I didn’t test it on AMD cards, since I don’t have any. On the other hand, on nvidia (I tried GT610, GTX460m and GTX770) only basic GDI opengl 1.1 is supported and the app crashes with unsupported opengl extension, gpucaps: I was testing if the app will launch with statically linked libraries on computer without VTK or PCL libraries installed, so I tried to launch it on a computer through remote desktop (I wasn’t interested if the rendering works, just if the app will complain about missing dll’s) and I was very surprised that the app worked even with rendering!Īfter some investigation, it looks like that on intel hd graphics (!!), opengl works natively even through remote desktop session, I made a screenshot of gpucaps: Yes it works fine, but the remote machine has to be running Windows 7 or 8 and it has to be a DirectX game (not an OpenGL one) Recent versions of Remote Desktop support a technology called RemoteFX - which allows 3D content to be rendered using the host machines GPU and streamed over remote desktop. The moment we enable the RDP service on Windows 10, the system will automatically enable the pre-define rule to allow the RDP port and its services through the firewall to connect remote computers either using a local intranet or the internet (via VPN). Visualization through VTK 7.0 is using opengl 4.0. Steps to allow RDP in Windows 10 firewall using GUI.
I need to use Windows 10 RDP from my primary computer running Windows 10 Pro version 1903.
I’m developing a point cloud registration application using VTK and PCL libraries. Microsoft win10 remote desktop can not open OpenGL program while using a Geforce graph card.But Intel HD graph and AMD radeon graph card can open OpenGL program perfectly on win10 remote desktop.Hope nvidia adding an OpenGL support on win10 remote desktop.