- Source: Video Core Next
Video Core Next is AMD's brand for its dedicated video encoding and decoding hardware core. It is a family of hardware accelerator designs for encoding and decoding video, and is built into AMD's GPUs and APUs since AMD Raven Ridge, released January 2018.
Background
Video Core Next is AMD's successor to both the Unified Video Decoder and Video Coding Engine designs, which are hardware accelerators for video decoding and encoding, respectively. It can be used to decode, encode and transcode ("sync") video streams, for example, a DVD or Blu-ray Disc to a format appropriate to, for example, a smartphone. Unlike video encoding on a CPU or a general-purpose GPU, Video Core Next is a dedicated hardware core on the processor die. This application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) allows for more power-efficient video processing.
Feature set
All versions of VCN support: MPEG-2 Decode, MPEG-4 Decode, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Encode/Decode, HEVC (H.265) Encode/Decode, and VP9 Decode. 10-bit color depth in the P010 format is supported. VCN 1.0 supports up to 4K resolution. VCN 2.0 and beyond supports up to 8K. Support for H.264 and H.265 Encode methods differ among generations (see below). VC-1 Decode is supported until VCN 3.0.33.
VCN 2.0 is implemented with Navi products and the Renoir APU. The feature set remains the same as VCN 1.0.
VCN 3.0 is implemented with Navi 2 products. VCN 3.0 implements H.264 B-frames, which was present in Video Coding Engine 2.0 but taken out with VCE 3.0.
VCN 4.0 adds AV1 encode. H.264 quality is higher with VCN 4.0 (as part of RDNA 3) compared to previous generations, but still lags behind Intel and Nvidia hardware codecs.
There is no support for encoding or decoding in YUV422 and YUV444 in H.264 and H.265.
Quality
AMD VCN has lower overall quality (VMAF) compared to offerings from Intel and Nvidia. B-frame narrows the gap, but does not eliminate it. With pre-analysis enabled too, the gap is almost closed.
Despite a lack of B-frame support, H.265 provides better quality (VMAF) and near-identical speed for the same bitrate compared to H.264 on VCN 2.0, 3.0, and 4.0.
See also
= Video hardware technologies
=Nvidia
PureVideo - Nvidia
GeForce 256's Motion Compensation
High-Definition Video Processor
Video Processing Engine
Nvidia NVENC
Nvidia NVDEC
AMD
Video Core Next - AMD
Video Coding Engine - AMD
Unified Video Decoder - AMD
Video Shader - ATI
Intel
Quick Sync Video - Intel
Clear Video - Intel
Qualcomm
Qualcomm Hexagon
References
External links
AMF, AMD's software API for VCN and earlier media functions. Release notes indicates feature additions without mentioning hardware versions.
VCEEnc, a command-line program exposing most configurable options from AMF. Allows HDR10+ with VCN H.265.
FastFlix, a graphical frontend for VCEEnc and other encoders.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- YouTube
- T-ara
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- PlayStation 4
- Kadaria Ahmed
- Xiaomi
- NewJeans
- Joko Widodo
- Xbox
- IKon
- Video Core Next
- Graphics Core Next
- Intel Quick Sync Video
- Unified Video Decoder
- Video Coding Engine
- Armored Core (video game)
- Nvidia NVDEC
- AMD APU
- Radeon RX 5000 series
- Armored Core