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Configuration for hardware acceleration for transcoding with VA-API and NVENC |
Hardware transcoding
Memories supports transcoding acceleration with VA-API and NVENC.
External Transcoder
If you plan to use hardware transcoding, it may be easier to run the transcoder (go-vod) in a separate docker image containing ffmpeg and hardware acceleration dependencies. For this, you need to clone the go-vod repository and build the docker image. Then you need to change the vod connect address and mark go-vod as external. The important requirement for running go-vod externally is that the file structure must be exactly same for the target video files.
In the directory with the docker-compose.yml
file, run,
git clone https://github.com/pulsejet/go-vod
If you are using docker compose, configure a service to start go-vod with the correct devices and filesystem structure. Otherwise, manually start the container with these parameters.
# docker-compose.yml
services:
app:
image: nextcloud
restart: always
depends_on:
- db
- redis
volumes:
- ncdata:/var/www/html
go-vod:
build: ./go-vod
restart: always
devices:
- /dev/dri:/dev/dri
volumes:
- ncdata:/var/www/html:ro
Finally, point Memories to the external go-vod instance. In the admin interface, set go-vod to external and configure the connect URL to go-vod:47788
. Alternatively, add the following configuration to config.php
:
'memories.vod.external' => true,
'memories.vod.connect' => 'go-vod:47788',
VA-API
!!! warning "These instructions are not applicable for external transcoders"
Newer Intel processors come with a feature called QuickSync that can significantly boost transcoding performance (4-5x improvement over x264 is common). QuickSync can be used for hardware accelerated transcoding using the VA-API in ffmpeg.
Note: VA-API acceleration may also work with some AMD GPUs.
To configure VAAPI, you need to have /dev/dri
available to the Nextcloud instance with the www-data
in the group owning the drivers. You also need the correct drivers and a compatible version of ffmpeg installed.
Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y intel-media-va-driver-non-free ffmpeg
Alpine:
apk update
apk add --no-cache bash ffmpeg libva-utils libva-vdpau-driver libva-intel-driver intel-media-driver mesa-va-gallium
Docker installations
If you use Docker, you need to:
-
Pass the
/dev/dri
device to the container. Indocker-compose.yml
:app: build: . restart: always devices: - /dev/dri:/dev/dri
-
Make sure the right drivers are installed. This can be done using a custom Dockerfile, for example
FROM nextcloud:25 RUN apt-get update && \ apt-get install -y software-properties-common && \ apt-add-repository -y non-free && \ apt-get update && \ apt-get install -y intel-media-va-driver-non-free ffmpeg && \ rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* COPY start.sh / CMD /start.sh
In
start.sh
,#!/bin/bash GID=`stat -c "%g" /dev/dri/renderD128` groupadd -g $GID render2 || true # sometimes this is needed GROUP=`getent group $GID | cut -d: -f1` usermod -aG $GROUP www-data php-fpm
-
Check the output of
/tmp/go-vod/<instance-id>.log
if playback has issues
linuxserver/nextcloud image
You can add the following to the docker-compose.yml
file to install the drivers:
devices:
- /dev/dri:/dev/dri
environment:
- DOCKER_MODS=linuxserver/mods:universal-package-install
- INSTALL_PACKAGES=libva|libva-intel-driver|intel-media-driver|mesa-va-gallium
FFmpeg from source
In some cases, you may need to build the drivers and ffmpeg
from source. For example, the available version of the media driver for the current debian image used by Nextcloud only supports upto Ice Lake CPUs. This recipe might be useful.
FROM nextcloud:25
# Enable QSV support
SHELL ["/bin/bash", "-c"]
RUN apt-get update && \
apt-get install -y sudo curl git && \
rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
RUN curl https://gist.githubusercontent.com/pulsejet/4d81c1356703b2c8ba19c1ca9e6f6e50/raw/qsv-docker.sh | bash
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