AMD GPU: Difference between revisions
imported>Lucasew No edit summary |
imported>Lelgenio Fix instructions for blender HIP, generic instructions are not sufficient, there's also a dedicated package for it. |
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== HIP == | == HIP == | ||
Most software has the HIP libraries hard-coded. You can work around it on NixOS by using: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | ||
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</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
=== Blender === | |||
Hardware accelerated rendering can be achieved by using the package <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>blender-hip</syntaxhighlight>. | |||
== OpenCL == | == OpenCL == |
Revision as of 03:30, 22 July 2023
This guide is about setting up NixOS to correctly use your AMD Graphics card if it is relatively new (aka, after the GCN architecture).
Make the kernel use the correct driver early
The kernel can load the correct driver right away:
boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ "amdgpu" ];
XServer
Make sure Xserver uses the `amdgpu` driver in your configuration.nix:
services.xserver.enable = true;
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "amdgpu" ];
Enable Southern Islands (SI) and Sea Islands (CIK) support
The oldest architectures that AMDGPU supports are Southern Islands (SI, ie. GCN 1) and Sea Islands (CIK, ie. GCN 2), but support for them is disabled by default. To use AMDGPU instead of the radeon driver, you can set the kernel parameters:
# for Southern Islands (SI ie. GCN 1) cards
boot.kernelParams = [ "radeon.si_support=0" "amdgpu.si_support=1" ];
# for Sea Islands (CIK ie. GCN 2) cards
boot.kernelParams = [ "radeon.cik_support=0" "amdgpu.cik_support=1" ];
HIP
Most software has the HIP libraries hard-coded. You can work around it on NixOS by using:
systemd.tmpfiles.rules = [
"L+ /opt/rocm/hip - - - - ${pkgs.hip}"
];
Blender
Hardware accelerated rendering can be achieved by using the package blender-hip
.
OpenCL
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = with pkgs; [
rocm-opencl-icd
rocm-opencl-runtime
];
You should also install the clinfo package to verify that OpenCL is correctly setup (or check in the program you use to see if it is now available, such as in Darktable).
Vulkan
To enable vulkan
hardware.opengl.driSupport = true;
# For 32 bit applications
hardware.opengl.driSupport32Bit = true;
Starting from 20.09, the amdvlk drivers can be used in addition to the mesa radv drivers, the program will choose which one to use:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = with pkgs; [
amdvlk
];
# For 32 bit applications
# Only available on unstable
hardware.opengl.extraPackages32 = with pkgs; [
driversi686Linux.amdvlk
];
more information can be found here https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/unstable/index.html#sec-gpu-accel-vulkan
Problems
Dual Monitors
If you encounter problems having multiple monitors connected to your gpu, adding `video` parameters for each connector to the kernel command line sometimes helps.
For example:
boot.kernelParams = [
"video=DP-1:2560x1440@144"
"video=DP-2:2560x1440@144"
];
Of course you have to adjust the connector names (like `DP-1`), the resolution and frame rate accordingly.
To figure out your connector names, use:
head /sys/class/drm/*/status
with your monitors connected.