Lee ponzu schrieb:
> Does the Linux viewer use X? If you DISPLAY SL on another computer
> running an XServer, does it behave OK.
>
> If so, could you assemble a small Linux host with a high end GPU and
> then DISPLAY SL on a different computer on the same local network?
>
> ponzu
so far I used yuk
On Thu, 14 Jul 2011 17:06:22 +0200
"Lance Corrimal" wrote:
> > If so, could you assemble a small Linux host with a high end GPU and then
> > DISPLAY SL on a different computer on the same local network?
>
> no. see above.
>
> bye,
> LC
Actually, using VirtualGL[1] this should be possible.
In the past it has been possible to do accelerated openGL-over-X11 over a
network with particular drivers, specifically some versions of the linux
NVidia drivers. Still, it's quite exotic, limited, and probably would not
result in the effect the original poster intended.
On Thu, Jul 14, 2011 at 11
Am Do, 14.07.2011, 16:56 schrieb Lee ponzu:
> Does the Linux viewer use X?
yes.
> If you DISPLAY SL on another computer running
> an XServer, does it behave OK.
no. no openGL app does.
> If so, could you assemble a small Linux host with a high end GPU and then
> DISPLAY SL on a different compu
If you want to use X forwarding, you're probably not going to be happy with
the results. Machines on the same gigabit switch can even have poor
performance just loading or refreshing a file manager. There may be other
ways, and there are always remote desktop-type layers like NX..
Discrete
On T
Does the Linux viewer use X? If you DISPLAY SL on another computer running
an XServer, does it behave OK.
If so, could you assemble a small Linux host with a high end GPU and then
DISPLAY SL on a different computer on the same local network?
ponzu
___