Ralph Corderoy
2019-Jul-27 11:37 UTC
[Nouveau] Video Hardware Decoding: Jittery Rectangles on Nvidia GT218 NVA8 VP4.
Hi, I'm having trouble with hardware decoding of video with mpv(1) having switched from Nvidia's proprietary driver to nouveau due to Arch Linux removing its nvidia-340xx package. The machine is an Acer Revo. $ lspci -nn | grep VGA 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: NVIDIA Corporation GT218 [ION] [10de:0a64] (rev a2) I think this is codename NVA8 with the video-accleration engine VP4.0. I've these packages installed, following https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Nouveau and https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Hardware_video_acceleration $ pacman -Q | egrep 'nvidia|nouveau|mesa|vdpau|vaapi|xorg-server' libva-mesa-driver 19.1.3-1 libva-vdpau-driver 0.7.4-4 libvdpau 1.2-1 libvdpau-va-gl 0.4.2-2 mesa 19.1.3-1 mesa-demos 8.4.0-1 mesa-vdpau 19.1.3-1 nouveau-fw 325.15-1 vdpauinfo 1.0-3 xf86-video-nouveau 1.0.16-1 xorg-server 1.20.5-2 xorg-server-common 1.20.5-2 $ A paste of vdpauinfo(1)'s output is at http://ix.io/1PHi. I've many sample videos that exhibit the same problem, but I'll stick with one from BBC's iPlayer obtained with get_iplayer(1). $ ffmpeg -i $f |& grep Video: Stream #0:0(und): Video: h264 (Main) (avc1 / 0x31637661), yuv420p(tv, bt709), 960x540 [SAR 1:1 DAR 16:9], 1602 kb/s, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 90k tbn, 50 tbc (default) Plain old `mpv $f' plays fine, using software decoding. VO: [gpu] 960x540 yuv420p Adding `--vo=vdpau' gives VO: [vdpau] 960x540 yuv420p [vo/vdpau] Compositing window manager detected. Assuming timing info is inaccurate. Playback is fine, still software decoding. `--vo=vdpau --hwdec=vdpau' uses hardware decoding: Using hardware decoding (vdpau). VO: [vdpau] 960x540 vdpau[yuv420p] [vo/vdpau] Compositing window manager detected. Assuming timing info is inaccurate. The video plays, CPU load is less (my aim), but there's ‘tearing’ of the picture as if small rectangles that are updates are appearing in the wrong location, off by a little. If I step through the frames with mpv's ‘.’ and ‘,’ then I've found a pattern: one frame's picture is good, followed by N bad ones where N is 3 or 7, i.e. every 4th or 8th frame is okay. Don't know if that's a clue or helps someone here recognise a known problem. I know X well, but Mesa, etc., below it are unknown to me, even to the extent of knowing quite how all the bits fit together. I'd appreciate a pointer or two as to how to tackle the problem, even if it's a ‘You've come to the wrong place, go over there’. :-) -- Cheers, Ralph.
Ilia Mirkin
2019-Jul-27 17:46 UTC
[Nouveau] Video Hardware Decoding: Jittery Rectangles on Nvidia GT218 NVA8 VP4.
On Sat, Jul 27, 2019 at 7:37 AM Ralph Corderoy <ralph at inputplus.co.uk> wrote:> The video plays, CPU load is less (my aim), but there's ‘tearing’ of the > picture as if small rectangles that are updates are appearing in the > wrong location, off by a little. If I step through the frames with > mpv's ‘.’ and ‘,’ then I've found a pattern: one frame's picture is > good, followed by N bad ones where N is 3 or 7, i.e. every 4th or 8th > frame is okay. Don't know if that's a clue or helps someone here > recognise a known problem. > > I know X well, but Mesa, etc., below it are unknown to me, even to the > extent of knowing quite how all the bits fit together. I'd appreciate a > pointer or two as to how to tackle the problem, even if it's a ‘You've > come to the wrong place, go over there’. :-)Unfortunately I've never tracked down the cause for this. https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/VideoAcceleration/ - see note #4. I have, over time, collected some sample videos where this happens in the first few frames. The plan was to do mmt traces of the blob driver, and figure out what it was doing differently. If this is something you're interested in, I'd be happy to provide some guidance. However my past efforts to work this out were fruitless. Hopefully it's just something dumb we're doing in reference frame management, or a missing bit in the info structures, or something else entirely since I've scoured quite heavily for those two. If you'd like to dedicate some of your time to working this out, you can join us at #nouveau on freenode. Cheers, -ilia
Solerman Kaplon
2019-Jul-29 11:29 UTC
[Nouveau] Video Hardware Decoding: Jittery Rectangles on Nvidia GT218 NVA8 VP4.
Às 14:46 de 27/07/2019, Ilia Mirkin escreveu:> On Sat, Jul 27, 2019 at 7:37 AM Ralph Corderoy <ralph at inputplus.co.uk> wrote: >> The video plays, CPU load is less (my aim), but there's ‘tearing’ of the >> picture as if small rectangles that are updates are appearing in the >> wrong location, off by a little. If I step through the frames with >> mpv's ‘.’ and ‘,’ then I've found a pattern: one frame's picture is >> good, followed by N bad ones where N is 3 or 7, i.e. every 4th or 8th >> frame is okay. Don't know if that's a clue or helps someone here >> recognise a known problem.<snip>>> Unfortunately I've never tracked down the cause for this. >> https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/VideoAcceleration/ - see note #4. >> >> I have, over time, collected some sample videos where this happens in >> the first few frames. The plan was to do mmt traces of the blob >> driver, and figure out what it was doing differently.<snip> I don't really know anything about hw coding, but looking from the outside, it seems some kind of ring buffer with exact 3 frames maybe intended to work kinda like using tripple buffering? I know for once that nvidia works better using tripple buffering from what I've read from the kwin threads. Solerman
Ralph Corderoy
2019-Aug-14 11:37 UTC
[Nouveau] Video Hardware Decoding: Jittery Rectangles on Nvidia GT218 NVA8 VP4.
Hi Ilia, A fortnight ago, you wrote:> > The video plays, CPU load is less (my aim), but there's ‘tearing’ of > > the picture as if small rectangles that are updates are appearing in > > the wrong location, off by a little. If I step through the frames > > with mpv's ‘.’ and ‘,’ then I've found a pattern: one frame's > > picture is good, followed by N bad ones where N is 3 or 7, i.e. > > every 4th or 8th frame is okay. Don't know if that's a clue or > > helps someone here recognise a known problem. > > Unfortunately I've never tracked down the cause for this. > https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/VideoAcceleration/ - see note #4.That sounds like the problem, but it is all the way through TV programme from the BBC iPlayer's service.> I have, over time, collected some sample videos where this happens in > the first few frames. The plan was to do mmt traces of the blob > driver, and figure out what it was doing differently. If this is > something you're interested in, I'd be happy to provide some guidance.I've two mmio traces, nouveau and nvidia, each using mpv(1) to play the same ten-second extract of an iPlayer MP4, with and without ‘--vo=vdpau --hwdec=vdpau’. $ grep -n ^MARK nvidia-4.mmiotrace 20:MARK 65645.302939 buffer_size_kb: 524288 21:MARK 65645.385776 starting x 1447554:MARK 65681.979892 x started 1448560:MARK 65682.446747 mpv none start 1868197:MARK 65701.153770 mpv none done 1869462:MARK 65702.748005 mpv vo start 2633729:MARK 65724.465154 mpv vo done 2634956:MARK 65726.259829 mpv vo hwdec start 5347520:MARK 65759.841432 mpv vo hwdec done 5349019:MARK 65762.431137 killing cat $ hwdec on nvidia easily overflowed the default 1,408 KiB trace buffer, whereas nouveau didn't. Are these helpful? Shall I submit them to the Gmail address given in https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/MmioTrace/ -- Cheers, Ralph.
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