Release Notes for Nuke and Hiero 10.5v3

Release Date

4 April 2017

Qualified Operating Systems

Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) or 10.10 (Yosemite)

Windows 7 or Windows 8 (64-bit only)

CentOS/RHEL 5 or CentOS/RHEL 6 (64-bit only)

Other operating systems may work, but have not been fully tested.

Requirements for Nuke's GPU Acceleration

If you want to enable Nuke to calculate certain nodes using the GPU, there are some additional requirements. You need to have:

an NVIDIA GPU with compute capability 2.0 (Fermi) or above. A list of the compute capabilities of NVIDIA GPUs is available at www.nvidia.co.uk/object/cuda_gpus_uk.html.

Note:  The compute capability is a property of the GPU hardware and can't be altered by a software update.

With graphics drivers capable of running CUDA 4.2 or above.

Note:  In order to use R3D GPU debayering in the Compositing environment, CUDA 6.0 (or higher) is required.

On Windows and Linux, CUDA graphics drivers are bundled with the regular drivers for your NVIDIA GPU. Drivers from April 2012 onward support CUDA 4.2.

Go to http://www.nvidia.com/Download/Find.aspx?lang=en-us for more information.

On Mac, the CUDA driver is separate from the NVIDIA graphics driver and must be installed, if you don't have it already. The minimum requirement for CUDA 4.2 is driver version 4.2.5, which can be downloaded from www.nvidia.com/drivers.

Note:  We recommend using the latest graphics drivers, where possible, regardless of operating system.

an AMD FirePro GPU on late 2013 Mac Pro 6,1 and mid 2015 Mac Pro 11,5, running OS X 10.9.3 'Mavericks', or later.

Late 2013 and Mid 2015 Mac Pros Only

Nuke supports GPU-enabled nodes on the late 2013 Mac Pro 6,1 and mid 2015 Mac Pro 11,5 (running OS X 10.9.3 'Mavericks', or later), including a new Enable multi-GPU support option. When enabled in the preferences, GPU processing is shared between the available GPUs for extra processing speed.

Note:   To ensure you get the best performance from OpenCL GPUs on late 2013 Mac Pro 6,1 and mid 2015 Mac Pro 11,5, we recommend updating Mavericks to 10.9.5, or above for full functionality. However:

If you're running an earlier version of Mac OS X than 10.9.5 and processing images greater than 4 mega pixels resolution, VectorGenerator, Kronos, and MotionBlur do not support GPU acceleration.

If you're running an earlier version of Mac OS X than 10.9.4, Kronos and MotionBlur do not support GPU acceleration.

New Features

There are no new features in this release.

Feature Enhancements

• ID 266967 - Monitor Output: A new use video legal range control has been added to the compositing Viewer Properties panel. Enabling the checkbox transforms monitor output to the legal video range.

Bug Fixes

• ID 143352 - Denoise: Moving the analysis region outside the frame bounding box caused Nuke to crash.

• ID 163170 - Custom panels docked in the wrong pane when added using the button in the top-left of the pane.

• ID 240564 - Calling node dependencies() from the Script Editor sometimes failed with expression-linked nodes.

• ID 241829 - Create Comp: Retimed clip instances produced comps with a one-frame offset.

• ID 242150/264672 - Timeline: The keyboard shortcuts to nudge a clip instance between tracks (Alt+. and Alt+,) did not work as expected.

• ID 249050 - PositionToPoints: Connecting a Viewer to a PositionToPoints node in a customer script caused Nuke to crash.

• ID 253488 - Export: Track names containing hyphens did not export correctly.

• ID 266188 - Export: The Version token number control only allowed a two-digit maximum, rather than the expected four digits.

Developer Notes

Here are the changes relevant to developers. See Help > Documentation from the Nuke menu bar or www.thefoundry.co.uk/products/nuke/developers/100/ndkdevguide/appendixc/index.html for more information.

As Nuke develops, we sometimes have to make changes to the API and ABI under the hood. We try to keep these changes to a minimum and only for certain releases, but from time to time API and ABI compatibility is not guaranteed. See the following table for the situations when you may have to recompile your plugins and/or make changes to the source code.

Release Type

Example

Compatibility

Recompile

Rewrite

Version

10.0v1 to 10.0v2

API and ABI

 

 

Point

10.0v1 to 10.5v1

API

 

Major

10.0v1 to 11.0v1

-

Additionally, node Class() names occasionally change between major releases. While these changes do not affect legacy scripts, you may not get the results you were expecting if a node class has been modified. The toolbars.py file, used to create Nuke's node toolbar, contains all the current node class names and is located in <install_directory>/plugins/nukescripts/ for reference.

As an example, between Nuke 9 and Nuke 10, the CameraShake node Class() changed from CameraShake2 to CameraShake3. In the toolbars.py file for the two releases, the entries for the CameraShake node appear as follows:

m.addCommand("CameraShake", "nuke.createNode(\"CameraShake2\")", icon="CameraShake.png")
m.addCommand("CameraShake", "nuke.createNode(\"CameraShake3\")", icon="CameraShake.png")

New Features

There are no new features in this release.

Feature Enhancements

There are no feature enhancements in this release.

Bug Fixes

There are no bug fixes in this release.