I need to create something like that, but I can't find any documentation on how to get the needed info from the graphics subsystem. I once worked at Intel, and when I was working there I saw someone from the Media SDK team running something that detected how much of the CPU and GPU resources were being used up by media applications running on that system. I doubt that this is the cause, but it doesn't hurt if you try. This will be used by other software that I am writing to do "load balancing" of media applications across a server farm, and also to alert the operations staff when media transcoding loads are to great for the existing server farm. Your bitrate and resolution are quite common and were best practice at the time your hardware was manufactured, but it might be that your old Quicksync implementation doesn't support 60 fps. I get that now and then even though I use the motherboard/cpu for video. CassandraVindicated I always wondered what (hw) meant. on the Plex server, you will see Transcode (hw) in the Plex activity monitor. It sounds good, but try turning hardware decoding off in Plex and then do the transcode again. Windows and Linux servers using Intel QuickSync do not have any artificial. I am looking to create an application that runs on Windows Server (currently 2012) that can monitor the GPU resource usage from any/all MFX/QuickSync enabled applications that are running on that server. About 20+ 1080p transcodes with quicksync definitely sounds about right. I should have known this coming as this is a quest OS, but I. I have enabled 'advanced' options on hardware transcoding, but I cant see Intel QuickSync. ![]() One of them is Emby Server and it is using Windows Server 2019 as quest operating system. I am not looking for debugging tools and things like that. Hey, I have setup a host machine running Debian 11 and with couple Virtual Machines on Virtualbox. ![]() c:tempusbmmiddv2 Make sure you read the License. We have very simple monitoring tool in tools directory (ex in linux: /opt/intel/mediasdk/tools/metrics_monitor).Īlso, there are another powerful tools you can analyze CPU/GPU performance. Here is the procedure to add a virtual monitor to your system (Windows 10 and Higher) Download our virtual display driver from Unpack the zip file to an empty folder, e.g.
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