Viz Engine Administrator Guide
Version 3.13 | Published March 28, 2019 ©
Viz Command Line Options
You can start Viz Artist and Viz Engine with various startup options. These command line parameters must be passed to the Viz executable file, viz.exe, and not to the batch file, viz.cmd. The batch file is only there for compatibility reasons. The table below details the most common Viz Command Line Options. You can get a list of all available startup options, by running viz.cmd -h or -? from the command line.
Command |
Description |
-B <path> |
Specify the path where Viz Engine stores its temporary data (see Viz Artist and Engine Folders) |
-c |
Start in Viz Configuration mode (see also -u1, -u2, -u3) |
-C |
Start without a console. |
-db user:pw@server/name-server:port |
Specify which Graphic Hub to connect to on Viz Engine startup. password can be omitted from the argument, but user, server, name-server and port must always be provided. Example: viz.exe -db Guest:@VizDbServer/localhost:19396 In the example above, Viz Engine connects to a Graphic Hub server called VizDbServer ( case sensitive) on the name-server localhost at port 19396, as the user Guest with no password. |
-g <config file> |
Start with a predefined Viz Config file. This allows a User to have more than one startup option |
-h, -? |
Display the available commands. |
-i |
Enable pre-initialization of textures. Textures are generated on the graphics card immediately after loading an image |
-l |
Specify a console title to distinguish Viz Engines in a Dual Channel setup (example: -l <title>) |
-n |
Start in Viz Engine mode (see also -u1, -u2, -u3). There is also an optional argument may give a scene that is loaded upon startup with the following syntax: |
-P |
Disable automatic mouse capture. |
-t |
Enables non-interactive mode for all occurrences except dongle issues and sound driver setup. The non interactive mode was introduced for use cases where there is no user and when there is no GUI one can interact with. |
-T |
Keep the Viz Engine Console always on top |
-u1, -u2, -u3 (up to a maximum of 24) |
For systems with two or more graphic cards (i.e. Trio One Box / Dual Channel). Specify GPU1 (-u1), GPU2 (-u2), etc., to run Viz Artist on. See Systems with Two or More GPUs below. |
-v [argument] |
Enable verbose mode. This enables all possible information to be shown in the Viz Engine Console. The optional argument is a number composed by addition of |
-w |
Start in Engine mode and show render windows (videowall mode). |
-W |
Disable restart on crash. |
-x |
Start without any GUI |
-X |
Write extended dump file (full memory dump) in case of a program crash. |
-y |
Start in Artist mode. Viz Artist is stated by Viz Engine after the Engine has started. |
-Y <path> |
Specify the path where Viz Engine stores its program data (see Viz Artist and Engine Folders) |
Systems with Two or More GPUs
It is possible to specify which GPU Viz Engine should run on, by providing the flags -u1 and -u2 for GPU1 and GPU2, respectively. A maximum of four GPUs are supported. This allows the system to run the Engine on one GPU while running Viz Config on another, for example:
<viz install folder>\viz.exe -c -u2
<viz install folder>\viz.exe -n -u1
More than one Viz Engine can run on one GPU (multiple Viz Engines can not run on the GPU with the same port number), use the formula m%n to calculate which Viz Engine instance to use (Viz Engine defined by -u<m>). Note, however, that Viz Artist can only run on Viz Engine instance 1 (-u1). Only the control GPU should have a display connected and is used for Artist/Preview.
Formula: m%n, where:
-
m = -u1/-u2/etc.
-
n = number of GPUs
For example, with two Viz Engines:
-
System with two GPUs: Engines run on GPU2: Engine 1 (-u2) / Engine 2 (-u4)
-
System with three GPUs: Engines run on GPU2: Engine 1 (-u2) / Engine 2 (-u5)
When either Trio One Box or Dual Channel Viz Artist versions are installed, GPUs are selected by default.