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DXVK is a Direct3D to Vulkan translation layer used in Proton, to help run Windows games on Linux and Steam Deck. A new release version 1.10.3 is out now.

This is a "minor maintenance release" readying the project for the next version of Proton. While the team mentioned recently that much newer drivers would soon be needed, that's not the case for this release since it's just a minor one. That said, as always, more compatibility and performance improvements is welcome.

Here's what's new in the release:

  • Added support for shared fences (PR #2608). This is needed for videos in Halo Infinite to work, alongside corresponding wine and vkd3d-proton patches.
  • Fixed a regression introduced in 1.10.2 that would cause rendering issues in various D3D11 games, including Prey, Bioshock Infinite (#2757), and some others.
  • Need For Speed 3: Fixed Modern Patch not working (#1699).
  • Ninja Blade: Fixed alpha test issues (#2745).
  • Stray: Enabled d3d11.ignoreGraphicsBarriers option to work around some GPU-bound performance issues.
  • Ys Origin: Work around stutter with the game's built-in FPS limiter (#2750, PR #2754).

As a reminder: you can upgrade the version of DXVK used in Proton, without waiting on a new release. To do so you can just overwrite the existing DXVK files with the release download of DXVK 1.10.3. You can find your Proton install somewhere like this (depending on your Steam Library drives):

path-to-your/SteamLibrary/steamapps/common/Proton x.x/dist

Where x.x is whatever Proton version installed you wish to give a new DXVK.

Inside there you will see "lib" and "lib64", for 32bit and 64bit. Inside each of those, there's a "wine" folder and inside there is a "dxvk" folder and that's where you replace the files with new versions. Do so at your own risk but it's usually harmless. If you mess anything up, one way to ensure it gets reinstalled cleanly is just to remove the "/dist" folder.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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4 comments

mr-victory Aug 2, 2022
So no pipeline cache yet?
Leopard Aug 2, 2022
Quoting: mr-victorySo no pipeline cache yet?

No and it wouldn't be beneficial to most people as that GPL ext is only available on Nvidia Vulkan Dev driver; not on RADV. And that said NV Vulkan dev driver has couple of regressions for vkd3d-proton games.

So with no proper mainline support there isn't much benefit for most users.
soulsource Aug 3, 2022
d3d11.ignoreGraphicsBarriers sounds like an option that I would expect to cause rendering errors with Unreal games, for instance in realtime-lighting.
(Edit: To give a bit of context: I know for certain that with DX12 a barrier in Unreal's realtime-shadow-map rendering is required. If that barrier is missing or ignored, the shadow map might not get cleared properly, causing random shadow-pixels to appear.)


Last edited by soulsource on 3 August 2022 at 8:25 am UTC
aufkrawall Aug 3, 2022
I'd use VKD3D-Proton instead in Stray (-dx12), it has less harsh streaming slow-downs vs. D3D11/DXVK. Also, some scenes that are prone to be CPU bound run massively faster. Though for whatever weird reason, you also need to enable UE PSO cache via UE config to avoid re-compilation of all shaders between sessions, even though VKD3D-Proton already creates its own cache.
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