Linux).
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Originally posted by Raka555 View Post
Thanks for this, but can you please state what CPU, GPU etc ?
If it is in the settings, those are too small, I can not read it.
Originally posted by debianxfce View Post
Your statement regarding 1000Hz kernel btw. is shit too, you're clearly too incompetent to reliably benchmark its non-existing impact.
Shit, the 3rd: The AMD Windows DX11 driver is not that bad like some people state here. There were also discussions on the DXVK bugtracker where Philip Rebohle and other developers responded that wrappers magically boosting performance is pure nonsense. So, stop spreading this garbage here...
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Originally posted by aufkrawall View PostThis is with an RX 580 + i7 6700k on the same system.
Your video is shit, it shows Hitman 1 and there is not even a comparison.
Your statement regarding 1000Hz kernel btw. is shit too, you're clearly too incompetent to reliably benchmark its non-existing impact.
Shit, the 3rd: The AMD Windows DX11 driver is not that bad like some people state here. There were also discussions on the DXVK bugtracker where Philip Rebohle and other developers responded that wrappers magically boosting performance is pure nonsense. So, stop spreading this garbage here...
And on Nvidia i can clearly see 6+ deferred threads on Windows.Last edited by artivision; 03 May 2019, 02:12 PM.
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Michael
Since (I assume) You will do the Linux vs. Windows benchmarks on Ubuntu, it would be cool if You could add an additional run with the following tweaks:
- With Intel's 'pstate' driver - not only setting the governor to "performance", but also the "performance-bias" to 0 for truly maximum performance.
(Easily achieved with the following command: sudo cpupower -c all set --perf-bias 0)
- Utilising Ubuntu's "low-latency" kernel for improved frame-times.
- Pinning the GPU to its highest performance level.
- Setting the I/O-scheduler to "BFQ" with its default settings (i.e. activated 'low_latency' flag).
- Additionally activating Feral's GameMode for increased I/O-priority for the game being run. (Alternatively You could do the same manually.)
With the above modifications, I'm seeing clearly improved performance & responsiveness with Arch-Linux's ZEN kernel!
Thanks in advance!
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Originally posted by Linuxxx View PostWith the above modifications, I'm seeing clearly improved performance & responsiveness with Arch-Linux's ZEN kernel!
All my games that aren't broken run completely stutter-free without those settings and those that are broken don't run better either.
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Originally posted by aufkrawall View PostWhere exactly?
All my games that aren't broken run completely stutter-free without those settings and those that are broken don't run better either.
WINE+DXVK, PCSX2, PPSSPP, RPCS3, Dolphin; you name it!
Hell, even just browsing the web with Firefox has improved drastically!
All of this compared to the out-of-the-box experience with Arch-Linux (Antergos), which gets even more profound when compared to my previous distro (openSUSE Tumbleweed)!
That's why it would be interesting to see whether Michael can also quantify these improvements when applying said modifications to Ubuntu!
BTW, what are you running?
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Originally posted by Linuxxx View PostBTW, what are you running?
I don't have any stutter e.g. in Hitman 2 once shaders are compiled. I also just tried out Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare (finally works with recent Wine) and it shares the same verdict (no perceivable stutter and fps well above 100).
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