Multiple cores on Linux
info
This document is outdated. As of 4.0.137, the default behavior is to use multi-process mode.
The setting still exists, but is true by default.
By default, Remotion starts the Chromium browser on Linux with the --single-process flag. This is because:
- The sandboxing feature of Chromium is not supported on all Linux distributions
 - Older versions of Chromium used to crash when starting headlessly with multiple processes
 - If some desktop libraries are missing, Chromium could crash on startup on some Distros.
 
This can lead to degraded rendering performance, especially when trying to leverage high-core CPUs and high Remotion concurrency.
Enable multi-process rendering on Linux
available from v4.0.42
For now, this option is opt-in. To enable multi-process mode for Chromium during rendering on Linux:
- renderMedia() / openBrowser() / renderFrames(): Use the 
chromiumOptions.enableMultiProcessOnLinuxoption. - CLI: Use the 
--enable-multi-process-on-linuxflag. - Config file: Use the 
Config.setChromiumMultiProcessInLinux()option. - Remotion Studio: Check the toggle in the advanced settings.
 - Cloud Run: From v4.0.42, this option is automatically enabled.
 - Lambda: This option is disabled with no option to enable it because on Amazon Linux, Chrome will crash if the 
--single-processflag is not used. We recommend using more Lambdas instead of more concurrency per Lambda. 
Should I enable multi-process mode?
The answer depends on the Linux environment. If you are running Remotion on a server, you should try to enable multi-process mode and see if it works.
Our recommended Docker image is confirmed working with multi-process mode enabled.