Difference between revisions of "Performance Optimizations"

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It needs to show a number 4.1 or greater otherwise graphically demanding games such as Zero-K won't run correctly.
 
It needs to show a number 4.1 or greater otherwise graphically demanding games such as Zero-K won't run correctly.
 
If it doesn't you need to do the following (or, as an alternative, upgrade all mesa-related packages from stretch-backports. As for now - Sep 2018 - it will bring Mesa 18.1 and "Max core profile" 4.5).
 
If it doesn't you need to do the following (or, as an alternative, upgrade all mesa-related packages from stretch-backports. As for now - Sep 2018 - it will bring Mesa 18.1 and "Max core profile" 4.5).
 +
 
The graphics stack in Debian Buster is new enough to bring "Max core profile" to "4.5".
 
The graphics stack in Debian Buster is new enough to bring "Max core profile" to "4.5".
  

Revision as of 13:14, 5 October 2018

In-game Overlay

When using Steam or Discord, the in-game overlay should be disabled for maximum performance. It can lead to anything from increased lag to a completely unresponsive user interface.

Disabling the Steam Overlay

  • Right click on Zero-K in your Steam library.
  • Select 'Properties' from the dropdown menu.
  • Untick "Enable the Steam Overlay while in-game" in General.


Disabling the Discord Overlay

  • In Discord, go to Settings -> Games
  • Look for Zero-K and click the button on the right to "Toggle Overlay". It should turn red.

Linux Graphics Driver Optimizations

Graphics Check

glxinfo | grep "Max core profile version"

It needs to show a number 4.1 or greater otherwise graphically demanding games such as Zero-K won't run correctly. If it doesn't you need to do the following (or, as an alternative, upgrade all mesa-related packages from stretch-backports. As for now - Sep 2018 - it will bring Mesa 18.1 and "Max core profile" 4.5).

The graphics stack in Debian Buster is new enough to bring "Max core profile" to "4.5".

Do a backup before preceding. These instructions written for Debian 9 but will likely work on other distributions with little modification.

Backport libdrm from sid

apt-get build-dep libdrm
apt-get source libdrm -t sid
debuild -b -uc -us libdrm
dpkg install libdrm

Build New Mesa3d

apt-get install llvm-3.9-dev
ln -sf /usr/bin/llvm-config-3.9 /usr/bin/llvm-config
git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/mesa/mesa
cd mesa
./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/opt/mesa --enable-texture-float --with-gallium-drivers=radeonsi,swrast --with-platforms=drm,x11 --enable-glx-tls --enable-shared-glapi --enable-glx --enable-driglx-direct --enable-gles1 --enable-gles2 --enable-gbm --enable-openmax --enable-xa --enable-osmesa --with-radeonsi-llvm-compiler --enable-sysfs --enable-vdpau --enable-xvmc --enable-openmax --enable-nine 
make -j 4
checkinstall

You will have to configure via the checkinstall menu to build and install a valid package.

This package will be built according to these values:

0 -  Maintainer: [ your@email ]
1 -  Summary: [ open source 3D computer graphics library ]
2 -  Name:    [ mesa ]
3 -  Version: [ version number from git ]
4 -  Release: [ 1 ]
5 -  License: [ MIT ]
6 -  Group:   [ checkinstall ]
7 -  Architecture: [ amd64 ]
8 -  Source location: [ mesa ]
9 -  Alternate source location: [  ]
10 - Requires: [  ]
11 - Provides: [ mesa ]
12 - Conflicts: [  ]
13 - Replaces: [  ]

Configure Xorg

Xorg -configure
cp xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf

Next restart your display manager.

systemctl restart lightdm.service