First things first, here's my current specs: http://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/3284901UserBenchmarks: Game 13%, Desk 64%, Work 52%
4/10/2017 12:11:25 PM
not really sure why there's a huge space between my html anchor
UserBenchmarks: Game 13%, Desk 64%, Work 52%
4/10/2017 12:17:06 PM
Been out of graphics work too long to say much about the current state of affairs but I generally believe that because of the virtualization layer, performance is still pretty trash. There are a number of people who have done sort of hacked out passthroughs but I don't know the mechanics there but the goal is always to give the VM a more direct path to the GPU. Lately though there have been efforts by NVIDIA and AMD to provide this more officially, though these look more like enterprise type solutions.http://www.nvidia.com/object/dedicated-gpus.html So not much help here
4/10/2017 1:02:19 PM
https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/Multiheaded-NVIDIA-Gaming-using-Ubuntu-14-04-KVM-585/This might be a little more helpful, though I don't know how much VirtualBox provides vs VMWare.
4/10/2017 1:05:07 PM
Linux graphics all comes down to drivers. My experience would be to go for like a "founders" or base model card, and run it on top of a very common OS. Ubuntu seems to have far and wide the best driver support, most likely because SteamOS is a derivative of it. But "best" can still mean waiting 6+ months for any kind of game optimization; you might see up to 30% fewer frames from any review you read online for blockbuster games.When I went to an AMD graphics card I gave up and went back to Win10. I feed 12GB of RAM to a Ubuntu VM and it's very hard to tell it's not on bare metal. With the Linux subsystem in win10 I rarely use it anyway. Most open source stuff is cross-compiled or easily runs in the subsystem (FFMPEG, apache, etc.)However... I too want a 1080Ti; so report back results
4/11/2017 6:09:56 AM
virtualized gpu works great, but not with virtual box. You need xen, vmware, or kvm. https://medium.com/@calerogers/gpu-virtualization-with-kvm-qemu-63ca98a6a172All of AWS/Azure gpus are "virtualized", it just depends on your hypervisor choices as to whether you want passthrough or a vgpu.
4/14/2017 10:26:10 AM