That's the bit of code I was looking for. Thanks Florent!
On Fri, Oct 19, 2018 at 12:24 PM Alberto Luaces wrote:
> Great! Thanks a lot, Florent!
>
> COUDRET Florent writes:
>
> > Hi Alberto,
> >
> > for NVidia and AMD graphics cards, we declare 2 public variables at
> > global scope to force us
Great! Thanks a lot, Florent!
COUDRET Florent writes:
> Hi Alberto,
>
> for NVidia and AMD graphics cards, we declare 2 public variables at
> global scope to force using GPU at run-time (even if there is no
> existing application profile).
>
>
> extern "C" {
>
> /// Declare this variable
Hi Alberto,
for NVidia and AMD graphics cards, we declare 2 public variables at
global scope to force using GPU at run-time (even if there is no
existing application profile).
extern "C" {
/// Declare this variable in public to enable the NVidia side of
Optimus -
http://developer.downl
Trajce Nikolov NICK writes:
> I owned laptop with same configuration and obviously the Radeon driver
> software kit (or how it is called) comes with an app where you select
> the card per app. You select your app in this Radeon app and it will
> run on the selected device
That is what I tried, bu
Chris Hanson writes:
> I believe I was previously told that there are some secret C symbols wherein
> if you create a variable of a particular name, it acts as a hint to the
> driver to trigger particular behavior.
>
> I can't at the moment find the names of the symbols or what they do, but I'll
I owned laptop with same configuration and obviously the Radeon driver
software kit (or how it is called) comes with an app where you select the
card per app. You select your app in this Radeon app and it will run on the
selected device
On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 9:09 PM Chris Hanson wrote:
> I bel
I believe I was previously told that there are some secret C symbols
wherein if you create a variable of a particular name, it acts as a hint to
the driver to trigger particular behavior.
I can't at the moment find the names of the symbols or what they do, but
I'll look around. Maybe you can find
Hi,
some client owns a laptop with a dual GPU system —the typical integrated
Intel card plus an additional Radeon 530 one into a windows10 system.
It seems that the driver selects automatically the Radeon when using
some CAD applications, but only the integrated Intel when running our
OSG program
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