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Improve performance
You can
improve performance by optimizing your computer system, After Effects,
your project, and your workflow.
 The best
way to work faster overall is to plan ahead and run early tests
of your workflow and output pipeline. (See Planning your work.) Lloyd Alvarez provides the BG Renderer
script on the After Effects Scripts website, which
allows you to render and export compositions in the background while you
continue to work in After Effects.
GridIron Software provides
Nucleo Pro 2, which improves rendering performance in After Effects
in several ways. For information, see the GridIron Software website.
Improve performance before starting After Effects- Make sure that you’ve installed
the current version of After Effects, including any available updates.
To check for and install updates, choose Help > Updates. For
more information about updates, go to the Downloads section
of the Adobe website.
- Make sure that you’ve installed the latest versions of
drivers and plug-ins, especially video card drivers. To download
updates for drivers and plug-ins, go to the provider’s website.
- Quit applications that are not necessary for your work.
This may include some applications that start automatically when
the operating system starts.
- Make sure that your system includes a display card that
supports OpenGL 2.0 or later. Though After Effects can function
without it, OpenGL accelerates various types of rendering, including
rendering to the screen for previews. See Render with OpenGL.
- Adjust the size of the virtual memory paging file (Windows
only). Virtual memory enables the system to use hard disk space
to store information normally stored in RAM. Windows manages virtual
memory using a paging file. To improve performance in After Effects,
adjust the size of the paging file to a maximum of twice the amount
of installed RAM—the default in Windows XP. (See Windows Help.)
- Defragment all hard disks regularly. See the documentation
for your operating system for details.
- Make sure that your system has enough RAM. Optimum performance
is achieved with computer systems with at least 2 GB of installed
RAM per processor core. See the documentation for your operating
system and computer for details on how to check the amount of installed
RAM and how to install RAM.
- Stop or pause resource-intensive operations in other
applications, such as video previews in Adobe Bridge.
- When possible, keep the source footage files for your
project on a fast local disk drive. If your source footage files
are on a slow disk drive (or across a slow network connection),
then performance will be poor. Ideally, use three fast local disk
drives: one for source footage files, one from which the application runs,
and one for rendered output.
Improve performance by optimizing memory, cache, and multiprocessing settings- Use multiple processors to
render multiple frames simultaneously by selecting the Render Multiple
Frames Simultaneously preference. See Memory & Multiprocessing preferences.
- Enable caching frames to disk by selecting the Enable
Disk Cache preference. See RAM and disk caches.
- Purge RAM and disk caches (choose Edit > Purge >
Image Caches).
Improve performance by simplifying your projectBy simplifying and dividing your project,
you can prevent After Effects from using memory and other resources
to process elements that you are not currently working with. Also,
by controlling when After Effects performs certain processing, you
can greatly improve overall performance. For example, you can avoid
repeating an action that needs to happen only once, or you can postpone an
action until it is more convenient for you.
- Delete unused elements from your project.
See Remove items from a project.
- Divide complex projects into simpler projects, and then
recombine them before you render the finished movie. To recombine
projects, import all of the projects into a single project by choosing
File > Import > File.
- Before rendering, put all of your source footage files
on a local disk—not the one that the application runs from. A good
way to do this is with the Collect Files command. See Collect files in one location.
- Pre-render nested compositions. Render a completed composition
as a movie so that After Effects doesn’t rerender the composition
every time it is displayed. See Pre-render a nested composition.
- Restrict the influence of layer switches by choosing
Edit > Preferences > General (Windows) or
After Effects > Preferences > General (Mac
OS), and deselecting Switches Affect Nested Comps. (Remember to
select this option again before you render the composition for final
output.)
- Collapse transformations for nested compositions. See Render order and collapsing transformations.
- Substitute a low-resolution or still-image proxy for
a source item when not working directly with that item. See Placeholders and proxies.
- Lower the resolution for the composition. See Resolution.
Note: To increase the rendering speed of RAM previews,
set the resolution of the Composition panel to match the magnification.
For example, if the magnification is 50%, choose Half from the Resolution
menu.
- Isolate the layer you’re working on by using the Solo
switch. See Solo a layer.
Improve performance by modifying screen outputYou can improve performance in many ways that
don’t affect how After Effects treats your project data, only how
output is drawn to the screen as you work. Although it is often
useful to see certain items and information as you work, After Effects
uses memory and processor resources to update this information,
so be selective in what you choose to display as you work. You will
likely need to see different aspects of your project at different
points in your workflow, so you may apply the following suggestions
in various combinations at various stages.
- Turn off display color management and
output simulation when not needed. See Simulate how colors will appear on a different output device.
- Enable hardware acceleration of previews, which uses
the GPU to assist in drawing previews to the screen. Choose Edit
> Preferences > Display (Windows) or After Effects > Preferences
> Display (Mac OS), and select Hardware Accelerate Composition,
Layer, And Footage Panels.
- Close unneeded panels. After Effects must use memory
and processor resources to update open panels, which may slow the
work that you are doing in another panel.
- Create a region of interest. If you are working on a
small part of your composition, limit which portion of the composition
is rendered to the screen during previews. See Region of interest (ROI).
- Deselect Show Cache Indicators in the Timeline panel
menu to prevent After Effects from displaying green and blue bars
in the time ruler to indicate cached frames.
- Deselect the Show Rendering Progress In Info Panel And
Flowchart preference (in Display preferences) to prevent the details
of each render operation for each frame from being written to the
screen.
- Hide Current Render Details in the Render Queue panel
by clicking the triangle beside Current Render Details in the Render
Queue panel.
- Press Caps Lock to prevent After Effects
from updating Footage, Layer, or Composition panels. When you make
a change that would otherwise appear in a panel, After Effects adds
a red bar with a text reminder at the bottom of the panel. After
Effects continues to update panel controls such as motion paths,
anchor points, and mask outlines as you move them. To resume panel updates
and display all changes, press Caps Lock again.
Note: Pressing Caps Lock suspends updates (disables refresh)
of previews in viewers during rendering for final output, too, although
no red reminder bar appears.
- Lower the display quality of a layer to Draft. See Layer image quality and subpixel positioning.
- Select Draft 3D in the Timeline panel menu, which disables
all lights and shadows that fall on 3D layers. It also disables
the depth-of-field blur for a camera.
- Deselect Live Update in the Timeline panel menu to prevent
After Effects from updating compositions dynamically.
- Display audio waveforms in the Timeline panel only when
necessary.
- Disable pixel aspect ratio correction by clicking the
Toggle Pixel Aspect Ratio Correction
button
at the bottom of a Composition, Layer, or Footage panel.
- Deselect Mirror On Computer Monitor when previewing
video on an external video monitor. See Preview on an external video monitor.
- Hide layer controls, such as masks, 3D reference axes,
and layer handles. See Show or hide layer controls in the Composition panel.
- Lower the magnification for a composition. When After
Effects displays the Composition, Layer, and Footage panels at magnifications
of 100% or greater, screen redraw speed decreases. (See Zoom.)
- Set the Resolution/Down Sample Factor value of the composition
to Auto in the Composition panel, which prevents the unnecessary
rendering of rows or columns of pixels that aren’t drawn to the
screen at low zoom levels. See Resolution.
Improve performance when using effectsSome effects, such as blurs and distortions,
require large amounts of memory and processor resources. By being
selective about when and how you apply these effects, you can greatly
improve overall performance.
- Apply memory-intensive and processor-intensive
effects later. Animate your layers and do other work that requires
real-time previews before you apply memory-intensive or processor-intensive
effects (such as glows and blurs), which may make previews slower
than real time.
- Temporarily turn off effects to increase the speed of
previews. See Delete or disable effects and animation presets.
- Limit the number of particles generated by particle effects.
- Rather than apply the same effect with the same settings
to multiple layers, apply the effect to an adjustment layer. When
an effect is applied to an adjustment layer, it is processed once,
on the composite of all of the layers beneath it. See Adjustment layers.
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