GstCUDA - Building and Installation Guide

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Getting the Code

GstCUDA is RidgeRun's professional product. You can purchase GstCUDA, with full source code, from the RidgeRun Store or using the Shopping Cart:


Dependencies

GstCUDA is supported for the Jetson TX1/TX2/Nano/Xavier platforms and PC systems that have an NVIDIA GPU. The following packages are needed in order to build and use GstCUDA:

  • GStreamer 1.8.0.1 version or greater:
    • gstreamer-1.0
    • gstreamer-plugins-base-1.0
    • gstreamer-base-1.0
    • gstreamer-check-1.0
    • gstreamer-video-1.0
    • gstreamer-controller-1.0
    • gstreamer-plugins-bad-1.0
  • CUDA 8.0 version or greater *
  • Mesa EGL

GStreamer

The GStreamer packages are likely already installed in your Tegra Ubuntu OS distribution. In case you want to double check and install the missing packages, run the following commands.

sudo apt install libgstreamer1.0-dev libgstreamer-plugins-base1.0-dev gstreamer1.0-plugins-base libgstreamer-plugins-bad1.0-dev gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad

CUDA L4T package

The Jetpack default installation will flash and install all the necessary CUDA packages. This section describes how to perform a manual installation, which is typically __NOT__ needed

Installation guide:

1. You will need to know which distribution version you are using:

lsb_release -a

2. Go to the CUDA 11.6.1 download archive and follow the selection menu.

Select the version depending on the lsb_release command executed above. We recommend using the deb (local) option for the installation.

3. Once you have selected your system setup, NVIDIA will show you the installation instructions for those requirements.

Mesa EGL

Run the following command to install the Mesa EGL package:

sudo apt install libegl1-mesa-dev

GTK-Doc

Run the following command to install the GTK-Doc package:

sudo apt install gtk-doc-tools

Building the project

The GstCUDA package must be built natively.

For the Jetson TX1/TX2/Nano/Xavier platforms

In order to build the project run the following commands. Note that the libdir variable corresponds to the Jetson TX1/TX2 system.

./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/ --libdir=/usr/lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/
make

The autogen.sh script will automatically run the configure script. In case a more complex configuration is needed, the configure step may be executed manually:

./autogen.sh --noconfigure
./configure --prefix=/usr/ --libdir=/usr/lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/ <additional advanced options>
make

For x86 platforms

In order to build the project run the following commands.

./autogen.sh --noconfigure
./configure --prefix=/usr/ --libdir=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ --disable-nvmm <additional advanced options>
make


Finally, the status of the current version may be checked by running the unit tests:

make check


Installing the plugin

The plugin is installed to the GStreamer's default plug-in location in the file system by running:

sudo make install

To verify that the plug-in was correctly installed, you should run:

gst-inspect-1.0 cuda

with expected output

Plugin Details:
  Name                     cuda
  Description              Allows frames to be processed by the GPU using a custom CUDA library algorithm
  Filename                 /usr/lib/<platform>/gstreamer-1.0/libgstcuda.so
  Version                  0.14.1.1
  License                  Proprietary
  Source module            gst-cuda
  Source release date      2022-09-28 20:35 (UTC)
  Binary package           GStreamer CUDA Plug-in
  Origin URL               Unknown package origin

  cudamux: cudamux
  cudafilter: cudafilter

  2 features:
  +-- 2 elements

After installing GstCUDA and all its dependencies, the Linux O.S. running on your platform must be rebooted before running a GStreamer pipeline that uses GstCUDA.



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