# AMD Graphics Card Good overview (table): * [wiki.gentoo.org/Radeon](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Radeon#Feature_support) * [wiki.gentoo.org/AMDGPU](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/AMDGPU#Feature_support) ## AMDGPU From gentoo wiki one should use AMDGPU e.g. for: > AMD Zen 2 "4000" series 7nm laptop APUs ### AMDGPU (mandatory packages) * archwiki -> AMDGPU -> Installation * archwiki -> Xorg -> AMD * archwiki -> Lenovo-IdeaPad-S540-13ARE (Ryzen 7 4800U CPU) * archwiki -> Hardware_video_acceleration -> ATI/AMD * HW-video-accel verification: * run `vainfo` and `vdpauinfo` as non-root * `amdgpu` module * see also: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/AMDGPU#Loading * The amdgpu kernel module is supposed to load automatically on system boot. * It is possible it loads, but late, after the X server requires it. In this case: * Include "amdgpu" in MODULES=(...) of `/etc/mkinitcpio.conf` ```shell # "DRI driver for 3D acceleration" depends=(mesa) # "DDX driver for 2D acceleration" depends+=(xf86-video-amdgpu) # "Vulkan support" depends+=(vulkan-radeon) # "HW-vide-acceleration: VA-API" depends+=(libva-mesa-driver) # "HW-vide-acceleration: VDPAU" depends+=(mesa-vdpau) ``` ### AMDGPU PRO (optional packages) * archwiki -> AMDGPU#AMDGPU_PRO * archwiki -> AMDGPU_PRO The amdgpu-pro-installer contains proprietary components for AMDGPU (it works on top of AMDGPU). Quote about the opengl part (from archwiki -> AMDGPU): > From Radeon Software 18.50 vs Mesa 19 benchmarks article: > When it comes to OpenGL games, the RadeonSI Gallium3D driver > simply dominates the proprietary AMD OpenGL driver. ```shell # proprietary OpenGL implementation depends+=(amdgpu-pro-libgl) # proprietary OpenCL implementation depends+=(opencl-amd) # proprietary Vulkan implementation depends+=(vulkan-amdgpu-pro) # Advanced Media Framework implementation depends+=(amf-amdgpu-pro) ```