Dear Nick,


I wanted to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude for your detailed explanation regarding the GFX pipeline and its relationship with GPU integration.

Thank you once again for your support and for pointing me to the relevant resources.
I look forward to any future discussions or collaborations.

Best regards.

------ Original Message ------
差出人: "Nick Couchman" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
送信済み: 火曜日, 2024/8/13  20:05
件名: Re: About the GPU settings of the latest version of Guacamole-server deployed from Git

On Tue, Aug 13, 2024 at 4:34 AM <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Hi everyone

 I came across an option called disable-gfx.
My understanding is that this option disables the GPU and is enabled by
 default.

 Could you please confirm if this understanding is correct?



Not quite, no - the GFX pipeline is not necessarily GPU-related, it's just an enhanced way of processing graphics over RDP:


https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-rdpegfx/da5c75f9-cd99-450c-98c4-014a496942b0 <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-rdpegfx/da5c75f9-cd99-450c-98c4-014a496942b0>


I'm sure it could be extended to support GPUs, but that's not the case today.

If my understanding is correct, I have a system with a GPU (NVIDIA GeForce
 RTX 4060 Ti) running on an Ubuntu machine with guacd installed.
However, when I run the nvidia-smi command, the "Processes:" section shows
 "No running processes found."

 Is there any additional configuration required to resolve this?



There is currently no direct integration, even when using the GFX pipeline, of guacd with GPUs. Doing so would take some additional coding/integration.


-Nick


Reply via email to