- Amd apu drivers on ubuntu install#
- Amd apu drivers on ubuntu driver#
- Amd apu drivers on ubuntu full#
Amd apu drivers on ubuntu install#
Amd apu drivers on ubuntu full#
One of the headline comments was "Introducing full support for Ubuntu 20.04.2" You just mention 20.04.
![amd apu drivers on ubuntu amd apu drivers on ubuntu](https://linuxconfig.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/bionic-amd-download.jpg)
I've recently seen that AMD have announced the 21.10 version of Radeon Software for Linux (the AMDGPU- PRO stuff). maybe if you follow those leads, you might find a way forward to getting a working OpenCL installed.
![amd apu drivers on ubuntu amd apu drivers on ubuntu](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/99/Linux_kernel_and_OpenGL_video_games.svg/300px-Linux_kernel_and_OpenGL_video_games.svg.png)
He also points out an AMD community thread where the problem is more fully explained. Have you looked at that thread for what people who do use Ubuntu have said? I'll refer you in particular to this post by Mountkidd that goes into chapter and verse about Ubuntu 20.04 and which particular kernels will or wont work with some particular versions of AMDGPU-PRO. There is a long running thread on the "Problems" board that has "Ubuntu 20" and "AMD drivers" in the title. If you don't see that OpenCL: line, you don't have OpenCL properly installed. That line was from one of my machines with a HD7850 GPU. OpenCL: AMD/ATI GPU 0: AMD Radeon HD7800 Series (driver version 3180.7. Once you get clinfo to properly report the platform and device information, you should then see (very early in the BOINC startup messages) something like If you look at the clinfo output you posted at BOINC, it clearly says "No platform" and "No devices found in platform" so you're being told that a working OpenCL capability is not installed. With Ubuntu, so it seems from what I've read, you need to worry about kernel versions and which particular OpenCL versions may be compatible or not. OpenCL is something extra that runs in addition to and depends on the amdgpu module.
Amd apu drivers on ubuntu driver#
The standard video driver these days is amdgpu - a kernel module that comes as part of the Linux kernel. It's an extra that extends the functionality of the video drivers. Please understand that OpenCL capability is something extra that is not part of a standard video driver install. In normal circumstances I just use discrete GPUs but I'm absolutely sure the internal GPUs work as well if I remove the discrete GPU. I have tested both the discrete and internal GPUs (separately) and they both work quite automatically without needing any software or setup changes. I have Athlon 200GE and Athlon3000G APUs which have Vega 3 - just 3 compute units (CUs) - so not as powerful as your Vega 8. I just download the Red Hat version of AMDGPU-PRO and extract just the OpenCL libs manually, (both PAL and legacy) and install both using a home-made installation script.
![amd apu drivers on ubuntu amd apu drivers on ubuntu](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Jw7wM.png)
I use a distro that doesn't package BOINC or OpenCL. I don't know anything about Ubuntu - only that it seems like every 6 months, after April and October when the new versions are released, there appears always to be a spate of problems for people trying to use OpenCL. Bill wrote: I'm trying to get the GPU portion of my 2200G to work in Ubuntu 20.04.