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Has anyone figured out a way to get the Mercury engine to actually use the GPU to render in PP 2019? As stated in the title, I have a P6000, I'm on the latest driver (431.70). My system is a Dell Precision 7920 (tower), running on an Intel Xeon Gold chip and there's no integrated Intel graphics that would interfere.
Any insight or direction would be great!
Cheers!
L. Michael Lee
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Read below doc on what the gpu does and does not do as most stuff is done on the cpu:
CUDA, OpenCL, Mercury Playback Engine, and Adobe Premiere Pro | Adobe Blog
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Very useful information but it doesn't answer my question. Premiere Pro CC CAN render using CUDA in real-time. See this YT post:
NVIDIA Quadro P6000 Editing 8K RED Camera RAW "Uncompressed" Video - YouTube​
I have the same graphics card, but the app is still choosing to render using the processor, not the GPU...
Furthermore, the P6000 is found on Adobe's recommended graphics card list:
Adobe Premiere Pro System Requirements
Adobe recommends a specific NVidia driver (411.63) at the bottom of that web page. However, that driver won't install on the latest build of Windows 10 Pro for workstations...
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411.63 is an old driver, 431.70 is the correct one.
What does the project settings/general say about the Video Rendering and Playback?
If it says MPE hardware what does your timeline consist of and what are your export settings?
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@ Ann
is your link still relevant in any kind ?
It is marked as last updated in feb 2011 and referes only to CS versions which are totally other then the current ones.
Especially the different accelarations have been mainly renewed by a totally other mechanism and options .....
...or have I got a wrong link ??
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Yes old but still relevant for MPE which refers to the graphicscard.
Quick sync is a different ballgame.
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There are standard and DCH driver versions. This may be part of the issue.
I'd probably recommend a full un-install then reinstall of the Nvidia driver. This shouldn't be too hard to solve.
I'd start there and next step would be to consider calling support.
If you are still having problems after a clean install of the correct driver, please shoot me a PM.
Wes
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Thanks for your response! I did better, I installed a fresh copy of Windows 10 Pro, installed the latest driver for the GPU (431.70 DCH) then all of the Windows updates.I'm coming from a FCP X workflow, so I'm fairly new to using PP 2019. Unless I'm incorrectly assuming how PP 2019 uses the GPU, I don't think its working. The GPU is always idle when rendering.
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Looking at the screenshot it is working.
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The video encoding/decoding on the GPU is at 0%. With 1.2 GB of memory usage and 9% total utilization. What am I not seeing? However, look at the CPU. The application is clearly utilizing the CPU to render the footage. When the rendering is complete, the CPU utilization drops to 0-5%.
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Are you performing scaling or adding GPU accelerated effects?
GPUs are not used to render everything in Premiere Pro. If you scale footage and add several filters, this is a common scenario where you should see a big difference.
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Has anyone figured out a way to get the Mercury engine to actually use the GPU to render in PP 2019?
Turn it on. If it's on, it's being used where it can.