Nvidia NVDEC
Nvidia NVDEC (formerly known as NVCUVID)[1] is a feature in its graphics cards that performs video decoding, offloading this compute-intensive task from the CPU.[2]
It is accompanied by NVENC for video encoding in Nvidia's Video Codec SDK.[2]
Technology
NVDEC can offload video decoding to full fixed-function decoding hardware (Nvidia PureVideo), or (partially) decode via CUDA software running on the GPU, if fixed-function hardware is not available.[2][3]
Depending on the GPU architecture, the following codecs are supported:[4]
- MPEG-2
- VC-1
- H.264 (AVCHD)
- H.265 (HEVC)
- VP8
- VP9
Versions
NVCUVID was originally distributed as part of the Nvidia CUDA Toolkit.[3] Later, it was renamed to NVDEC and moved to the Nvidia Video Codec SDK.[1]
Operating system support
NVDEC is available for Windows and Linux operating systems.[2] As NVDEC is a proprietary API (as opposed to the open-source VDPAU API), it is only supported by the proprietary Nvidia driver on Linux.
Application and library support
See also
- Intel Quick Sync Video, Intel's equivalent SIP core
- Video Coding Engine, AMD's equivalent SIP core
References
- 1 2 "Video Decoder". CUDA Toolkit Documentation. Nvidia. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
- 1 2 3 4 "NVIDIA VIDEO CODEC SDK". NVIDIA Developer. Nvidia. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
- 1 2 "Nvidia Video Decoder (NVCUVID) Interface" (PDF). Nvidia. November 2015. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
- ↑ "Video Encode and Decode GPU Support Matrix". NVIDIA Developer. Nvidia. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
- ↑ Michael Larabel (27 June 2017). "GStreamer Adds NVDEC NVIDIA GPU Decoding Support". Phoronix.
- ↑ Michael Larabel (11 November 2017). "FFmpeg Lands NVDEC-Accelerated H.264 Decoding". Phoronix.
- ↑ wm4 (28 October 2017). "vd_lavc: add support for nvdec hwaccel". GitHub.