Provided by: primus_0~20150328-17_amd64
NAME
primusrun - run an application on a discrete NVIDIA video card
SYNOPSIS
primusrun command
DESCRIPTION
Primus implements low-overhead local-only client-side OpenGL offloading via GLX forking. It is currently intended to be used alongside Bumblebee and provides a drop-in replacement for optirun (i.e. "primusrun").
VARIABLES
The following is a list of environment variables affecting primus library that may be relevant for end users: PRIMUS_SYNC Readback-display synchronization method (default: 0) 0: no sync, 1: synced, display previous frame, 2: synced, display latest frame PRIMUS_VERBOSE Verbosity level (default: 1) 0: only errors, 1: warnings, 2: profiling PRIMUS_DISPLAY The secondary Xorg server display number (default: :8)
EXAMPLES
primusrun glxgears -info Runs the graphics demo supplied by mesa-utils to confirm whether the discrete card is being used for GL rendering. PRIMUS_VERBOSE=2 primusrun glxgears Runs the graphics demo supplied by mesa-utils with verbose output from primus. vblank_mode=0 primusrun glxgears Disable vblank synchronisation, typically used for benchmarking purposes.
ISSUES
Since compositing hurts performance, invoking primus when a compositing WM is active is not recommended. If you need to use primus with compositing and see flickering or bad performance, synchronizing primus' display thread with the application's rendering thread may help. PRIMUS_SYNC=1 primusrun ... This makes primus display the previously rendered frame. Alternatively, with PRIMUS_SYNC=2 primus will display the latest rendered frame, trading frame rate for reduced visual latency.
AUTHOR
Primus was created by Alexander Monakov <amonakov@gmail.com>. This manual page was written by Vincent Cheng <Vincentc1208@gmail.com>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).