
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Wed Jun 26, 2024 5:44 am
- Real Name: Aygun Tataev
Feature Proposal
Having DaVinci Resolve available as a Flatpak to download from the software manager, would be convenient as clicking Install and that's it. I have scoured every technical aspect on how to install and run Resolve with no issues and it's been difficult.
I know Rocky is the recommended OS for DaVinci Resolve, but as a Linux Mint user (based on Ubuntu and Debian), I'd rather prefer developers fixing compatibility, rather than have us users change a whole system.
Rocky, CentOS, and other Linux distributions based on RedHat have low hardware support and rely on extremely deprecated libraries which will not be installed by default on modern Linux distributions.
The Problems:
Computer specs:
GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 (12GB)
CPU: Ryzen 9 5900X (4.8Ghz, 12 cores)
RAM: 64GB DDR4 3200Mhz
MOBO: ASUS ProArt B550-Creator
OS: Linux Mint 21.3 Cinnamon
The following issues below happen both for:
DaVinci_Resolve_Studio_19.0b3_Linux.run
DaVinci_Resolve_Studio_18.6.6_Linux.run
Issue 1: (solved, but I shouldn't have to do this.)
Problem: I think this is a problem for majority of the Linux distributions, and that is Resolve not booting up when the installation has finished. The prerequisites and libraries have been installed. CUDA is installed and up-to-date, same with the graphics drivers of course.
Solution:
Right click on the DaVinci Resolve shortcut that was created on the desktop,
Select "Open With > Text Editor" or similar program
Where you see Exec=/opt/resolve/bin/resolve $u, add 'sudo' before /opt/ and after = leaving space (Like a command)
Then where you see Terminal=false, change that to true
Save and exit, launch using the icon, input your user password into the terminal
Don't close the terminal while DaVinci Resolve is in use.
Issue 2: (not solved)
DaVinci Resolve does not support Wayland even in version 19 beta. In Linux Mint, I do have "fractional scaling" enabled which it says is an experimental feature, but it saves my eyes from having to look at a small 100% scale or a big 200% scale. With this feature on, I have the ability to set my display scale at 125% on a 4K monitor.
Other Applications like Discord, OBS, VSCode, etc. show the GUI completely fine because they have Wayland support. With Resolve, the buttons are tiny and the whole GUI behaves as if it's on a 6K display (which it is, if you think about the experimental feature changing the virtual resolution of the display.)
Even if I switch the "fraction scaling" feature off, the GUI still looks so small and I have to squint my eyes.
Thank you for your time.
Having DaVinci Resolve available as a Flatpak to download from the software manager, would be convenient as clicking Install and that's it. I have scoured every technical aspect on how to install and run Resolve with no issues and it's been difficult.
I know Rocky is the recommended OS for DaVinci Resolve, but as a Linux Mint user (based on Ubuntu and Debian), I'd rather prefer developers fixing compatibility, rather than have us users change a whole system.
Rocky, CentOS, and other Linux distributions based on RedHat have low hardware support and rely on extremely deprecated libraries which will not be installed by default on modern Linux distributions.
The Problems:
Computer specs:
GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 (12GB)
CPU: Ryzen 9 5900X (4.8Ghz, 12 cores)
RAM: 64GB DDR4 3200Mhz
MOBO: ASUS ProArt B550-Creator
OS: Linux Mint 21.3 Cinnamon
The following issues below happen both for:
DaVinci_Resolve_Studio_19.0b3_Linux.run
DaVinci_Resolve_Studio_18.6.6_Linux.run
Issue 1: (solved, but I shouldn't have to do this.)
Problem: I think this is a problem for majority of the Linux distributions, and that is Resolve not booting up when the installation has finished. The prerequisites and libraries have been installed. CUDA is installed and up-to-date, same with the graphics drivers of course.
Solution:
Right click on the DaVinci Resolve shortcut that was created on the desktop,
Select "Open With > Text Editor" or similar program
Where you see Exec=/opt/resolve/bin/resolve $u, add 'sudo' before /opt/ and after = leaving space (Like a command)
Then where you see Terminal=false, change that to true
Save and exit, launch using the icon, input your user password into the terminal
Don't close the terminal while DaVinci Resolve is in use.
Issue 2: (not solved)
DaVinci Resolve does not support Wayland even in version 19 beta. In Linux Mint, I do have "fractional scaling" enabled which it says is an experimental feature, but it saves my eyes from having to look at a small 100% scale or a big 200% scale. With this feature on, I have the ability to set my display scale at 125% on a 4K monitor.
Other Applications like Discord, OBS, VSCode, etc. show the GUI completely fine because they have Wayland support. With Resolve, the buttons are tiny and the whole GUI behaves as if it's on a 6K display (which it is, if you think about the experimental feature changing the virtual resolution of the display.)
Even if I switch the "fraction scaling" feature off, the GUI still looks so small and I have to squint my eyes.
Thank you for your time.