Dota 2 lagging in Steam when running on MacBook Pro
I installed Ubuntu on my Macbook Pro recently. But DOTA 2 is very much laggy in Ubuntu 16.04. It runs crispy in OSX. I tried updating machine and all, but no use.
The graphics card shows Intel Haswell Mobile in Ubuntu and Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB in OSX. Is it a graphics related problem? How can this be fixed.
Note: I have seen Dota 2 running fine on Ubuntu with laptops of very ordinary specs.
Some more information as per comments:
The output of
lspci | grep VGA
is
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Crystal Well Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 08)
It plays 60 fps 4k videos perfectly fine.
intel-graphics steam mac macbook
add a comment |
I installed Ubuntu on my Macbook Pro recently. But DOTA 2 is very much laggy in Ubuntu 16.04. It runs crispy in OSX. I tried updating machine and all, but no use.
The graphics card shows Intel Haswell Mobile in Ubuntu and Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB in OSX. Is it a graphics related problem? How can this be fixed.
Note: I have seen Dota 2 running fine on Ubuntu with laptops of very ordinary specs.
Some more information as per comments:
The output of
lspci | grep VGA
is
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Crystal Well Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 08)
It plays 60 fps 4k videos perfectly fine.
intel-graphics steam mac macbook
1
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
2
Edit your question with the output oflspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32
add a comment |
I installed Ubuntu on my Macbook Pro recently. But DOTA 2 is very much laggy in Ubuntu 16.04. It runs crispy in OSX. I tried updating machine and all, but no use.
The graphics card shows Intel Haswell Mobile in Ubuntu and Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB in OSX. Is it a graphics related problem? How can this be fixed.
Note: I have seen Dota 2 running fine on Ubuntu with laptops of very ordinary specs.
Some more information as per comments:
The output of
lspci | grep VGA
is
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Crystal Well Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 08)
It plays 60 fps 4k videos perfectly fine.
intel-graphics steam mac macbook
I installed Ubuntu on my Macbook Pro recently. But DOTA 2 is very much laggy in Ubuntu 16.04. It runs crispy in OSX. I tried updating machine and all, but no use.
The graphics card shows Intel Haswell Mobile in Ubuntu and Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB in OSX. Is it a graphics related problem? How can this be fixed.
Note: I have seen Dota 2 running fine on Ubuntu with laptops of very ordinary specs.
Some more information as per comments:
The output of
lspci | grep VGA
is
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Crystal Well Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 08)
It plays 60 fps 4k videos perfectly fine.
intel-graphics steam mac macbook
intel-graphics steam mac macbook
edited Mar 27 '17 at 18:20
Mrinal Saurabh
asked Mar 27 '17 at 17:31
Mrinal SaurabhMrinal Saurabh
1114
1114
1
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
2
Edit your question with the output oflspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32
add a comment |
1
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
2
Edit your question with the output oflspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32
1
1
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
2
2
Edit your question with the output of
lspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
Edit your question with the output of
lspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I had this problem, and I managed to solve it on Arch linux. The problem was that OpenCL drivers were not installed. I guess the basic steps are same, so here they are:
- Run
$ neofetch
command to check what Graphics card you are using.
//Mine was Intel Crystal well. - Go to intel site and find what is the
microarchitectre of your chip. For e.g. mine was Haswell as seen on
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/crystal_well. My processor is
also listed i7-4770HQ. - Install the relevant driver, as from this
page - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GPGPU. Mine was
intel-opencl
. Restart your computer. - Run
$ clinfo
. You should see a platform registered. OpenCL is enabled now.
add a comment |
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I had this problem, and I managed to solve it on Arch linux. The problem was that OpenCL drivers were not installed. I guess the basic steps are same, so here they are:
- Run
$ neofetch
command to check what Graphics card you are using.
//Mine was Intel Crystal well. - Go to intel site and find what is the
microarchitectre of your chip. For e.g. mine was Haswell as seen on
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/crystal_well. My processor is
also listed i7-4770HQ. - Install the relevant driver, as from this
page - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GPGPU. Mine was
intel-opencl
. Restart your computer. - Run
$ clinfo
. You should see a platform registered. OpenCL is enabled now.
add a comment |
I had this problem, and I managed to solve it on Arch linux. The problem was that OpenCL drivers were not installed. I guess the basic steps are same, so here they are:
- Run
$ neofetch
command to check what Graphics card you are using.
//Mine was Intel Crystal well. - Go to intel site and find what is the
microarchitectre of your chip. For e.g. mine was Haswell as seen on
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/crystal_well. My processor is
also listed i7-4770HQ. - Install the relevant driver, as from this
page - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GPGPU. Mine was
intel-opencl
. Restart your computer. - Run
$ clinfo
. You should see a platform registered. OpenCL is enabled now.
add a comment |
I had this problem, and I managed to solve it on Arch linux. The problem was that OpenCL drivers were not installed. I guess the basic steps are same, so here they are:
- Run
$ neofetch
command to check what Graphics card you are using.
//Mine was Intel Crystal well. - Go to intel site and find what is the
microarchitectre of your chip. For e.g. mine was Haswell as seen on
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/crystal_well. My processor is
also listed i7-4770HQ. - Install the relevant driver, as from this
page - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GPGPU. Mine was
intel-opencl
. Restart your computer. - Run
$ clinfo
. You should see a platform registered. OpenCL is enabled now.
I had this problem, and I managed to solve it on Arch linux. The problem was that OpenCL drivers were not installed. I guess the basic steps are same, so here they are:
- Run
$ neofetch
command to check what Graphics card you are using.
//Mine was Intel Crystal well. - Go to intel site and find what is the
microarchitectre of your chip. For e.g. mine was Haswell as seen on
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/crystal_well. My processor is
also listed i7-4770HQ. - Install the relevant driver, as from this
page - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GPGPU. Mine was
intel-opencl
. Restart your computer. - Run
$ clinfo
. You should see a platform registered. OpenCL is enabled now.
answered Dec 27 '18 at 18:52
Mrinal SaurabhMrinal Saurabh
1114
1114
add a comment |
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1
Which version of Ubuntu are you using?
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:01
Also, can you play a 1080p 60FPS video (such as youtube.com/watch?v=aqz-KE-bpKQ) off of YouTube fine? Make sure to select the 60fps mode in the youtube menu.
– Android Dev
Mar 27 '17 at 18:02
2
Edit your question with the output of
lspci | grep VGA
– M. Becerra
Mar 27 '17 at 18:09
I have updated with the required information. I also tried to install AMD Graphics driver, which did not help. So uninstalled it back.
– Mrinal Saurabh
Mar 27 '17 at 18:32