Could you post the output file of Help -> Save System Info in the GUI? Or if you don’t have GUI access run this command (you might have to change the path of the info.txt file to somewhere writable): blender -python-expr 'import sys, sys_info sys_info.write_sysinfo("info.txt") sys. I would be curious to know what OpenGL information Blender sees on such a node. Amazon EC2 manages the physical hardware, graphics device drivers, and the transportation of commands to and from your EC2 instance. When applications make OpenGL API calls for 3D operations, the Amazon OpenGL library re-directs those calls to the Elastic Graphics accelerator over the network, where the operations are processed and results are returned back to the library. Instead, it is an Amazon-optimized OpenGL library that detects the presence of and connects to the attached Elastic Graphics accelerator. Generally, 3.x means DirectX10, 4.x means DirectX11 support, so if your card is DirectX11. However the driver is not a device driver. Drivers can upgrade your OpenGL support if the hardware supports it. Elastic GPUs allow you to easily attach low-cost graphics acceleration to a wide range of EC2 instances over the network. You need to install Elastic Graphics driver in your instance. To activate OpenGL 4.3 support for existing Elastic GPUs, simply stop and start your instances, and a new driver will be automatically installed in your instance to support OpenGL 4.3. From the AWS Elastic Graphics FAQ (emphasis mine): Not sure how relevant the stuff below then is.Įlastic Graphics seems like an elaborate setup for transparent remote rendering.
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