kovacs_miki Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 Just curious if anyone knows this. On an M1 mac when running logic through rosetta, if I load plugins that have native M1 versions (like fabfilter nexus) are they loading the apple silicon version, or they running the intel one, since logic is running the intel version..? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eriksimon Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 (edited) Good question, I'm curious too. I wonder if there are any plugins that are M1 only - if there are, and they also work under Rosetta2, then that is your answer Edited April 27, 2021 by Eriksimon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kovacs_miki Posted April 27, 2021 Author Share Posted April 27, 2021 Yes that's be a quick way to answer but unfortunately i doubt there's a plugin like that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
des99 Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 I think plugins are spawned as separate processes now, so you might be able to see in Activity Monitor which architecture is running from a loaded plugin perhaps? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kovacs_miki Posted April 27, 2021 Author Share Posted April 27, 2021 Yes a tried that, but couldn't find them as a separate process in activity monitor Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ValliSoftware Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 Just curious if anyone knows this. On an M1 mac when running logic through rosetta, if I load plugins that have native M1 versions (like fabfilter nexus) are they loading the apple silicon version, or they running the intel one, since logic is running the intel version..? Important The system prevents you from mixing arm64 code and x86_64 code in the same process. Rosetta translation applies to an entire process, including all code modules that the process loads dynamically. More info here... https://developer.apple.com/documentation/apple-silicon/about-the-rosetta-translation-environment Once you specify Logic to run in Rosetta 2, only Intel plug-ins get loaded. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
des99 Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 Yes, but I thought they changed plugin handling in Logic *specifically* because of this. In the same way, people have said that running Logic ARM-natively can still load Intel plugins - precisely because the plugins are moved to their own process, so you *can* mix architectures. That's what I understood, from user reports (don't have an ARM Mac so don't know directly.) but prehaps someone that does have one can answer definitively... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ValliSoftware Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 Yes, but I thought they changed plugin handling in Logic *specifically* because of this. In the same way, people have said that running Logic ARM-natively can still load Intel plugins - precisely because the plugins are moved to their own process, so you *can* mix architectures. That's not what the OP is asking. They want to know if a x86_64 app can load arm64 plug-ins. The answer is no. Once you're in x86_64, it's only x86_64. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
des99 Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 Ok, thanks for the confirmation. And running natively, you can load both ARM and Intel plugins? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fisherking Posted April 27, 2021 Share Posted April 27, 2021 yes, running natively, intel plugins load thru rosetta2, and arm plugins load directly. am wondering when rosetta2 will end (2 years perhaps?) and wondering which plugins i'll lose when that happens. but for now, seems a good place to be. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
orangefridge Posted June 22 Share Posted June 22 Not sure if this will help: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/pluginfo/id1626412949?mt=12 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
des99 Posted June 22 Share Posted June 22 PlugInfo is great, I helped with testing, and among other things it will tell you which architectures a plugin supports. It's highly recommended and I use it pretty much everytime I install plugins. It doesn't of course change Logic's handling of native or Intel plugins. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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