
Hi, my destop is Linux mint 18.1 cinnamon 64bit and my graphic driver is nvidia video driver. The problem is recorded gifs are flicking with my desktop wallpaper.
Thanks for reporting. Could you try if other screen recording software suffers from the same issue?
In the end Peek is just using ffmpeg to do the recording, and issues like this are often driver related in which case there is not much I can do :(
Thanks for replying. I just found out other screen recording software (kazam) also having same problem in screen recording :(
Ok. I would love to offer you a workaround, but I have no experience with the Nvidia driver and the available settings and I also can't test it.
Two things I found that could be related:
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/156155/x11grab-flickers-in-opengl-draw-areas
http://askubuntu.com/questions/263996/fixing-the-nvidia-graphics-screen-flicker-issue
I will leave this issue open for a while, maybe somebody else has some idea on this.
I had luck with changing the allow flipping setting for the Nvidia driver.
@gort818 Thanks, I added this info the FAQs.
@BrainAxe It would be cool if you could try if this also works for you.
Thanks @gort818 for the information. It works and I am relieved from unwanted pain.
I am very grateful to @phw for keeping this issue opened. I found the setting in OpenGL Settings, here is a screenshot you can add this in FAQs and thanks again. :)

Glad to help guys!
I know this is an old ticket but I also had the same issue and the above solution resolved it for me. Thank you.

Guys, i'm sorry to be late to the party, but disabling the Flipping in nV settings did help, but not completely SOLVE the issue..
Grabbing high framerate still makes the same glitches even with hardware encoder and lowish bitrate!
Settings below, ffmpeg 4.1 compiled standalone to match my 384.xx driver and codec headers version 8.
$ ./ffmpeg -video_size 1024x768 -framerate 60 -f x11grab -i :0.0+100,200 -vcodec h264_nvenc x11_output.mp4
ffmpeg version 4.1.6 Copyright (c) 2000-2020 the FFmpeg developers
built with gcc 4.8 (Ubuntu 4.8.5-4ubuntu8~14.04.2)
configuration: --prefix=/apps/libav/11.7 --enable-gpl --enable-version3 --enable-nonfree --enable-runtime-cpudetect --enable-gray --enable-vdpau --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libfdk-aac --enable-libtheora --enable-libxcb --cpu=native --enable-vdpau --enable-libwavpack --enable-libxvid --enable-libx264 --enable-nvenc
libavutil 56. 22.100 / 56. 22.100
libavcodec 58. 35.100 / 58. 35.100
libavformat 58. 20.100 / 58. 20.100
libavdevice 58. 5.100 / 58. 5.100
libavfilter 7. 40.101 / 7. 40.101
libswscale 5. 3.100 / 5. 3.100
libswresample 3. 3.100 / 3. 3.100
libpostproc 55. 3.100 / 55. 3.100
[x11grab @ 0x2e8a500] Stream #0: not enough frames to estimate rate; consider increasing probesize
Input #0, x11grab, from ':0.0+100,200':
Duration: N/A, start: 1601796935.110486, bitrate: N/A
Stream #0:0: Video: rawvideo (BGR[0] / 0x524742), bgr0, 1024x768, 60 fps, 1000k tbr, 1000k tbn, 1000k tbc
File 'x11_output.mp4' already exists. Overwrite ? [y/N] y
Stream mapping:
Stream #0:0 -> #0:0 (rawvideo (native) -> h264 (h264_nvenc))
Press [q] to stop, [?] for help
Output #0, mp4, to 'x11_output.mp4':
Metadata:
encoder : Lavf58.20.100
Stream #0:0: Video: h264 (h264_nvenc) (Main) (avc1 / 0x31637661), bgr0, 1024x768, q=-1--1, 2000 kb/s, 60 fps, 15360 tbn, 60 tbc
Metadata:
encoder : Lavc58.35.100 h264_nvenc
Side data:
cpb: bitrate max/min/avg: 0/0/2000000 buffer size: 4000000 vbv_delay: -1
frame= 233 fps=0.0 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:03.83 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 264 fps=214 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:04.35 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 296 fps=170 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:04.88 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 326 fps=145 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:05.38 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 357 fps=130 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:05.90 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 386 fps=119 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:06.38 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 414 fps=110 q=18.0 size= 0kB time=00:00:06.85 bitrate= 0.1kbits/frame= 447 fps=105 q=18.0 size= 256kB time=00:00:07.40 bitrate= 283.4kbits/frame= 476 fps=100 q=18.0 size= 256kB time=00:00:07.88 bitrate= 266.1kbits/frame= 509 fps= 96 q=18.0 size= 512kB time=00:00:08.43 bitrate= 497.4kbits/frame= 540 fps= 93 q=18.0 size= 512kB time=00:00:08.95 bitrate= 468.7kbits/frame= 570 fps= 90 q=18.0 size= 512kB time=00:00:09.45 bitrate= 443.9kbits/
@KiLLAAA This is still likely a video driver issue. You can try to report this to ffmpeg or Nvidia.
@phw yes, it looks like ffmpeg grabs current frame which is still being written at the time.
Most helpful comment
I had luck with changing the allow flipping setting for the Nvidia driver.