After experimenting with Catalyst 13.1 legacy and open source driver (HD4850) in the beginning of this year, I was unsatisfied with performance and bugs in drivers and used only Windows on my home PC. But after experimenting with Ubuntu 13.10 yesterday, I was very surprised how much improvement is done to open source radeon driver. Especially in 3D performance. After a while I have hope that I can do some gaming on Linux.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The AMD Radeon Performance Is Incredible On Linux 3.12
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by curaga View PostMichael, the first page mentions r500/X1950 testing, but it's nowhere.Michael Larabel
https://www.michaellarabel.com/
Comment
-
Catalyst
Comparing the catalyst results for HD 6950 from this article, the OSS driver is as fast as or faster than Catalyst BUT in the reaction quake test. In the later, catalyst has ~500 FPS where radeon has some 300 FPS...
Nice! I'm wondering what performance level the SI driver will reach, as soon as it is feature complete...
Comment
-
Originally posted by birdie View PostMichael, thank you for your continuous tests, but can you include other more tangible games in your analysis?
I guess many people will be really annoyed by my proposal, but I'd really like to see some present and past heavy-weights like:
3DMark 2006 (running in Wine, of course)
StarCraft II (ditto)
Fallout 3 (ditto)
Counter Strike Global Offensive (native)
The games you're currently testing are inconclusive in regard to modern GPU requirements.
Even if we were able to run it confortably, or even better native linux support, a major issue stays : you can't get them automated, even more if they are available through steam. Just remember how PTS works : it downloads all the stuff the profile selected need through distro repositories. Hence no closed-source games can be found there.
Maybe you can help with that, by trying to open game publishers' eyes. You'll have to deal with shareholders, that only see cash and DRM. Good luck.
Comment
-
Originally posted by birdie View PostMichael, thank you for your continuous tests, but can you include other more tangible games in your analysis?
I guess many people will be really annoyed by my proposal, but I'd really like to see some present and past heavy-weights like:
3DMark 2006 (running in Wine, of course)
StarCraft II (ditto)
Fallout 3 (ditto)
Counter Strike Global Offensive (native)
The games you're currently testing are inconclusive in regard to modern GPU requirements.
Ironic you mentioned 3DMark, SC2, and F3 as being more tangible games, considering running them (in wine) would give you completely useless scores due to wine's ever-changing nature. While they are more graphically demanding, they still don't take advantage of modern hardware due to wine's graphical restrictions. The only wine tests that should be done are benchmarks between other versions of wine and that's it. That being said, it would actually be nice to see PTS benchmarks in wine. So basically comparing the same test between windows, linux, and wine.Last edited by schmidtbag; 14 October 2013, 11:24 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Morpheus View PostEven if we were able to run it confortably, or even better native linux support, a major issue stays : you can't get them automated, even more if they are available through steam. Just remember how PTS works : it downloads all the stuff the profile selected need through distro repositories. Hence no closed-source games can be found there.
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
etc....
It's also possible to test wine games:
OpenBenchmarking.org, Phoronix Test Suite, Linux benchmarking, automated benchmarking, benchmarking results, benchmarking repository, open source benchmarking, benchmarking test profiles
PTS only relies upon distro repositories for test dependencies, e.g. downloading GCC or some library, but all of the test codes/programs themselves are downloaded directly from upstream sources. I have no issues with testing closed-source games, I just care that they can be automated well and deliver reproducible and accurate results.Michael Larabel
https://www.michaellarabel.com/
Comment
Comment