Skip to content

A PowerShell script to identify which graphics API (DirectX, Vulkan) and upscaling technologies (DLSS, FSR, XeSS) a Windows process is using.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

sparklineflux/windows-gpu-tech-checker

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Windows Graphics API & Upscaling Tech Checker

This PowerShell script is a straightforward tool designed to quickly determine which graphics API (like DirectX or Vulkan) and upscaling technologies (such as NVIDIA DLSS, AMD FSR, or Intel XeSS) a specific running Windows process, typically a game, is utilizing.

It's particularly useful for checking if a game is using DirectX 11, DirectX 12, Vulkan, or if it has integrated support for modern upscaling solutions like DLSS, FSR, or XeSS.

Before you continue

Recommendations

  1. **Update powershell to the latest version, you can do this through Microsoft Store or Windows Update.

  2. **Update your graphic card drivers and make sure you have DirectX installed in order to get the truth and avoid misleading results

How to Use

  1. Save the script: Save the PowerShell script/code as a .ps1 file (e.g., cgpuapi-win.v1.0.0.ps1).

  2. Run as Administrator: The script requires administrative privileges to inspect other running processes. Open PowerShell or Windows Terminal as an administrator.

  3. Navigate and Execute:

    • Use the cd command to navigate to the directory where you saved the script.

    • Run the script by typing .\cgpuapi-win.v1.0.0.ps1 and pressing Enter.

Important: You will be able to enter a process of your choice (e.g., ezquake, wow, bodycam) by running cgpuapi-win.v1.0.0.ps1. Easiest way's simply reading the instructions from the prompt explaining and accepting input which allows you to run it, as-is, or by changing the default example variable are located directly within the ps1 script file itself.

To do the latter simply download and open the file in any text-edior. I recommend notepad++, vim or aetherlink, but notepad will do. Now adjust the settings as needed.

Remember that you risk making unwanted changes; I'm not recommending this method for users wholly new to writing or handling code!

Below I've presented a example of my own interaction with the script, including the output (On a Windows 11 Pro with Powershell 7.5.2) while running ezquake in the background. I didn't enter any input, it will use your userprofile folder Documenets as default and give the filename a date- and time reference in the filename.

   Process 'ezquake' (ID: 372) found. Attempting to list modules...
   Searching for relevant DLLs...
   - Found DirectX DLL: d3d12.dll

   --- Summary of Detected Technologies ---
   [API] Likely DirectX.
   [Upscaling] No AMD FSR found.
   [Upscaling] No NVIDIA DLSS found.
   [Upscaling] No Intel XeSS found.

   Note: A loaded DLL indicates support, not necessarily active use.
   Do you want to save a log of the results? (y/n): y
   Enter log file path (default: C:\Users\opusprojectus\Documents\GPU_TechCheck_2025-07-06_20-31-46.log.txt)
   Log file path: 
   Save to 'C:\Users\opusprojectus\Documents\GPU_TechCheck_2025-07-06_20-31-46.log.txt'? (y/n): y

What It Checks For

The script identifies the presence of key DLLs (Dynamic Link Libraries) associated with:

  • Graphics APIs: DirectX (d3d11.dll, d3d12.dll) and Vulkan (various vulkan-related DLLs).

  • Upscaling Technologies:

    • NVIDIA DLSS (nvngx_dlss.dll)

    • AMD FidelityFX/FSR (e.g., amd_fidelityfx_x.dll, amd_fsr_x.dll)

    • Intel XeSS (libxess.dll)

Note: The detection of a DLL indicates integrated support for the technology within the application. It does not necessarily mean the feature is currently active. Activation is typically managed through the application's in-game or program settings.

License

This project is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.0.

Please be aware: While GPLv3 allows for free distribution, the non-commercial sale of this specific tool is not intended by the creator. If you have commercial use in mind, please reach out to the creator.

About

A PowerShell script to identify which graphics API (DirectX, Vulkan) and upscaling technologies (DLSS, FSR, XeSS) a Windows process is using.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published