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Pranayamo Armata
United Electro-Magnetic Federation Business Alliance of Manufacturers and Miners
5
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Posted - 2016.11.18 19:48:40 -
[1] - Quote
This may be overly specific but I wanted to report it anyway:
I'm on Arch Linux with experimental mesa packages from the mesa-git repository (enabling stuff like d3d9 I believe) and the amdgpu open source driver for a radeon Tonga PRO family card. When loading station environments the entire system frooze up and amdgpu driver crashed, freezing the system (could only ssh in). Prior to that there were jitters on screen (see http://download.anaproy.nl/evejitters.jpg , may be related to https://forums.eveonline.com/default.aspx?g=posts&t=500331 ). The issue didn't occur prior to Ascension.
The solution was to downgrade to the standard arch packages for mesa, at the cost of a framerate drop though. |
Neuntausend
GoonWaffe Goonswarm Federation
1064
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Posted - 2016.11.18 19:54:29 -
[2] - Quote
I assume the standard mesa package you downgraded to does not include d3d9 support?
Does the issue go away when you use the git version, but disable d3d9 in wine? |
Pranayamo Armata
United Electro-Magnetic Federation Business Alliance of Manufacturers and Miners
5
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Posted - 2016.11.18 20:04:24 -
[3] - Quote
I'm not really sure about d3d9, but I think that was the whole point why I installed mesa-git in the first place (it's a while ago so I don't remember well). I didn't see the option to enable/disable it in winecfg though, neither in mesa-git nor standard mesa.
Do my 'jitters' look similar to yours? |
Neuntausend
GoonWaffe Goonswarm Federation
1064
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Posted - 2016.11.18 20:25:25 -
[4] - Quote
Not quite, no.
Concerning d3d9 - to actually use it in wine, just having a version of mesa that supports it is not enough. You will also need a version of wine that supports it. The wine devs aren't too fond about d3d9, since it's a lot of code for a very niche problem, and doesn't actually serve to solve the real problems. So it will likely not ever end up being a part of wine. There's a d3d9 patch available for wine, or you can use wine-staging instead. If your version of wine supports it, you can see the "staging" tab in winecfg, and it will have a checkbox to enable Direct 3D 9. If you don't have that, you are most likely not using it, no matter which version of mesa you have. You'd probably need this here as well: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/wine-gaming-nine/ or this: https://www.archlinux.org/packages/multilib/x86_64/wine-staging/
So, I do not think your issue stems from d3d9, really, whereas I'm fairly sure mine does. I will let you know if I find a solution for mine, maybe it would help fix yours as well. |
Pranayamo Armata
United Electro-Magnetic Federation Business Alliance of Manufacturers and Miners
5
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Posted - 2016.11.20 10:35:57 -
[5] - Quote
Right, that refreshes my memory: I used to be on a d3d9 wine, but then the Linux launcher came out which shipped its own non-d3d9 wine and I switched to that. So indeed I haven't been on it lately. My issue must have been purely mesa+amdgpu related. |
Neuntausend
Sebiestor Tribe Minmatar Republic
1077
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Posted - 2016.11.21 02:51:43 -
[6] - Quote
Maybe downgrade mesa, install wine-staging and enable CSMT - for me that's almost as fast as d3d9 |
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