From: Dallas Warren (dallas.warren_at_monash.edu)
Date: Mon Oct 02 2017 - 16:47:59 CDT

Thanks for the hint Joshua.

However, just tried that and the display window will not get any
larger than the maximum window size (1912x1015).

Obviously, there must be some manner to do this, since
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/vmd/minitutorials/vrmovies/ states:

"For early testing purposes, the movie can be rendered at low or
moderate resolutions, e.g. 512x512, 1024x1024, or 2048x2048, which
will both speed up rendering and also speed up YouTube uploading and
associated post-processing. Final completed movies should be rendered
at either 3840x2160 or 4096x4096 resolution, to ensure good quality
playback on the latest generation smartphones that have 2560x1440
displays. "
Catch ya,

Dr. Dallas Warren
Drug Delivery, Disposition and Dynamics
Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University
381 Royal Parade, Parkville VIC 3052
dallas.warren_at_monash.edu
---------------------------------
When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail.

On 3 October 2017 at 04:22, Vermaas, Joshua <Joshua.Vermaas_at_nrel.gov> wrote:
> No, sadly. On linux boxes, I tend to just increase the resolution of the display window. On my machine, I can get sizes in excess of the monitor resolution by having the window hanging off the edge of the screen *before* the "display resize" command.
>
> -Josh
>
> On 10/01/2017 07:05 AM, Dallas Warren wrote:
> Think I've worked it out, but can't try it out until at my workstation in a couple of days. Generate the frames using Tachyon and can I then feed the .dat file to TachyonL-OptiX in some manner?
>
> On 28 Sep. 2017 2:52 pm, "Dallas Warren" <dallas.warren_at_monash.edu<mailto:dallas.warren_at_monash.edu>> wrote:
> Got myself a decent graphics card now, yay! (History here:
> http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/vmd/mailing_list/vmd-l/28862.html08d508cd248c%7Ca0f29d7e28cd4f5484427885aee7c080%7C0%7C0%7C636424599534295726&sdata=EwW3k6h8bR1%2FGJjQU5VwsycImAcafXevnUsKmytjuOo%3D&reserved=0>)
>
> So now having a go at generating a 360 3D animation. Following
> instructions at
>
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/vmd/minitutorials/vrmovies/%7Ca0f29d7e28cd4f5484427885aee7c080%7C0%7C0%7C636424599534295726&sdata=FxEPWg8sxhjOASPoq8dH7dfsw99XtwFNx%2BAKIyNgX4c%3D&reserved=0> I can make
> one. Looks neat. However, it renders it at the resolution of the
> display window, how do I get it to a higher resolution? I must be
> missing something simple here ....
>
> With previous 3D animations I would render using Tachyon with the
> Movie Generator, render both left and right stereo views separately,
> then run Tachyon on the command line with the .dat files to get higher
> resolution images, join into videos with the left/right views joined
> together. Worked well.
>
> Since using Tachyon-Optix as the renderer, it doesn't output the .dat
> file that Tachyon does, just the stereo 360 images that then stitch
> together into the video.
>
> Start up message for reference:
> Info) Multithreading available, 12 CPUs detected.
> Info) CPU features: SSE2 AVX
> Info) Free system memory: 33GB (92%)
> Info) Creating CUDA device pool and initializing hardware...
> Info) Detected 1 available CUDA accelerator:
> Info) [0] GeForce GTX 1080 Ti 28 SM_6.1 @ 1.66 GHz, 11GB RAM, KTO, AE2, ZCP
> Warning) Detected X11 'Composite' extension: if incorrect display occurs
> Warning) try disabling this X server option. Most OpenGL drivers
> Warning) disable stereoscopic display when 'Composite' is enabled.
> Info) OpenGL renderer: GeForce GTX 1080 Ti/PCIe/SSE2
> Info) Features: STENCIL MSAA(4) MDE CVA MTX NPOT PP PS GLSL(OVFGS)
> Info) Full GLSL rendering mode is available.
> Info) Textures: 2-D (32768x32768), 3-D (16384x16384x16384), Multitexture (4)
> Info) Detected 1 available TachyonL/OptiX ray tracing accelerator
> Info) Compiling 1 OptiX shaders on 1 target GPU...
> Info) Dynamically loaded 2 plugins in directory:
> Info) /usr/local/lib/vmd/plugins/LINUXAMD64/molfile
>
>
> Catch ya,
>
> Dr. Dallas Warren
> Drug Delivery, Disposition and Dynamics
> Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University
> 381 Royal Parade, Parkville VIC 3052
>
dallas.warren_at_monash.edu<mailto:dallas.warren_at_monash.edu>
> ---------------------------------
> When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail.
>
>