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PSA: You can now use FFmpeg's VAAPI-based VP8 and VP9 encoder on Skylake+ systems on Linux: Tested on Ubuntu 16.04LTS

Build VAAPI with support for VP8/9 decode and encode hardware acceleration on a Skylake validation testbed:

Build platform: Ubuntu 16.04LTS.

First things first:

Install baseline dependencies first

sudo apt-get -y install autoconf automake build-essential libass-dev libtool pkg-config texinfo zlib1g-dev libva-dev cmake mercurial libdrm-dev libvorbis-dev libogg-dev git libx11-dev libperl-dev libpciaccess-dev libpciaccess0 xorg-dev intel-gpu-tools

This presents only one option, building all components from source and installing the latest build dependencies from source.

Then add the Oibaf PPA, needed to install the latest development headers for libva:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:oibaf/graphics-drivers
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get -y upgrade && sudo apt-get -y dist-upgrade

Option 1: Build the latest libva and all drivers from source:

First things first, build the dependency chain:

  1. libva:

Libva is an implementation for VA-API (Video Acceleration API)

VA-API is an open-source library and API specification, which provides access to graphics hardware acceleration capabilities for video processing. It consists of a main library and driver-specific acceleration backends for each supported hardware vendor. It is a prerequisite for building the VAAPI driver components below.

git clone https://github.com/01org/libva
cd libva
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install
  1. cmrt:

This is the C for Media Runtime GPU Kernel Manager for Intel G45 & HD Graphics family. it's a prerequisite for building the intel-hybrid-driver package.

git clone https://github.com/01org/cmrt
cd cmrt
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install
  1. intel-hybrid-driver:

This package provides support for WebM project VPx codecs. GPU acceleration is provided via media kernels executed on Intel GEN GPUs. The hybrid driver provides the CPU bound entropy (e.g., CPBAC) decoding and manages the GEN GPU media kernel parameters and buffers.

This package grants access to the VPX-series hybrid decode capabilities on supported hardware configurations,, namely Haswell and Skylake. Do not build this target on unsupported platforms.

Related, see this commit regarding the hybrid driver initialization failure on platforms where its' not relevant.

git clone https://github.com/01org/intel-hybrid-driver
cd intel-hybrid-driver
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install
  1. intel-vaapi-driver:

This package provides the VA-API (Video Acceleration API) user mode driver for Intel GEN Graphics family SKUs. The current video driver back-end provides a bridge to the GEN GPUs through the packaging of buffers and commands to be sent to the i915 driver for exercising both hardware and shader functionality for video decode, encode, and processing.

it also provides a wrapper to the intel-hybrid-driver when called up to handle VP8/9 hybrid decode tasks on supported hardware (when configured with the --enable-hybrid-codec option as shown below:).

git clone https://github.com/01org/intel-vaapi-driver
cd intel-vaapi-driver
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu --enable-hybrid-codec
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install

However, on Kabylake and newer, omit this as shown since its' not needed:

cd ~/vaapi
git clone https://github.com/intel/intel-vaapi-driver
cd intel-vaapi-driver
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu 
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install

  1. libva-utils:

This package provides a collection of tests for VA-API, such as vainfo, needed to validate a platform's supported features (encode, decode & postproc attributes on a per-codec basis by VAAPI entry points information).

git clone https://github.com/intel/libva-utils
cd libva-utils
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
time make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
sudo make -j$(nproc) install

Platform environment variables:

Check if LIBVA environment variables are correctly configured:

set | grep LIBVA

Should output something like:

LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME=i965
LIBVA_DRIVERS_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri

If not (as expected), set them on your system environment variables (/etc/environment) and reboot.

sudo systemctl reboot 

Verification:

When done, test the VAAPI supported featureset by running vainfo:

vainfo

The output on my current testbed is:

libva info: VA-API version 0.40.0
libva info: va_getDriverName() returns 0
libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/i965_drv_video.so
libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_0_40
libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
vainfo: VA-API version: 0.40 (libva 1.7.3)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 1.8.3.pre1 (glk-alpha-58-g5a984ae)
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVC1Simple              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Main                :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Advanced            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileNone                   :	VAEntrypointVideoProc
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointEncPicture
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVP9Profile0            :	VAEntrypointVLD

On reboot, test the VAAPI supported featureset by running vainfo:

vainfo

Making a usable FFmpeg build to test the encoders:

Now, we will build an FFmpeg binary that can take advantage of VAAPI to test the encode and decode capabilities on Skylake, using a custom prefix because we load FFmpeg via the environment-modules system on the testbed.

Prepare the target directories first:

sudo mkdir -p /apps/ffmpeg/dyn
sudo chown -Rc $USER:$USER /apps/ffmpeg/dyn
mkdir -p ~/ffmpeg_sources

Include extra components as needed:

(a). Build and deploy nasm: Nasm is an assembler for x86 optimizations used by x264 and FFmpeg. Highly recommended or your resulting build may be very slow.

Note that we've now switched away from Yasm to nasm, as this is the current assembler that x265,x264, among others, are adopting.

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
wget wget http://www.nasm.us/pub/nasm/releasebuilds/2.14rc0/nasm-2.14rc0.tar.gz
tar xzvf nasm-2.14rc0.tar.gz
cd nasm-2.14rc0
./configure --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" --bindir="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin"
make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(b). Build and deploy libx264 statically: This library provides a H.264 video encoder. See the H.264 Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples. This requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-gpl --enable-libx264.

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
git clone http://git.videolan.org/git/x264.git -b stable
cd x264/
PATH="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin:$PATH" ./configure --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" --bindir="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin" --enable-static --disable-opencl --enable-pic
PATH="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin:$PATH" make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(c). Build and configure libx265: This library provides a H.265/HEVC video encoder. See the H.265 Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples.

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
hg clone https://bitbucket.org/multicoreware/x265
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources/x265/build/linux
PATH="$/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin:$PATH" cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" -DENABLE_SHARED:bool=off ../../source
make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) clean VERBOSE=1

(d). Build and deploy the libfdk-aac library: This provides an AAC audio encoder. See the AAC Audio Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples. This requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libfdk-aac (and --enable-nonfree if you also included --enable-gpl).

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
wget -O fdk-aac.tar.gz https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac/tarball/master
tar xzvf fdk-aac.tar.gz
cd mstorsjo-fdk-aac*
autoreconf -fiv
./configure --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" --disable-shared
make -j$(nproc)
make -j$(nproc) install
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(e). Build and configure libvpx

   cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
   git clone https://github.com/webmproject/libvpx
   cd libvpx
   ./configure --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" --enable-runtime-cpu-detect --enable-vp9 --enable-vp8 \
   --enable-postproc --enable-vp9-postproc --enable-multi-res-encoding --enable-webm-io --enable-better-hw-compatibility --enable-vp9-highbitdepth --enable-onthefly-bitpacking --enable-realtime-only \
   --cpu=native --as=nasm
   time make -j$(nproc)
   time make -j$(nproc) install
   time make clean -j$(nproc)
   time make distclean

(f). Build LibVorbis

   cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
   wget -c -v http://downloads.xiph.org/releases/vorbis/libvorbis-1.3.6.tar.xz
   tar -xvf libvorbis-1.3.6.tar.xz
   cd libvorbis-1.3.6
   ./configure --enable-static --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn"
   time make -j$(nproc)
   time make -j$(nproc) install
   time make clean -j$(nproc)
   time make distclean

(g). Build FFmpeg:

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
git clone https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg -b master
cd FFmpeg
PATH="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin:$PATH" PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/lib/pkgconfig:/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig" ./configure \
  --pkg-config-flags="--static" \
  --prefix="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn" \
  --extra-cflags="-I/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/include" \
  --extra-ldflags="-L/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/lib" \
  --extra-cflags="-I/usr/local/include" \
  --extra-ldflags="-L/usr/local/lib" \
  --bindir="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin" \
  --enable-debug=3 \
  --enable-vaapi \
  --enable-libvorbis \
  --enable-libvpx \
  --enable-gpl \
  --cpu=native \
  --enable-opengl \
  --enable-libfdk-aac \
  --enable-libx264 \
  --enable-libx265 \
  --extra-libs=-lpthread \
  --enable-nonfree 
PATH="/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin:$PATH" make -j$(nproc) 
make -j$(nproc) install 
make -j$(nproc) distclean 
hash -r

Note: To get debug builds, omit the distclean step and you'll find the ffmpeg_g binary under the sources subdirectory.

We only want debug builds when an issue crops up and a gdb trace may be required for debugging purposes.

The environment-modules file for FFmpeg (edit as necessary if your prefixes differ, and to add conflicts if needed):

less /usr/share/modules/modulefiles/ffmpeg/vaapi


#%Module1.0#####################################################################
##
## ffmpeg media transcoder modulefile
## By Dennis Mungai <dmngaie@gmail.com>
## February, 2018
##

# for Tcl script use only
set     appname         ffmpeg
set     version         dyn
set     prefix          /apps/${appname}/${version}
set     exec_prefix     ${prefix}/bin

conflict        ffmpeg/git

prepend-path    PATH            ${exec_prefix}
prepend-path    LD_LIBRARY_PATH ${prefix}/lib

To load and test, run:

module load ffmpeg/vaapi

Confirm all is sane via:

which ffmpeg

Expected output:

/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin/ffmpeg

Sample snippets to test the new encoders:

Confirm that the VAAPI encoders have been built successfully:

ffmpeg  -hide_banner -encoders | grep vaapi 

 V..... h264_vaapi           H.264/AVC (VAAPI) (codec h264)
 V..... hevc_vaapi           H.265/HEVC (VAAPI) (codec hevc)
 V..... mjpeg_vaapi          MJPEG (VAAPI) (codec mjpeg)
 V..... mpeg2_vaapi          MPEG-2 (VAAPI) (codec mpeg2video)
 V..... vp8_vaapi            VP8 (VAAPI) (codec vp8)

See the help documentation for each encoder in question:

ffmpeg -hide_banner -h encoder='encoder name'

Making a usable FFmpeg build without the module system:

Now, we will build an FFmpeg binary that can take advantage of VAAPI to test the encode and decode capabilities on the test platform.

Prepare the target directories first:

mkdir -p $HOME/bin
chown -Rc $USER:$USER $HOME/bin
mkdir -p ~/ffmpeg_sources

Include extra components as needed:

(a). Build and deploy nasm: Nasm is an assembler for x86 optimizations used by x264 and FFmpeg. Highly recommended or your resulting build may be very slow.

Note that we've now switched away from Yasm to nasm, as this is the current assembler that x265,x264, among others, are adopting.

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
wget wget http://www.nasm.us/pub/nasm/releasebuilds/2.14rc0/nasm-2.14rc0.tar.gz
tar xzvf nasm-2.14rc0.tar.gz
cd nasm-2.14rc0
./configure --prefix="$HOME/bin" --bindir="$HOME/bin"
make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(b). Build and deploy libx264 statically: This library provides a H.264 video encoder. See the H.264 Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples. This requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-gpl --enable-libx264.

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
git clone http://git.videolan.org/git/x264.git -b stable
cd x264/
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" ./configure --prefix="$HOME/bin" --bindir="$HOME/bin" --enable-static --disable-opencl --enable-pic
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(c). Build and configure libx265: This library provides a H.265/HEVC video encoder. See the H.265 Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples.

sudo apt-get install cmake mercurial
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
hg clone https://bitbucket.org/multicoreware/x265
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources/x265/build/linux
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$HOME/bin" -DENABLE_SHARED:bool=off ../../source
make -j$(nproc) VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) install VERBOSE=1
make -j$(nproc) clean VERBOSE=1

(d). Build and deploy the libfdk-aac library: This provides an AAC audio encoder. See the AAC Audio Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples. This requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libfdk-aac (and --enable-nonfree if you also included --enable-gpl).

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
wget -O fdk-aac.tar.gz https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac/tarball/master
tar xzvf fdk-aac.tar.gz
cd mstorsjo-fdk-aac*
autoreconf -fiv
./configure --prefix="$HOME/bin" --disable-shared
make -j$(nproc)
make -j$(nproc) install
make -j$(nproc) distclean

(e). Build and configure libvpx:

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
git clone https://github.com/webmproject/libvpx/
cd libvpx
./configure --prefix="$HOME/bin" --enable-runtime-cpu-detect --enable-vp9 --enable-vp8 \
--enable-postproc --enable-vp9-postproc --enable-multi-res-encoding --enable-webm-io --enable-vp9-highbitdepth --enable-onthefly-bitpacking --enable-realtime-only \
--cpu=native --as=yasm
time make -j$(nproc)
time make -j$(nproc) install
time make clean -j$(nproc)
time make distclean

(f). Build LibVorbis:

   cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
   wget -c -v http://downloads.xiph.org/releases/vorbis/libvorbis-1.3.6.tar.xz
   tar -xvf libvorbis-1.3.6.tar.xz
   cd libvorbis-1.3.6
   ./configure --enable-static --prefix="$HOME/bin"
   time make -j$(nproc)
   time make -j$(nproc) install
   time make clean -j$(nproc)
   time make distclean

(g). Build FFmpeg:

cd ~/ffmpeg_sources
git clone https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg -b master
cd FFmpeg
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/bin/lib/pkgconfig:/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig" ./configure \
  --pkg-config-flags="--static" \
  --prefix="$HOME/bin" \
  --extra-cflags="-I$HOME/bin/include" \
  --extra-ldflags="-L$HOME/bin/lib" \
  --extra-cflags="-I/usr/local/include" \
  --extra-ldflags="-L/usr/local/lib" \
  --bindir="$HOME/bin" \
  --enable-debug=3 \
  --enable-vaapi \
  --enable-libvorbis \
  --enable-libvpx \
  --disable-debug \
  --enable-gpl \
  --cpu=native \
  --enable-opengl \
  --enable-libfdk-aac \
  --enable-libx264 \
  --enable-libx265 \
  --extra-libs=-lpthread \
  --enable-nonfree 
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" make -j$(nproc) 
make -j$(nproc) install 
make -j$(nproc) distclean 
hash -r

Note: To get debug builds, omit the distclean step and the --disable-debug configure flag and you'll find the ffmpeg_g binary under the sources subdirectory.

We only want debug builds when an issue crops up and a gdb trace may be required for debugging purposes.

Test the encoders;

Using GNU parallel, we will encode some mp4 files (4k H.264 test samples, 40 minutes each, AAC 6-channel audio) on the ~/src path on the system to VP8 and HEVC respectively using the examples below. Note that I've tuned the encoders to suit my use-cases, and re-scaling to 1080p is enabled. Adjust as necessary.

To VP8, launching 10 encode jobs simultaneously:

parallel -j 10 --verbose 'ffmpeg -loglevel debug -threads 4 -hwaccel vaapi -i "{}"  -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD129 -c:v vp8_vaapi -loop_filter_level:v 63 -loop_filter_sharpness:v 15 -b:v 4500k -maxrate:v 7500k -vf 'format=nv12,hwupload,scale_vaapi=w=1920:h=1080' -c:a libvorbis -b:a 384k -ac 6 -f webm "{.}.webm"' ::: $(find . -type f -name '*.mp4')

To HEVC with GNU Parallel:

To HEVC Main Profile, launching 10 encode jobs simultaneously:

parallel -j 4 --verbose '/apps/ffmpeg/dyn/bin/ffmpeg -loglevel debug -threads 4 -hwaccel vaapi -i "{}"  -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD129 -c:v hevc_vaapi -qp:v 19 -b:v 2100k -maxrate:v 3500k -vf 'format=nv12,hwupload,scale_vaapi=w=1920:h=1080' -c:a libvorbis -b:a 384k -ac 6 -f matroska "{.}.mkv"' ::: $(find . -type f -name '*.mp4')

Some notes:

  1. Intel's QuickSync is very efficient. See the power utilization traces and average system loads with 10 encodes running simultaneously here.
  2. Skylake's HEVC encoder is very slow, and I suspect that on my hardware, may be slower than the software-based x265 encoder and kvazaar's HEVC encoders. However, its' quality, when well tuned, is significantly superior to other hardware-based encoders such as the Nvidia NVENC HEVC encoder on Maxwell GM200-series SKUs. The NVENC encoder on Pascal is however faster and superior to the one on Intel's Skylake HEVC encoder implementation.
  3. Unlike Nvidia's NVENC, there are no simultaneous encodes limitations on the consumer SKUs. I was able to run 10 encode sessions siumultaneously with VAAPI, whereas with NVENC, I'd have been limited to two maximum simultaneous encodes on the GeForce GTX series GPUs on the testbeds. Good work, Intel.

VP9 hardware-accelerated encoding is now available for FFmpeg. However, you'll need an Intel Kabylake-based Integrated GPU to take advantage of this feature.

And now, with the new vp9_vaapi encoder, here's what we get.

Encoder options now available:

ffmpeg -h vp9_vaapi

Output:

Encoder vp9_vaapi [VP9 (VAAPI)]:
    General capabilities: delay 
    Threading capabilities: none
    Supported pixel formats: vaapi_vld
vp9_vaapi AVOptions:
  -loop_filter_level <int>        E..V.... Loop filter level (from 0 to 63) (default 16)
  -loop_filter_sharpness <int>        E..V.... Loop filter sharpness (from 0 to 15) (default 4)

What happens when you try to pull this off on unsupported hardware, say Skylake?

See the sample output below:

[Parsed_format_0 @ 0x42cb500] compat: called with args=[nv12]
[Parsed_format_0 @ 0x42cb500] Setting 'pix_fmts' to value 'nv12'
[Parsed_scale_vaapi_2 @ 0x42cc300] Setting 'w' to value '1920'
[Parsed_scale_vaapi_2 @ 0x42cc300] Setting 'h' to value '1080'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'video_size' to value '3840x2026'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'pix_fmt' to value '0'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'time_base' to value '1/1000'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'pixel_aspect' to value '1/1'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'sws_param' to value 'flags=2'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] Setting 'frame_rate' to value '24000/1001'
[graph 0 input from stream 0:0 @ 0x42cce00] w:3840 h:2026 pixfmt:yuv420p tb:1/1000 fr:24000/1001 sar:1/1 sws_param:flags=2
[format @ 0x42cba40] compat: called with args=[vaapi_vld]
[format @ 0x42cba40] Setting 'pix_fmts' to value 'vaapi_vld'
[auto_scaler_0 @ 0x42cd580] Setting 'flags' to value 'bicubic'
[auto_scaler_0 @ 0x42cd580] w:iw h:ih flags:'bicubic' interl:0
[Parsed_format_0 @ 0x42cb500] auto-inserting filter 'auto_scaler_0' between the filter 'graph 0 input from stream 0:0' and the filter 'Parsed_format_0'
[AVFilterGraph @ 0x42ca360] query_formats: 6 queried, 4 merged, 1 already done, 0 delayed
[auto_scaler_0 @ 0x42cd580] w:3840 h:2026 fmt:yuv420p sar:1/1 -> w:3840 h:2026 fmt:nv12 sar:1/1 flags:0x4
[hwupload @ 0x42cbcc0] Surface format is nv12.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42ccbc0] Created surface 0x4000000.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42ccbc0] Direct mapping possible.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000001.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Direct mapping possible.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000002.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000003.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000004.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000005.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000006.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000007.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000008.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x4000009.
[AVHWFramesContext @ 0x42c3e40] Created surface 0x400000a.
[vp9_vaapi @ 0x409da40] Encoding entrypoint not found (19 / 6).
Error initializing output stream 0:0 -- Error while opening encoder for output stream #0:0 - maybe incorrect parameters such as bit_rate, rate, width or height
[AVIOContext @ 0x40fdac0] Statistics: 0 seeks, 0 writeouts
[aac @ 0x40fcb00] Qavg: -nan
[AVIOContext @ 0x409f820] Statistics: 32768 bytes read, 0 seeks
Conversion failed!

The interesting bits are the entrypoint warnings for VP9 encoding being absent on this particular platform, as confirmed by vainfo's output:

libva info: VA-API version 0.40.0
libva info: va_getDriverName() returns 0
libva info: Trying to open /usr/local/lib/dri/i965_drv_video.so
libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_0_40
libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
vainfo: VA-API version: 0.40 (libva 1.7.3)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 1.8.4.pre1 (glk-alpha-71-gc3110dc)
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVC1Simple              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Main                :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Advanced            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileNone                   :	VAEntrypointVideoProc
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointEncPicture
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVP9Profile0            :	VAEntrypointVLD

The VLD (for Variable Length Decode) entry point for VP9 profile 0 is the furthest that Skylake comes to in terms of VP9 hardware-acceleration.

These with Kabylake test beds, run these encode tests and report back :-)

@Brainiarc7
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@hamwong,

Let me get back to you on that.

@Brainiarc7
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@Dalmat,

An year later:

(a). FFmpeg's h264_vaapi:

ffmpeg -init_hw_device vaapi=intel:/dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -hwaccel_device intel -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -filter_hw_device intel -vf 'format=nv12|vaapi,hwupload' -c:v h264_vaapi -qp 21 old_town_cross_1080p50_h264_vaapi.mkv

Readings:
i. PSNR: PSNR y:37.903869 u:39.785445 v:41.603166 average:38.630980 min:37.573365 max:41.537383
ii. VMAF: VMAF score: 96.270236

(b). FFmpeg's hevc_vaapi:

ffmpeg -init_hw_device vaapi=intel:/dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -hwaccel_device intel -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -filter_hw_device intel -vf 'format=nv12|vaapi,hwupload' -c:v hevc_vaapi -qp 21 old_town_cross_1080p50_hevc_vaapi.mkv

Readings:
i. PSNR: PSNR y:37.488106 u:39.573284 v:41.712610 average:38.282739 min:37.230676 max:41.611796
ii. VMAF: 96.395142

(c). FFmpeg's vp8_vaapi:

ffmpeg -init_hw_device vaapi=intel:/dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -hwaccel_device intel -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -filter_hw_device intel -vf 'format=nv12|vaapi,hwupload' -c:v vp8_vaapi old_town_cross_1080p50_vp8_vaapi.mkv

Readings:
i. PSNR: PSNR y:35.494408 u:38.265035 v:39.605085 average:36.359397 min:35.820870 max:37.004402
ii. VMAF: VMAF score: 93.076852

(d). FFmpeg's vp9_vaapi:

ffmpeg -init_hw_device vaapi=intel:/dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -hwaccel_device intel -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -filter_hw_device intel -vf 'format=nv12|vaapi,hwupload' -c:v vp9_vaapi old_town_cross_1080p50_vp9_vaapi.mkv

Readings:
i. PSNR: PSNR y:35.874297 u:38.632504 v:40.298447 average:36.761880 min:36.455215 max:37.779381

ii. VMAF: VMAF score: 94.359042

Measurement:

  1. PSNR:

for i in *.mkv ; do ffmpeg -i "$i" -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -lavfi psnr="stats_file=psnr.log" -f null - ; done

  1. Netflix VMAF:

for i in *.mkv ; do ffmpeg -i "$i" -i old_town_cross_1080p50.y4m -lavfi libvmaf="psnr=1:log_fmt=json" -f null - ; done

Platform information:

  1. vainfo:
vainfo: VA-API version: 1.4 (libva 2.4.0.pre1)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Coffee Lake - 2.4.0.pre1 (2.2.0-15-gecfb0db)
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline:	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264High               :	VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh      :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264StereoHigh         :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVC1Simple              :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Main                :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Advanced            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileNone                   :	VAEntrypointVideoProc
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           :	VAEntrypointEncPicture
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain10             :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain10             :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVP9Profile0            :	VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP9Profile0            :	VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileVP9Profile2            :	VAEntrypointVLD

@Brainiarc7
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Brainiarc7 commented Dec 16, 2018

@hamwong,

For the HEVC encoder, here are the available options, using the latest git heads from both libva and ffmpeg:

ffmpeg -h encoder=hevc_vaapi

Encoder hevc_vaapi [H.265/HEVC (VAAPI)]:
    General capabilities: delay hardware 
    Threading capabilities: none
    Supported pixel formats: vaapi_vld
h265_vaapi AVOptions:
  -low_power         <boolean>    E..V..... Use low-power encoding mode (only available on some platforms; may not support all encoding features) (default false)
  -qp                <int>        E..V..... Constant QP (for P-frames; scaled by qfactor/qoffset for I/B) (from 0 to 52) (default 25)
  -aud               <boolean>    E..V..... Include AUD (default false)
  -profile           <int>        E..V..... Set profile (general_profile_idc) (from -99 to 255) (default -99)
     main                         E..V.....
     main10                       E..V.....
     rext                         E..V.....
  -tier              <int>        E..V..... Set tier (general_tier_flag) (from 0 to 1) (default main)
     main                         E..V.....
     high                         E..V.....
  -level             <int>        E..V..... Set level (general_level_idc) (from -99 to 255) (default -99)
     1                            E..V.....
     2                            E..V.....
     2.1                          E..V.....
     3                            E..V.....
     3.1                          E..V.....
     4                            E..V.....
     4.1                          E..V.....
     5                            E..V.....
     5.1                          E..V.....
     5.2                          E..V.....
     6                            E..V.....
     6.1                          E..V.....
     6.2                          E..V.....
  -sei               <flags>      E..V..... Set SEI to include (default hdr)
     hdr                          E..V..... Include HDR metadata for mastering display colour volume and content light level information

With that in mind, here's what you can tune:

(a). Change the -profile to main.

(b). Set the -tier from main to high.

(c). The same applies to the -level option. Change that to 6.2.

Now, for the bitrates: You're targeting 1000KB/s. If that's the case, set it as shown:

`-b:v 1M -maxrate:v 1.0M -bufsize:v=4(b:v/fps)

For audio synchronization, use the following audio filter: -af "aresample=async=1:min_hard_comp=0.100000:first_pts=0".
This should ensure that your audio stream is in sync with the video stream, especially when segmenting.

@pathmissing
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@Brainiarc7 Works fine on Debian Stretch 9.6. Had some minor issues but nothing that could not be resolved by using my brain + Google.
Thank you for this nice piece of information, it helped me a lot!

@Brainiarc7
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You're most welcome. @pathmissing!
Thanks for the feedback.

@Mandrewoid
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@Brainiarc7 I realize this is kindof an old topic. Hopefully you're still around.
I was having some trouble getting vaapi gpu-acceleration to work on linux.

Currently I have achieved h264 acceleration functional, getting about 900fps vs 300fps on Cpu-only.
with a command like:
ffmpeg -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -i input.mp4 -an -c:v h264_vaapi -qp:v 19 -b:v 2100k -maxrate:v 3500k output.mp4

Unfortunately I don't seem to be able to get h265 to work, despite vainfo showing
VAProfileHEVCMain : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileHEVCMain10 : VAEntrypointVLD

other commands that you have run like:
ffmpeg -h encoder=hevc_vaapi
returns:
Codec 'hevc_vaapi' is not recognized by FFmpeg.
but I also get
Codec 'h264_vaapi' is not recognized by FFmpeg.
if I try to do 'ffmpeg -h encoder=h264_vaapi', yet as I said h264 encoding does in fact work fine.

The error I get when I try to run ffmepg with -c:v hevc_vaapi instead of -c:v h264_vaapi is:
[hevc_vaapi @ 0x2586f00] No usable encoding entrypoint found for profile (no profile names) (17).
so it does look like it is recognizing and calling the encoder, but not asking for a valid profile?
Any ideas? Thanks for your help

@Brainiarc7
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@Mandrewoid,

The encoding formats supported by VAAPI on your end can be printed out via:

vainfo | grep Slice

What you've pointed above only indicates support for Variable Length Decoding (VLD) entrypoints.

Can you provide the output of:

vainfo
ffmpeg -buildconf
lspci

@Brainiarc7
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@hamwong

I'll update this with an explanation for the rate control modes you can expect.

@TRPB
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TRPB commented Jun 20, 2019

I've been playing around encoding with vp9_vaapi and thought I'd share my experiences here as this thread was useful.

Using vp9_vaapi the flags -crf and -qp are ignored. The one option that works is -global_quality which seems to go from 1-150ish. Lower numbers give higher quality/filesize. Has anyone else played around with controlling the quality using vp9_vaapi? Is there documentation for global_quality anywhere?

I was hoping to save space compared to h264 source files without losing quality. Here's my ffmpeg command:

fmpeg -hwaccel vaapi -hwaccel_device /dev/dri/renderD128 -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel_output_format vaapi -i "$infile" -c:v vp9_vaapi -global_quality $quality  -bf 4 -bsf:v vp9_raw_reorder,vp9_superframe  -c:a libvorbis "$outfile"

This does everything in hardware so you don't need to use hwupload and uses pseudo b-frames as recommended by the manual to increase compression.

Unfortunately global_quality is rather frustrating as it needs tweaking based on the source material. For low quality sources with already high compression (e.g. SD h264 video with a bitrate < 800K) any global_quality setting less than 120 will result in a larger file than the source file. It's not clear how global_quality relates to bitrate but lower values will give higher bitrates.

For HD h264 video with a high bitrate (>3M) global quality settings affect the quality/compression. For visual quality, I used ffmpeg to screenshot the video at the same timestamp and compared the frames by zooming in to 400%

  • global_quality 40 gives a visually indistinguishable video with a 5% filesize reduction.

  • global_quality 50 seems give very slightly worse visual quality with about a 25% filesize reduction.

  • Omitting global_quality and using whatever the default is, lowers quality a bit more (From playing around the default seems to be in the 90-100 range)

Obviously different source videos will have different results but that's what I've found so far.

@Brainiarc7
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Thanks for the insights, @TRPB.

I should definitely take a closer look at the VAAPI VP9 encoder implementation.

@hugo53
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hugo53 commented Mar 1, 2021

@Brainiarc7 I tried to install on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Cascade Lake (EC2 instance) but always get:

$ vainfo
error: can't connect to X server!
error: failed to initialize display

$ sudo vainfo
error: XDG_RUNTIME_DIR not set in the environment.
error: can't connect to X server!
error: failed to initialize display

I also tried to research but cannot find the root cause. Could you please help on this? Thanks in advance!

@drolex2
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drolex2 commented Mar 24, 2021

Is it possible to build this for Windows?

@elsandosgrande
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Is it possible to build this for Windows?

@drolex2 VA-API is only available on Linux, so no. The Windows builds already support Window's hardware-accelerated video decoding API from what I know.

@draekko
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draekko commented Oct 7, 2021

Ubuntu 21.04
5.11.0-34-lowlatency
X11/Xorg
Haswell i5-4200U / HD Graphics 4400 (HSW GT2)

libva, intel-hybrib-driver, cmrt, intel-vaapi-driver, libva-utils all compiled from master from the therepo's this morning.

At one point i had VP9 hybrid decode working but after upgrading the OS it no longer works. Recompiling had two issues crop up, the one with issues with the libs .so vs .so.1 the header missing externs in intel-hybrid-driver i'm left with this problem where it can't find dri_get_drawable :

libva info: VA-API version 1.13.0 libva info: User environment variable requested driver 'i965' libva info: Trying to open /opt/Apps/vaapi/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/i965_drv_video.so libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_1_13 error: failed to resolve dri_get_drawable(): /opt/Apps/vaapi/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libva-x11.so.2: undefined symbol: dri_get_drawable /opt/Apps/vaapi/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/hybrid_drv_video.so init failed Not using hybrid_drv_video.so libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0 vainfo: VA-API version: 1.13 (libva 2.13.0.pre1) vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Haswell Mobile - 2.4.0.pre1 (2.3.0-34-g3ed3f6a) vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice VAProfileVC1Simple : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileVC1Main : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileVC1Advanced : VAEntrypointVLD VAProfileNone : VAEntrypointVideoProc VAProfileJPEGBaseline : VAEntrypointVLD

@PhantomLordM
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PhantomLordM commented Jan 1, 2022

@Brainiarc7 thank you very much for your work and extensive description on the topic. I followed all the steps, without any problems, but when finished vainfo keeps returning mi this:

libva info: VA-API version 1.14.0
libva info: User environment variable requested driver 'i965'
libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/i965_drv_video.so
libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_1_14
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/hybrid_drv_video.so init failed
Not using hybrid_drv_video.so
libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
vainfo: VA-API version: 1.14 (libva 2.14.0.pre1)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 2.4.0.pre1 (2.3.0-34-g3ed3f6a)
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileVC1Simple : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVC1Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVC1Advanced : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileNone : VAEntrypointVideoProc
VAProfileJPEGBaseline : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileJPEGBaseline : VAEntrypointEncPicture
VAProfileVP8Version0_3 : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVP8Version0_3 : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileHEVCMain : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileHEVCMain : VAEntrypointEncSlice

I've tried re-doing all the steps several times to find if I wasn't making any mistakes, but none of the instructions returned errors and the results are always the same.

I'm on Skylake m5-6y57 at Ubuntu 20.04 and I cannot make VP9 decoding hardware accelerated. I would appreciate any help on the topic.

@Brainiarc7
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Hello there,

Try running the command:

LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME=i965 LIBVA_DRIVERS_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri vainfo --display drm --device /dev/dri/renderD128

And post your results here.

@PhantomLordM
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PhantomLordM commented Jan 2, 2022

Hello @Brainiarc7 , thank you for your reply.
Yesterday I tried downgrading libva below 2.0, as I read somewhere that with 2.0+ libva has some problems to start hybrid driver. I must admit it didn't go well, I tried uninstalling bunch of packages, installing them once again and the final outcome was somehow weird.
I finally got: VAProfileVP9Profile0 : VAEntrypointVLD in my vainfo printout, but running VP9 encoded file in VLC showed no change - the graphic processor doesn't seem to be used for decoding at all.

As for your request, the output looks like that:
LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME=i965 LIBVA_DRIVERS_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri vainfo --display drm --device /dev/dri/renderD128
libva info: VA-API version 1.14.0
libva info: User environment variable requested driver 'i965'
libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/i965_drv_video.so
libva info: Found init function __vaDriverInit_1_12
libva info: va_openDriver() returns 0
vainfo: VA-API version: 1.14 (libva 2.14.0.pre1)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel i965 driver for Intel(R) Skylake - 2.4.0.pre1 (2.3.0-34-g3ed3f6a)
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileMPEG2Simple : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileMPEG2Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264Main : VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointFEI
VAProfileH264High : VAEntrypointStats
VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264MultiviewHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileH264StereoHigh : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileVC1Simple : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVC1Main : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVC1Advanced : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileNone : VAEntrypointVideoProc
VAProfileJPEGBaseline : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileJPEGBaseline : VAEntrypointEncPicture
VAProfileVP8Version0_3 : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileVP8Version0_3 : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileHEVCMain : VAEntrypointVLD
VAProfileHEVCMain : VAEntrypointEncSlice
VAProfileVP9Profile0 : VAEntrypointVLD

However running the same command with 'hybrid' prints out this:
LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME=hybrid LIBVA_DRIVERS_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri vainfo --display drm --device /dev/dri/renderD128
libva info: VA-API version 1.14.0
libva info: User environment variable requested driver 'hybrid'
libva info: Trying to open /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/hybrid_drv_video.so
libva error: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dri/hybrid_drv_video.so has no function __vaDriverInit_1_0
libva info: va_openDriver() returns -1
vaInitialize failed with error code -1 (unknown libva error),exit

I'm not sure if it should print out something else, but because I can't see any GPU assist in decoding VLC I think that something is still not right.

Oh, BTW after all of my yesterday's "work" I ended up loosing ability to play youtube in Firefox in h.264...VC9 still plays, but H.264 with hardware acceleration is gone now.

EDIT: Firefox thing was my bad - I uninstalled libavcodec-extra package in the process and after reinstalling playing forced h.264 video works great with hardware acceleration. VC9 still no hardware acceleration.

@Aaron2550
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Hey, i cant get vp8 and vp9 to work, neiother via qsv nor vaapi. im on arch, my kernel is 6.2.9-arch1-1, i have all the packages needed installed and my vainfo output looks fine, but i get

[vp9_vaapi @ 0x5630589212c0] No usable encoding entrypoint found for profile VAProfileVP9Profile0 (19).
[vost#0:0/vp9_vaapi @ 0x563058920fc0] Error initializing output stream: Error while opening encoder for output stream #0:0 - maybe incorrect parameters such as bit_rate, rate, width or height

with both vp8 and vp9. hevc and avc work fine. heres my vainfo output, any ideas?

vainfo --display drm --device /dev/dri/renderD128
Trying display: drm
vainfo: VA-API version: 1.18 (libva 2.17.1)
vainfo: Driver version: Intel iHD driver for Intel(R) Gen Graphics - 23.1.0 ()
vainfo: Supported profile and entrypoints
      VAProfileNone                   : VAEntrypointVideoProc
      VAProfileNone                   : VAEntrypointStats
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Simple            : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileMPEG2Main              : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264Main               : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264Main               : VAEntrypointFEI
      VAProfileH264Main               : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileH264High               : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264High               : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264High               : VAEntrypointFEI
      VAProfileH264High               : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileVC1Simple              : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Main                : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVC1Advanced            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileJPEGBaseline           : VAEntrypointEncPicture
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointFEI
      VAProfileH264ConstrainedBaseline: VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileVP8Version0_3          : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain               : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain               : VAEntrypointFEI
      VAProfileHEVCMain               : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCMain10             : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain10             : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain10             : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileVP9Profile0            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP9Profile1            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP9Profile2            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileVP9Profile3            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain12             : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain12             : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain422_10         : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain422_10         : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain422_12         : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain422_12         : VAEntrypointEncSlice
      VAProfileHEVCMain444            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain444            : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCMain444_10         : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCMain444_10         : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCMain444_12         : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain            : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain            : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain10          : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain10          : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain444         : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain444         : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain444_10      : VAEntrypointVLD
      VAProfileHEVCSccMain444_10      : VAEntrypointEncSliceLP

@Brainiarc7
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@Aaron2550 that's because your VAAPI implementation doesn't support the requested encoding entry points.
For encoding, as explained earlier, you're looking at Slice and SliceLP entry points for VAAPI.
What you posted above from vainfo doesn't indicate these entry points for VP8 and VP9.

@toannt-hus
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For anyone with problem loading hybrid driver with latest libva (2.18 on my laptop), you need the following patch to intel-hybrid-driver:

diff --git a/src/media_drv_output_dri.c b/src/media_drv_output_dri.c
index 42299b8..1eab11e 100644
--- a/src/media_drv_output_dri.c
+++ b/src/media_drv_output_dri.c
@@ -105,11 +105,11 @@ media_output_dri_init (VADriverContextP ctx)
   struct dri_vtable *dri_vtable;

   static const struct dso_symbol symbols[] = {
-    {"dri_get_drawable",
+    {"va_dri_get_drawable",
      offsetof (struct dri_vtable, get_drawable)},
-    {"dri_get_rendering_buffer",
+    {"va_dri_get_rendering_buffer",
      offsetof (struct dri_vtable, get_rendering_buffer)},
-    {"dri_swap_buffer",
+    {"va_dri_swap_buffer",
      offsetof (struct dri_vtable, swap_buffer)},
     {NULL,}
   };
diff --git a/src/media_drv_output_dri.h b/src/media_drv_output_dri.h
index 0d6ccf0..91adee8 100644
--- a/src/media_drv_output_dri.h
+++ b/src/media_drv_output_dri.h
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
 #define _MEDIA__DRIVER_OUT_DRI_H
 #include <stdbool.h>
 #include "media_drv_defines.h"
-#define LIBVA_X11_NAME "libva-x11.so.1"
+#define LIBVA_X11_NAME "libva-x11.so.2"
 VOID media_output_dri_terminate (VADriverContextP ctx);
 BOOL media_output_dri_init (VADriverContextP ctx);


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