Talk:Supported hardware: Difference between revisions

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If we need to mention a specific driver version for a specific situation in Ubuntu then that's fine, but what version is it then? Although, specific ''software'' requirements for specific Linux-distros should probably be fleshed out on individual "how to install on X" pages. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] ([[User talk:Ned Scott|talk]]) 06:22, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
If we need to mention a specific driver version for a specific situation in Ubuntu then that's fine, but what version is it then? Although, specific ''software'' requirements for specific Linux-distros should probably be fleshed out on individual "how to install on X" pages. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] ([[User talk:Ned Scott|talk]]) 06:22, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
idk what best version of amd drivers is, I dont use or care about AMD, and already get way too involved, but yes there is a specific version that has less problems, fritsch would know which.
the vram thing, again, you base yourself on what has been writen in some docs, while there may be no limit set, the reason is obvious because it varies with setup/os and type of content, in ION and some nvidia cards, and I think its key to mention, FOR BEST RESULTS... if for no other reason at all. And from personal experience, any less does make certaing content choke or start having artifacts. Agin we can not say anything or we can say, for best results set X.

Revision as of 10:44, 30 March 2014

Desktop

CPU
++
SSE
x86 or x86_64 processor such as: Intel Pentium 4, Intel Pentium M, AMD Athlon XP/64, AMD Opteron, or newer CPU. Anything made in the last few years does.).
  • If your GPU/VPU does not support hardware video decoding then you will require a fast modern processor is required to decode some videos (H.264, VC-1, etc) in 1080P. Editor note: Hard to quantify this, but maybe we can get a rough benchmark score in here?
  • There is very limited Power PC (PPC) support: [Linux] How to install on Linux-ppc
RAM Note: Some platforms - the video playback acceleration, a minimum of 512MB dedicated VRAM is required set in BIOS
  • Minimum: 256MB
  • Recommended: 1GB or more
Graphics
XBMC will run on most graphics cards made in the last few years, including hardware video decoding support. This includes most cards from ATI/AMD, Intel, or NVIDIA which support OpenGL 2.0 or later.


Minimum:

Recommended:
ATI Intel Nvidia
ATI Radeon RV710/M92 (HD 4300/4500) Intel GMA 950 (945G) Nvidia GeForce 6-Series
ATI Radeon Cedar (Radeоn HD 5400 Series or newer Intel GMA X4500HD (G45) or newer Nvidia GeForce 8-Series or newer
Video
decoding
For hardware video decoding, which may be necessary on various low-performance CPUs to playback 1080P content, make sure your GPU or VPU supports either VAAPI, VDPAU, or CrystalHD.

Note: ATI Radeon cards lower than UVD2.2, are not supported with Ubuntu & variants 12.10 base system, using fglrx due to changes in ATI's drivers. Legacy cards that support the minimum OpenGL requirements still can be installed, but you wont get any hardware acceleration playback in XBMC with fglrx and must remain at a specific driver version to work without bugs..

Drive space The XBMC binary generally takes up between 100 to 200 MB of space, depending on how it's compiled. Technically speaking, if your hardware supports netbooting, you don't even require a hard drive for either the OS or XBMC.
  • Minimum: 4 to 8GB
  • Recommended: 16GB or more
Depending on how big your video library is. Most of the space required for XBMC comes from the images/artwork cache, which can be adjusted: HOW-TO:Reduce XBMC disk space.
Optical
Drive
Optional
DVD - Bluray
Ethernet
port
Optional
  • Minimum: 100BASE-TX

Note: A wired connection is preferred over slow wifi network, some 5gHz environments may affect wifi signal quality/strength and reduce bandwidth or cause signal fluctuations that affect streaming

uNiversal 07:51, 29 March 2014 (EDT)

For starters, the RAM requirement is wrong. The minimal RAM requirement for XBMC to run on linux hardware, even for v13 Gotham, on x86 systems, is still 256MB. The CPU requirement has been replaced with a recommendation. That recommendation of "dual core" means nothing because XBMC doesn't use more than one core for video decoding, and has only gained the ability to use more cores in v13 Gotham if specifically set to do so, and even that setting discourages turning that on.
If you want to update the GPU text, please do so, but don't format it using that table. That table is a big step backwards in formatting. -- Ned Scott (talk) 02:45, 28 March 2014 (EDT)
I apologize, I see that dual-core comment is in the old text as well. Sill, that table was a mess and just took up more space without being any clearer about the requirements. -- Ned Scott (talk) 02:48, 28 March 2014 (EDT)
YEs, things can always be improved, however you have left out the legacy stuff which is a must because the questions will be ask:ed.
You also left out the hdd/usb and add optional optical drive, you needs a usb a hdd or ssd cannot do without either, and in case you want playback optical media that should also be there. — Preceding unsigned comment added by uNiversal (talkcontribs)
Here. You don't need USB or an optical drive at all (plenty of people have installed directly to the drive and then installed that drive on the other hardware), but you would be hard pressed to find any hardware that is able to run XBMC that doesn't have a USB port. It's virtually impossible, and it's a given that you need some method of installing.
Same for optical drives. It's completely obvious that if you want to play a DVD then you need something to physically read a DVD. People aren't just setting bare DVDs on top of the HTPC case and expecting magic.
That being said, I would not object to a mention of USB (and ethernet, for that matter) in the context of being able to playback media. A lot of people do have the mistaken impression that USB 3 or gigabit ethernet is required for HD content, when USB 2 and 100meg ethernet will do just fine. -- Ned Scott (talk) 03:43, 28 March 2014 (EDT
For gpu acceleration yoou need minimum 512MB Vram in addition to the 256MB system ram, so we already at 700MB+RAM so ya 1GB minimum depending if shared or not.
Yes, unfortunately, we should do the obvious more often, not everyone gets the obvious, no matter how much we want to belive that. Yes ether port mim100meg is ok and usb2 is also ok, unless you streaming over wifi a 50mbit bitrate file, Ive added a few things above lookup from the uvd2.0 page and whatnot to add to the table when your done reformating it again ;)
The usb port I mean a USB drive you can installinux to a USB drive or Intall to hdd or install to ssd, I didnt means that you need a usb port, though its obvious ;) that most everything has one of those these days.uNiversal 04:34, 28 March 2014 (EDT)
I don't know who told you that 512 MB of VRAM was needed, but they're wrong. I run XBMC on an x86 Pentium M with 64MB VRAM and 256MB system RAM. Raspberry Pi is ARM, but it runs XBMC using 256MB on the model A, total, both VRAM and system RAM.
Even for 50mbit files, USB 2 and ethernet 100 is more than enough. There is no recommended gigabit ethernet. It's faster, but it makes zero difference for XBMC. BluRay ISOs don't go higher than about 40. Even then, it's not a requirement, just as an optical drive or an IR remote are not requirements. -- Ned Scott (talk) 11:31, 28 March 2014 (EDT)
What about the above I polshed it up a bit,
  1. RAM: Sure 256 is minimum but thats just system wise, video playback requires 512 dedicated vram for accelerated content, + system ram your already on 700MB+
  2. A video bitrate and the bandwith is not the same, a 100MB port maxes out at 12MB/s, but in wifi connections a 40Mbit bluray will suffer depending on newrok equipment/signal quality and strenght, though ok now we can fill buffers and whatnot.
Ive added more specific notes about legacy amd cards, we cant ignore these yet, they can run xbmc even with fglrx just no acceleration on video playback.uNiversal 06:22, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
Hardware video decoding does not require any additional RAM. None. My main HTPC hardware, which I have been using for the last three years on a daily basis, decodes every format that any other major VPU can, including MPEG2, VC-1, and more, and has a grand total of 320 MB of RAM (256MB system RAM, 64 MB VRAM). Whoever told you that XBMC ever needs 512 MB of VRAM is simply wrong.Ned Scott (talk) 22:08, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
No... it is not... Maybe your platforms work fine with no RAM assigned or bare 64MB to video card in Bios, you try running a ION or some Nvidia cards for e.g or some AMD cards under Linux and not assign them 512MB ram in bios
and see what happens when hardware decode time comes. It will work perfectly wont it? It not XBMC, the hardware just needs it to operate optimally naturally it has nothing to do with XBMC.
Sure you can with some platforms but not everyone using xbmc has your hardware. like me for e.g.uNiversal 02:04, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
As far as networking, that's not a requirement to run XBMC. Plenty of people run XBMC completely offline, so it's not accurate to put this down on this page.Ned Scott (talk) 22:08, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
Sure, But its ok for you to talk about netbooting which is definitely not a xbmc requirement?
Im suggesting better ways to put this forward because it makes sense and logical, Can it always be imporved? Sure! Doant mean you have to have it or use it. what a terrible suggestion idk what I was thinking in this day and age.uNiversal 02:04, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
There's already a big bright note for Ubuntu users about their older AMD cards. It specifically says that, for Ubuntu 12.10+, users need to use an AMD card that is 2.2 or higher, with a link to a list of cards, if they want to use hardware video decoding. The reason there are two sections, one for GPU in the UI context, and one for GPU/VPU in the video decoding context, already explains that the older cards can still be used for the GUI.Ned Scott (talk) 22:08, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
Yes there is, 'but its does not tell you that you need to use fglrx and that it needs to be a specific version
the intended audience here, need to be told this specifically and clearly beyond any doubts or have to tell them each and every time they ask, Im not a parrot, thx. uNiversal 02:04, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
I don't see any point in listing arbitrary acronyms under the storage space requirements. As a requirement, it doesn't matter if the user is using a mechanical hard drive, SSD, nor does it matter if they connect with USB, Firewire, SATA, PATA, eSATA, mSATA, PCIe, Thunderbolt, SD, mSD, CF, or a custom eMMC module connector.Ned Scott (talk) 22:08, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
Its not the connectors acronyms Im listing, whatever gives you that idea? ;)
but yes I suppose it could be any medium these days so ya. I agree with that comment, under that premise.uNiversal 02:07, 30 March 2014 (EDT)
If the point here is to list suggested hardware, like what many threads do in the hardware forum, then that is different and should be done on a different set of pages than this one. Such a page should be marked as a community suggestion, and likely needs to be in context of the specific OS that is also being suggested. For example, a page could be called "Recommended hardware for Ubuntu" or "Recommended hardware for OpenELEC". -- Ned Scott (talk) 22:08, 29 March 2014 (EDT)
mmm, right?!


perhaps there could be better ways to do these things, but Im not doing them.
if you like, do write it yourself and teach me the world as it should be according to Ned Scott and I will learn :) uNiversal 02:07, 30 March 2014 (EDT)


I wish you hadn't chopped up my comment like that, but whatever. Yes, any system, any motherboard, that is x86 based, can run without giving 500MB to VRAM and still use hardware video decoding. Not just my systems, but any system. There is no RAM requirement for hardware video decoding. None. Since you've been persistent about it I've even looked it up, and I can't find anything that backs up the claim that one needs 500MB of VRAM to use hardware video decoding. I'm honestly at a loss as for why you think this is a requirement.

Netbooting is mentioned as an example of how someone doesn't strictly require local memory for XBMC to work on a system. Then memory requirements are given, which can be local or networked. It's a given that you need a way to connect to a server if you decide to netboot. Just as it's a given that you need a DVD drive if you want to play DVDs. Anything with a USB drive can have wireless internet or wired ethernet added to it.

If we need to mention a specific driver version for a specific situation in Ubuntu then that's fine, but what version is it then? Although, specific software requirements for specific Linux-distros should probably be fleshed out on individual "how to install on X" pages. -- Ned Scott (talk) 06:22, 30 March 2014 (EDT)

idk what best version of amd drivers is, I dont use or care about AMD, and already get way too involved, but yes there is a specific version that has less problems, fritsch would know which.

the vram thing, again, you base yourself on what has been writen in some docs, while there may be no limit set, the reason is obvious because it varies with setup/os and type of content, in ION and some nvidia cards, and I think its key to mention, FOR BEST RESULTS... if for no other reason at all. And from personal experience, any less does make certaing content choke or start having artifacts. Agin we can not say anything or we can say, for best results set X.