Hardware video acceleration

From ArchWiki

Hardware video acceleration makes it possible for the video card to decode/encode video, thus offloading the CPU and saving power.

There are several ways to achieve this on Linux:

  • Video Acceleration API (VA-API) is a specification and open source library to provide both hardware accelerated video encoding and decoding, developed by Intel.
  • Video Decode and Presentation API for Unix (VDPAU) is an open source library and API to offload portions of the video decoding process and video post-processing to the GPU video-hardware, developed by NVIDIA.
  • Advanced Media Framework (AMF) is an open source framework which allows "Optimal" access to AMD GPUs for multimedia processing using the AMDGPU PRO Stack, Developed by AMD.
  • NVDEC/NVENC - NVIDIA's proprietary APIs for hardware video acceleration, used by NVIDIA GPUs from Fermi onwards.

For comprehensive overview of driver and application support see #Comparison tables.

Installation

Intel

Intel graphics open-source drivers support VA-API:

Also see VAAPI supported hardware and features.

NVIDIA

Nouveau open-source driver supports both VA-API and VDPAU:

NVIDIA proprietary driver supports via nvidia-utils:

AMD/ATI

AMD and ATI open-source drivers support both VA-API and VDPAU:

  • VA-API on Radeon HD 2000 and newer GPUs is supported by libva-mesa-driver.
  • VDPAU on Radeon R600 and newer GPUs is supported by mesa-vdpau.

AMDGPU PRO proprietary driver is built on top of AMDGPU driver and supports both VA-API and VDPAU in addition to AMF.

Note:
  • You may need to force your application to use AMDGPU PRO Vulkan Driver.
  • HEVC encoding may not be available on GPUs older than Navi.

Translation layers

  • libva-vdpau-driver — A VDPAU-based backend for VA-API.
https://cgit.freedesktop.org/vaapi/vdpau-driver || libva-vdpau-driver, libva-vdpau-driver-vp9-gitAUR
  • libvdpau-va-gl — VDPAU driver with OpenGL/VAAPI backend. H.264 only.
https://github.com/i-rinat/libvdpau-va-gl || libvdpau-va-gl
  • nvidia-vaapi-driver — A CUDA NVDEC based backend for VA-API.
https://github.com/elFarto/nvidia-vaapi-driver/ || libva-nvidia-driver
Note:

Verification

Your system may work perfectly out-of-the-box without needing any configuration. Therefore it is a good idea to start with this section to see that it is the case.

Tip:
  • mpv with its command-line support is great for testing hardware acceleration. Look at the log of mpv --hwdec=auto video_filename and see hwdec for more details.
  • Use nvtop to check "DEC" (decoder) usage on the top lines while playing a video, for AMD, Intel and NVIDIA.
  • For Intel GPU, use intel-gpu-tools and run intel_gpu_top as root to monitor the GPU activity during video playback for example. The video bar being above 0% indicates GPU video decoder/encoder usage.
  • For AMD GPU, use radeontop to monitor GPU activity. Unlike intel-gpu-tools, there is currently no way to see decode/encode usage on radeontop [3].
  • For any GPU, you can compare CPU usage with a tool like htop. Especially for higher resolution videos (4k+), CPU usage when VA-API is enabled and working should be dramatically lower on laptops and other relatively low-power devices.

Verifying VA-API

Verify the settings for VA-API by running vainfo, which is provided by libva-utils:

$ vainfo
libva info: VA-API version 0.39.4
libva info: va_getDriverName() returns 0
libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib/dri/i965_drv_video.so
libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_0_39
libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
vainfo: VA-API version: 0.39 (libva 1.7.3)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 1.7.3
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVC1Simple              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Main                :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Advanced            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileNone                   :	VAEntrypointVideoProc
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointEncPicture
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice

VAEntrypointVLD means that your card is capable to decode this format, VAEntrypointEncSlice means that you can encode to this format.

In this example the i965 driver is used, as you can see in this line:

vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 1.7.3

If the following error is displayed when running vainfo:

libva info: va_openDriver() returns -1
vaInitialize failed with error code -1 (unknown libva error),exit

You need to configure the correct driver, see #Configuring VA-API.

Verifying VDPAU

Install vdpauinfo to verify if the VDPAU driver is loaded correctly and retrieve a full report of the configuration:

$ vdpauinfo
display: :0   screen: 0
API version: 1
Information string: G3DVL VDPAU Driver Shared Library version 1.0

Video surface:

name   width height types
-------------------------------------------
420    16384 16384  NV12 YV12
422    16384 16384  UYVY YUYV
444    16384 16384  Y8U8V8A8 V8U8Y8A8

Decoder capabilities:

name                        level macbs width height
----------------------------------------------------
MPEG1                          --- not supported ---
MPEG2_SIMPLE                    3  9216  2048  1152
MPEG2_MAIN                      3  9216  2048  1152
H264_BASELINE                  41  9216  2048  1152
H264_MAIN                      41  9216  2048  1152
H264_HIGH                      41  9216  2048  1152
VC1_SIMPLE                      1  9216  2048  1152
VC1_MAIN                        2  9216  2048  1152
VC1_ADVANCED                    4  9216  2048  1152
...

Configuration

Although the video driver should automatically enable hardware video acceleration support for both VA-API and VDPAU, it may be needed to configure VA-API/VDPAU manually. Only continue to this section if you went through #Verification.

The default driver names, used if there is no other configuration present, are guessed by the system. However, they are often hacked together and may not work. The guessed value will be printed in the Xorg log file, which is ~/.local/share/xorg/Xorg.0.log if rootless, or /var/log/Xorg.0.log if Xorg is running as root. To search the log file for the values of interest:

$ grep -iE 'vdpau | dri driver' xorg_log_file
(II) RADEON(0): [DRI2] DRI driver: radeonsi
(II) RADEON(0): [DRI2] VDPAU driver: radeonsi

In this case radeonsi is the default for both VA-API and VDPAU.

Note: If you use GDM, run journalctl -b --grep='vdpau | dri driver' as root instead.

This does not represent the configuration however. The values above will not change even if you override them.

Configuring VA-API

You can override the driver for VA-API by using the LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME environment variable:

Note:
  • You can find the installed drivers in /usr/lib/dri/. They are used as /usr/lib/dri/${LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME}_drv_video.so.
  • Some drivers are installed several times under different names for compatibility reasons. You can see which by running sha1sum /usr/lib/dri/* | sort.
  • LIBVA_DRIVERS_PATH can be used to overrule the VA-API drivers location.
  • Since version 12.0.1 libva-mesa-driver provides radeonsi instead of gallium.

Configuring VDPAU

You can override the driver for VDPAU by using the VDPAU_DRIVER environment variable.

The correct driver name depends on your setup:

  • For Intel graphics you need to set it to va_gl.
  • For the open source AMD driver set it to the proper driver version depending on your GPU, see #Verification.
  • For the open source Nouveau driver set it to nouveau.
  • For NVIDIA's proprietary version set it to nvidia.
Note:
  • You can find the installed drivers in /usr/lib/vdpau/. They are used as /usr/lib/vdpau/libvdpau_${VDPAU_DRIVER}.so.
  • Some drivers are installed several times under different names for compatibility reasons. You can see which by running sha1sum /usr/lib/vdpau/*.
  • For hybrid setups (both NVIDIA and AMD), it may be necessary to set the DRI_PRIME environment variable. For more information see PRIME.

Configuring applications

Multimedia frameworks:

Video players:

Web browsers:

Multimedia recording/streaming:

Troubleshooting

Failed to open VDPAU backend

You need to set VDPAU_DRIVER variable to point to correct driver. See #Configuring VDPAU.

VAAPI init failed

An error along the lines of libva: /usr/lib/dri/i965_drv_video.so init failed is encountered. This can happen because of improper detection of Wayland. One solution is to unset $DISPLAY so that mpv, MPlayer, VLC, etc. do not assume it is X11. Another mpv-specific solution is to add the parameter --gpu-context=wayland.

This error can also occur if you installed the wrong VA-API driver for your hardware.

Video decoding corruption or distortion with AMDGPU driver

When experiencing video decoding corruption or distortion with AMDGPU driver, set allow_rgb10_configs=false as environment variable or driconf. [4]

Comparison tables

VA-API drivers

Codec libva-intel-driver [5] intel-media-driver [6] libva-mesa-driver [7] [8] libva-vdpau-driver
(VDPAU adapter)
libva-nvidia-driver
(NVDEC adapter)
Decoding
MPEG-2 GMA 4500 and newer Broadwell and newer Radeon HD 6000 and newer
GeForce 8 and newer1
See #VDPAU drivers See #NVIDIA driver only
H.263/MPEG-4 Visual4 No No Radeon HD 6000 and newer
VC-1 Sandy Bridge and newer Broadwell and newer Radeon HD 2000 and newer
GeForce 9300 and newer1
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC GMA 45002, Ironlake and newer Radeon HD 2000 and newer
GeForce 8 and newer1
H.265/HEVC 8bit Cherryview/Braswell and newer Skylake and newer Radeon R9 Fury and newer
H.265/HEVC 10bit Broxton and newer Broxton/Apollo Lake and newer Radeon 400 and newer
VP8 Broadwell and newer Broadwell and newer No No
VP9 8bit Broxton and newer
Hybrid: Haswell refresh to Skylake3
Broxton/Apollo Lake and newer Raven Ridge + Radeon RX 5000 and newer See #VDPAU drivers5
VP9 10bit & 12bit Kaby Lake and newer Kaby Lake and newer No
AV1 8bit & 10bit No Tiger Lake and newer Radeon RX 6600 and higher/newer
Encoding
MPEG-2 Ivy Bridge and newer Broadwell and newer
except Broxton/Apollo Lake
No No6
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Sandy Bridge and newer Broadwell and newer Radeon HD 7000 and newer
H.265/HEVC 8bit Skylake and newer Skylake and newer Radeon 400 and newer
H.265/HEVC 10bit Kaby Lake and newer Kaby Lake and newer Raven Ridge + Radeon RX 5000 and newer
VP8 Cherryview/Braswell and newer
Hybrid: Haswell to Skylake3
No
VP9 8bit Kaby Lake and newer Icelake and newer
VP9 10bit & 12bit No
AV1 8bit & 10bit Alchemist and newer Radeon RX 7900 and higher/newer

VDPAU drivers

Codec Color
depth
mesa-vdpau [10] [11] nvidia-utils libvdpau-va-gl
(VA-API adapter)
Decoding
MPEG-2 8bit Radeon R600 and newer
GeForce 8 and newer1
GeForce 8 and newer No
H.263/MPEG-4 Visual 8bit Radeon HD 6000 and newer
GeForce 200 and newer1
GeForce 200 and newer
VC-1 8bit Radeon HD 2000 and newer
GeForce 9300 and newer1
GeForce 8 and newer2
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC 8bit Radeon HD 2000 and newer
GeForce 8 and newer1
GeForce 8 and newer See #VA-API drivers
H.265/HEVC 8bit Radeon R9 Fury and newer GeForce 900 and newer3 No
10bit Radeon 400 and newer No4
VP9 8bit Raven Ridge + Radeon RX 5000 and newer GeForce 900 and newer3
10bit/12bit No4
AV1 8bit Radeon RX 6600 and higher/newer GeForce 30 and newer5
10bit No4
  • 1 Up until GeForce GTX 750.
  • 2 Except GeForce 8800 Ultra, 8800 GTX, 8800 GTS (320/640 MB).
  • 3 Except GeForce GTX 970 and GTX 980.
  • 4 NVIDIA implementation is limited to 8bit streams [12] [13].
  • 5 Starting with driver version 510.[14]

NVIDIA driver only

Codec nvidia-utils [15]
NVDEC NVENC
MPEG-2 Fermi and newer1 No
VC-1
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Kepler and newer2
H.265/HEVC 8bit Maxwell (GM206) and newer Maxwell (2nd Gen) and newer
H.265/HEVC 10bit Pascal and newer
VP8 Maxwell (2nd Gen) and newer No
VP9 8bit Maxwell (GM206) and newer
VP9 10bit & 12bit Pascal and newer
AV1 8bit & 10bit Ampere and newer3 Ada Lovelace and newer
  • 1 Except GM108 (not supported)
  • 2 Except GM108 and GP108 (not supported)
  • 3 Except A100 (not supported)

Application support

Application Decoding Encoding Documentation
VA-API VDPAU NVDEC VA-API NVENC
FFmpeg Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes FFmpeg#Hardware video acceleration
GStreamer Yes No Yes Yes Yes GStreamer#Hardware video acceleration
Kodi Yes Yes No Kodi#Hardware video acceleration
mpv Yes Yes Yes mpv#Hardware video acceleration
VLC media player Yes Yes No VLC media player#Hardware video acceleration
MPlayer Yes1 Yes No MPlayer#Hardware video acceleration
Flash No2 Yes2 No Browser plugins#Adobe Flash Player
Chromium Yes No No Yes No Chromium#Hardware video acceleration
Firefox Yes No No No No Firefox#Hardware video acceleration
GNOME/Web GStreamer ? ? GNOME/Web#Video
  • 1 VA-API support provided by mplayer-vaapiAUR instead.
  • 2 VDPAU is supported only by NPAPI plugin. PPAPI plugin to NPAPI browser experimental adapter is available that provides partial VA-API and VDPAU acceleration.