OK, so if I'm reading this properly, I should do something like:
melt edl.xml -consumer avformat:out.mp4 real_time:4
... to get specify 4 cores with frame-dropping?
Also, what is frame dropping?
----------
jeffrey k eliasen - technologist, philosopher, agent of change
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> On Jun 16, 2016, at 13:30, Dan Dennedy <d...@dennedy.org> wrote:
>
> https://www.mltframework.org/bin/view/MLT/Questions#Does_MLT_take_advantage_of_multi
>
> <https://www.mltframework.org/bin/view/MLT/Questions#Does_MLT_take_advantage_of_multi>
>
> On Thu, Jun 16, 2016 at 4:29 PM jeffrey k eliasen <j...@jke.net
> <mailto:j...@jke.net>> wrote:
> I am running the melt command on a 4-core system with no other software
> running (except system services), and I am only seeing about 30% CPU usage
> (134% of the theoretical 400% on the box). ffmpeg and other commands are
> fully utilizing the cores (380-410%), so the power is definitely available.
> All the files are being read from tempfs (RAM-based disk), so while there is
> definitely some latency for file access it should not be significant compared
> to the same media stored on physical media.
>
> Is melt able to utilize multiple processors? If so, why is it only using
> about 1.5 CPUs of the available 4? Are there settings I can adjust to better
> utilize the host machine?
>
> ----------
> jeffrey k eliasen - technologist, philosopher, agent of change
> blog <http://jeff.jke.net/> | linkedin
> <http://www.linkedin.com/pub/jeffrey-eliasen/3/a83/b76> | google+
> <http://plus.google.com/+JeffreyEliasen> | facebook
> <http://facebook.com/jeffrey.eliasen> | twitter
> <http://twitter.com/jeffreyeliasen>
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reports. http://sdm.link/zohomanageengine
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