![]() ![]() (I don't normally use c++ okay?) I can't get resolve to actually detect that it exists though, even though I'm using the right file structure. I'm had to change out clang++ (what they use by default) to gcc, because for some reason it just didn't include basic std libs. Update: I figured out how to compile it, but can't get it to work. I'll update if I can figure out how to compile the x264 plugin and it works. There's also DNxHR, but from my small bit of testing, MJPEG is slightly smaller. If you want to use clips in davinci resolve, I recommend using something similar to this command: for i in *.mkv do ffpb -vsync 0 -hwaccel cuda -i "$i" -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -c:v mjpeg -q:v 2 -pix_fmt yuvj420p -c:a pcm_s16le "$.mov" done (This transcodes. It only supports h264 if you pay for the full version. I'm trying to figure out how to compile it since they give no instructions lol) (Well, actually actually, there's an example plugin located in /opt/resolve/Developer/CodecPlugin/Examples/x264_encoder_plugin which supposedly supports h264. Everything I read indicates that Davinci Resolve Studio on Linux supports H.264 and H.265 encoding with a supported Nvidia GPU.Īctually, it doesn't. ![]()
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