
I actually did it for a few years, but i wasnt editing video so all was good. I try every few months to pull myself away from Windows. Really disappointed that i cant do voice overs on linux. How are you using Prores on Linux? I will eventually buy the studio version, but for now the free version on Windows atleast suits my needs. It doesn't bother me much because I mostly use Prores, DnxHD and h.264 for my work. But - the codec support in Linux is different (worse) than with the Windows version.

You will then get all the bells and whistles including extended codec support and many functions not available in the free version. My advice is - get the Studio version and try again. Also h.264 is not supported in the free version - see also the many threads across the forum. Hardware encoding is only available with the Studio version if I remember correctly.
DAVINCI RESOLVE LINUX MP4 FOR MAC
Also read: 5 of the Best Video Editors for Mac in 2021 Go to the DaVinciResolve release page and download the latest DaVinci Resolve version.
DAVINCI RESOLVE LINUX MP4 INSTALL
Therefore you don’t need any windows API translation layer like wine to install DaVinci Resolve. What CPU, GPU, CPU memory, GPU memory? What kind of video? Codec? Resolution? Unlike other creative software, DaVinci Resolve supports the Linux platform. We are unable to answer, we can only guess because you did not provide any information about your system or videos. I am talking about 20 secs video with no modifications, status says it will take more than a day to export. I can understand free version can be slow but not this slow. Using the Studio version here on Manjaro Linux Gnome and render speeds are actually faster than they have been on Windows.Īmdavid wrote:Thanks for the reply Dennis,īut I think I am missing something. This version is pretty limited in terms of codec support and acceleration - and even more so on Linux. ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -vcodec dnxhd -acodec pcms16le -s 1920x1080 -r 30000/1001 -b:v 36M -pixfmt yuv422p -f mov output.mov In the above command, it’s assumed your input file is input.mp4 and the output file name is output.mov.

I am an Adobe user but I wanted to move away from Windows and Adobe. To edit your video inside DaVinci Resolve, you have to convert it to. I have replaced the Nvidia driver on Centos, Debian, Mint & Ubuntu - without success.

I have Nvidia GTX card (not the fastest but it should be okay for basic need). What am I am missing, why my export on Linux takes forever?
DAVINCI RESOLVE LINUX MP4 MP4
I used ffmpeg to convert my mp4 videos to mov on Linux but on windows, that manual conversion is not required. Blackmagic Design DaVinci Resolve is one of the most powerful video editing suites available that also runs on Linux. The same action on Windows 10 (same hardware) takes less than a min. It takes ages to export, I never succeed on Linux version - I can't wait more than a day for 20sec test video.Īll Linux flavours are exhibiting the same behaviour. But I am having a strange issue when I try to export a 20 seconds video (for testing purpose). I can install Resolve 15 on Centos and with some stretch, I can install it on Debian, Ubuntu & Linux mint (okay, all are Debian).
