Third Party Hardware > GPU Compute / Accelerators
Current support distributions for Navi AMD
MauryG5:
Hello everyone, I wanted to know if to date, as well Fedora, if there is some other distribution of Linux for our architecture, which has the drivers to normal operation GPUs AMD series Navi 10/14. Someone has information about? Thanks
pocock:
On Debian buster, it should be possible with updated kernel and mesa packages from the buster-backports catalog.
This shows how to search the current versions of mesa packages in buster-backports, nobody backported them at the time of writing this reply.
If I was using a Navi card myself, I would prepare the necessary backports and find a way to make those packages available conveniently. For now, I decided to start with the RX 580 and wait for the Big Navi cards to arrive. I don't feel it is a good use of money to buy an RX 5700 today when the Big Navi might come in 2 weeks.
OpenBSD commented that amdgpu is currently being adapted for the powerpc64 port, that list might be the best place to get further details about Navi.
On any distribution, developers are sometimes willing to make an extra effort to support things like this if the manufacturer or another user can provide free or subsidized access to the hardware.
MPC7500:
The Navi problems are Kernel related. You will face that problem on any POWER-distribution.
MauryG5:
For me personally, big navi is not fully exploitable as we don't have great software to run that requires all that power. Of course for those who have to buy now, maybe it is better to wait, but I repeat, it does not seem to me that with the software currently available for Power, we can unfortunately take advantage of a card like the big navi. So in summary, you tell me that if you install one of those packages on Debian, can you use Navi? But are there no real drivers now, given the time that has passed since the release of Navi 10/14 ?!
pocock:
On any Linux, you need a combination of the following:
- the kernel
- the firmware blob packages
- other libraries like mesa
- xserver-xorg-video-amdgpu
While it is a long time since the first Navi cards released, please remember that Debian only makes a release every 2 years. Debian freezes 6 months before the release. The current Debian stable release, buster, entered freeze back in January 2019:
https://release.debian.org/buster/freeze_policy.html
and the next stable freeze will be in 2021. That is why backport packages are necessary for Debian users.
Every user has different requirements. I personally don't need a Big Navi right now, I never do any gaming or 3D, but I think it may be worth paying a little bit more money to have a PCIe 4.0 card that can handle multiple monitors, maybe even a multi-seat configuration in future. If it has better video encoding and decoding that will be useful for anybody running OBS but they haven't given any confirmation whether codecs like AV1 will be included in the spec.
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