On 01/31/2011 11:50 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote: > It doesn't tell me my computer is too slow, > it just gives me a rather pixelated image. > People look like there made of burlap. > > The output from mplayer has two things > that look like error messages to me. > >> Failed to open VDPAU backend libvdpau_nvidia.so: cannot open shared >> object file: No such file or directory >> [vdpau] Error when calling vdp_device_create_x11: 1 > > and > >> [VD_FFMPEG] DRI failure.0.051 ct: -0.030 0/ 0 ??% ??% ??,?% 0 0 > > I don't even know why it looks for VDPAU. > I have a GeForce card. That depends on *which* GeForce card you have. vdpau will only help you if you have a GeForce 6 series card or later *and* are running with the nvidia driver. The more later, the more it can help you. If you are using nouveau or nv, you can't benefit from vdpau support. > Presumably things would go badly if it found libvdpau_nvidia.so . > > Once upon a time, I knew what DRI failure meant, > but I've forgotten and googling turns up questions but no answers. DRI = Direct Rendering Infrastructure. It is the main support for 3D acceleration in X11 these days. In the video world, DRM is the Direct Rendering Manager. Wikipedia is your friend. > /var/log/Xorg.0.log includes, among other things: > >> [ 86356.565] Dac detection success >> [ 86356.565] (II) RADEON(0): Output: DVI-0, Detected Monitor Type: 0 >> [ 86356.565] Unhandled monitor type 0 >> [ 86356.565] (II) RADEON(0): EDID for output DVI-0 Whoa! This looks like you have a Radeon card of some sort. Radeon is made by AMD these days (used to be ATI). GeForce is made by nVidia. > from mplayer -V, the last lineis > >> vo: x11 uninit called but X11 not initialized.. Yeah, I get this message from both my laptop and my desktop. The former has an ATI chipset, the latter an nVidia one. What is in your /etc/mplayer/mplayer.conf file? It should show the vo options it will try and use. Mine uses: vo=xv,xvidix, and I don't have those problems.... The man page for mplayer for video output options. You can override by using the -vo command line option. See what works best for you. > Any ideas? -- Kevin J. Cummings kjchome@xxxxxxxxxxx cummings@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx cummings@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Registered Linux User #1232 (http://counter.li.org) -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines