2013-02-19, 12:26
Hello,
I am using xbmc-xvba and have seen some strange cpu utilization in the menus, although I think this is not a problem of the xvba branch I would like to discuss it here first.
I realized that xbmc-xvba uses 100% of a cpu core if in some menus, but not in all. To investigate this further, I would like to ask for suggestions how to nail down the facts.
For example, I used top to see the core utilization, which is by far the best tool for this. I also have the md 13.1 driver installed, because I have a legacy onboard chipset HD3200.
The phenomenon is like this:
Using confluence, the menu item "Videos" has almost no cpu utilization. Movies with "latest added" also uses low cpu.
TV Shows with "latest added enabled" uses 100% of one core. As does the list of a TV show.
I know we have dirty regions (which is enabled), and I disabled the rss feed already. I am not talking about playback, which is fine, only about the cpu utilization in the menus.
Any advice to investigate this further?
I am using xbmc-xvba and have seen some strange cpu utilization in the menus, although I think this is not a problem of the xvba branch I would like to discuss it here first.
I realized that xbmc-xvba uses 100% of a cpu core if in some menus, but not in all. To investigate this further, I would like to ask for suggestions how to nail down the facts.
For example, I used top to see the core utilization, which is by far the best tool for this. I also have the md 13.1 driver installed, because I have a legacy onboard chipset HD3200.
The phenomenon is like this:
Using confluence, the menu item "Videos" has almost no cpu utilization. Movies with "latest added" also uses low cpu.
TV Shows with "latest added enabled" uses 100% of one core. As does the list of a TV show.
I know we have dirty regions (which is enabled), and I disabled the rss feed already. I am not talking about playback, which is fine, only about the cpu utilization in the menus.
Any advice to investigate this further?