14.09.2019
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Apologies for not being clear, and you're correct -enable-glx shouldn't be there. What I was trying to say is the video fails if -enable-glspectrum, -with-x, and -disable-xcb are passed the video fails to play when using the OpenGL Video Output.

VLC Media Player is the most popular and robust multi-format, free media player available. The VLC Media Player was publically released in 2001 by non-profit organization VideoLAN Project. VLC Media Player quickly became very popular thanks to its versatile multi-format playback capabilities. It was aided by compatibility and codec issues which rendered competitor media players like QuickTime, Windows and Real Media Player useless to many popular video and music file formats. The easy, basic UI and huge array of customization options have enforced VLC Media Player’s position at the top of the free media players.

Flexibility

VLC Media Player plays almost any video or music file format you can find. At its launch this was a revolution compared to the default media players most people were using that often crashed or displayed “codecs missing” error messages when trying to play media files. VLC Media Player can play MPEG, AVI, RMBV, FLV, QuickTime, WMV, MP4 and a shed load of other video and audio media file formats. Not only can VLC Media Player handle loads of different formats, VLC Media Player can also playback partial or incomplete audio and video media files so you can preview downloads before they finish.

Easy to Use

VLC Media Player’s UI is definitely a case of function over beauty. The basic look does, however, make the media player extremely easy to use. Simply drag and drop files to play or open them using files and folders then use the classic media navigation buttons to play, pause, stop, skip, edit playback speed, change the volume, brightness, etc. A huge variety of skins and customization options mean the standard appearance shouldn’t be enough to prevent you from choosing VLC as your default media player.

Advanced Options

Don’t let VLC Media Player’s simple interface fool you, within the playback, audio, video, tools, and view tabs are a huge variety of player options. You can play with synchronization settings including a graphic equalizer with multiple pre-sets, overlays, special effects, AtmoLight video effects, audio spatializer, and customizable range compression settings. You can even add subtitles to videos by adding the SRT file to the video’s folder.

Summary

VLC Media Player is quite simply the most versatile, stable and high-quality free media player available. It has rightly dominated the free media player market for over 10 years now and looks like it may for another 10 years thanks to the constant development and improvement by VideoLAN Org.

Active2 years ago

After upgrading from Ubuntu 14.04 to 16.04 I immediately noticed an issue whereby VLC now shows terrible video when you skip around, which only appears to fix itself after a few seconds, which I am guessing when it next meets a keyframe. This can be shown in the screenshot below:

I have tried the following to resolve the issue:

  • Using VLC's stable ppa to get a later verison of VLC (VLC media player 2.2.4 Weatherwax)
  • Changing from nvidia driver 361.42 to 340.96 (which didn't work so I switched back, I made sure to reboot each time). I also tried the X.Org X server - Nouveau driver.
  • Trying various outputs from Automatic to X11 Video Output XCB, and OpenGL GLX video output (XCB).
  • Changing the Hardware-accelerated decoding from Automatic to Disable (under the Input/Codecs tab)
  • Disabling all but my primary monitor.

I notice that if I pause the video, skip to any location, wait a second or two, and then play, the video will be fine. I just need VLC to wait until it is ready instead of trying to plow on immediately with the audio and trying to get the video to sync up.

Other media players like mpv media player just work in this regard, but I noticed mpv media player doesn't allow me to skip to the next video for some reason which is why I'm going back to trying to fix VLC.

Update June 4th 2016

I just installed Xubuntu on my netbook and VLC works on there perfectly well. I tried both VLC 2.2.2 and 2.2.4 from the PPA. This issue looks like its Ubuntu Desktop specific or to do with the fact that my desktop monitor runs through an Nvidia GPU (but have tested using nouveau drivers).

Another thing I noticed is that streaming media from a remote host on the same network using an NFS share makes the problem far more noticeable.

Update 8th June 2016

I have uploaded a youtube video trying to demonstrate the change in behaviour where the audio never stops playing as you skip around, but the video will be 'paused' and then kick in as pixelated before eventually sorting itself out. Normally both the audio and video would kick in together once the player is ready and there would be no video pixelation as shown here in this video of Xubuntu 16.04 using VLC.

Update 9th June 2016

It appears that videos I record using Kazam screen caster are not affected which led me to believe it was some proprietary codec or something. I revisited the decoding menu and found that only this option worked on a local file (I still had pixelation issues on the same video when it was loaded from an NFS folder but maybe that is yet another different issue?).

I am guessing that the DRM option is the important point here as VA-API via X11 did not work (and neither did 'disable' or any of the others). I would now be keen to figure out what I need to do when I'm loading the vidoes from an NFS.Increasing the stream output muxer caching didn't fix it.

Final Update - It's an Nvidia Issue (9th June 2016)

This is definitely an Nvidia graphics card related issue (haven't tested AMD). After noticing that VA-API with DRM didn't work on my work computer (which is also running Ubuntu 16.04 with an Nvidia Graphics card), when I got home I tried installing xubuntu to test that theory. That didn't do the trick. After that I unplugged my Nvidia graphics card and am now using the integrated intel graphics (on i5-4670K) which is working brilliantly on 'automatic' and even on files loaded from the NFS.

Normally I would post this as the answer, but I don't think many others would be happy with it. I hope that maybe someone will have a solution whereby I can plug in my graphics card again, but I think the reality is we need to wait for an update to the kernel and/or better proprietary drivers from Nvidia. What amazes me is that having the card in and using the opensource nouveau drivers, or switching off hardware acceleration doesn't work.

Programster
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6 Answers

Update 19th October 2016

I noticed that my Nvidia module was recompiled during an update today, so I rebooted and tested this again. It looks like the issue has now been fixed. For reference, I am running the driver version 367.57 on an Nvidia GTX 970.

Original Answer

TL;DR

The critical point here is that installing the drivers PPA results in the libcuda1-361libxnvctrl0 packages being upgraded which resolves the issue. I also found that I had issues with lots of the nvidia drivers so the safest thing to do is go back to the opensource driver. I have had some success with the nvidia-340 driver though.

Full Description

Ok somehow I managed to resolve the situation by accident

Firstly I installed the drivers ppa:

Then I purged the existing nvida drivers

Then I installed the 364 drivers.

After rebooting, I was unable to log into Ubuntu desktop but could log into Xubuntu desktop from previous testing. This would work long enough for me to see that the video playback worked perfectly, but within a few minutes my computer would lock up and would require hard rebooting. After doing this a few times I purged the nvidia drivers again:

I no longer have the nvidia binary drivers installed and am on the Nouveau driver but the video playback is working and my computer doesn't lock up!

ProgramsterProgramster
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I had the same annoying issue on KDE Neon (ubuntu 16.04) with nvidia graphics (GTX 1050). I am using the nvidia drivers 375.82. To resolve this issue I had to change two vlc settings:

  1. Video Settings -->Output -->X11 video output (XCB)
  2. Codecs -->Hardware accelerated decoding -->VA-API video decodervia DRM

The second setting is needed to skip through some proprietary files likewmv. As far as I have tested, vlc is now working as before without the nvidia graphics card.

jdzjdz

I was able to get mine working with nvidia-367 and nvidia-370 drivers by selecting the VLC Settings > Video > Output as 'X11 video output (XCB)' instead of 'VDPAU output' which had the lag when skipping. All the (XCB) options worked for me with nvidia-367 including 'X11 video output (XCB)' -(didn't work on nvidia-370) and 'OpenGL GLX video output (XCB)' -(OpenGL GLX worked after reboot after upgrading to nvidia-370).

Basically all the XCB options worked well (skipping, speeds), Color ASCII art worked as normal, the OpenGL (non GLX/XCB) ones aligned to the bottom left but skipped well. ASCII art (black and white) worked OK but couldn't be resized. The others didn't display stuff to screen.

Will think about updating to nvidia-370 as it just came out recently.

pd12pd12
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Have the same problem with VLC in Unity 14.04, it started very recently, probably caused by regular apt upgrades, but I didn't pinpoint it. Choppy playback in VLC, vertical sync issues, video hangs for a few seconds while skipping ahead. I have an Nvidia card in my Dell laptop. I checked other options like the HDMI cable (using an external monitor), but eventually narrowed it down to VLC.

My (lazy) solution is switching to built in Totem player called 'Videos' in Unity. It seems to have all the codecs and the basic features. No problems right now. I'll deal with this later or wait for updates.

R0bb3dR0bb3d

X11 Video Output Xcb Download Google Play

Had the same issue on Lenovo notebook with discrete nvidia video card and Ubuntu 16.04. Solved by choosing integrated Intel HD in nvidia-settings tool.So the solution (if you have nvidia drivers installed) is to run nvidia-settings and choose integrated Intel HD video card

AlexandraAlexandra

I have had the same problem on a Debian Jessie, Nvidia 950 GC with backports Nvidia drivers, and VLC 2.2.4. The update to 367.44-3 version of the nvidia drivers switched the problem.

The solution I found : switching material decoding to 'VA-API via DRM'. It now works fine.

Hope this can help someone.

Nicolas FRANCOISNicolas FRANCOIS

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