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AMDXDNA Driver For Ryzen AI Now Ready To Appear In The Linux Kernel

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  • AMDXDNA Driver For Ryzen AI Now Ready To Appear In The Linux Kernel

    Phoronix: AMDXDNA Driver For Ryzen AI Now Ready To Appear In The Linux kernel

    The AMDXDNA kernel driver for Linux systems that was made open-source in January for supporting the Ryzen AI NPU on laptop SoCs going back to the Ryzen 7040 "Phoenix" series is now one step away from appearing in the mainline Linux kernel in the near future...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    A bit peculiar to put this under DRM, but anyway, nice to have. Not that I have one of these CPUs, yet. And yes, it would have been nice at launch day, but hopefully people will now have a nicely reviewed driver. Now it would of course be fine if we had means to see what calculations could be offloaded to this ASIC and software that would be using it once available.
    Stop TCPA, stupid software patents and corrupt politicians!

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Adarion View Post
      A bit peculiar to put this under DRM, but anyway, nice to have. Not that I have one of these CPUs, yet. And yes, it would have been nice at launch day, but hopefully people will now have a nicely reviewed driver. Now it would of course be fine if we had means to see what calculations could be offloaded to this ASIC and software that would be using it once available.
      It's under DRM because the accelerator "accel" subsystem is under the DRM umbrella due to commonality with GPUs/drivers.
      Michael Larabel
      https://www.michaellarabel.com/

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Adarion View Post
        And yes, it would have been nice at launch day, but hopefully people will now have a nicely reviewed driver. Now it would of course be fine if we had means to see what calculations could be offloaded to this ASIC and software that would be using it once available.
        I have one of these and I'm curious for what uses it will really have!

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        • #5
          Sadly, llama.cpp doesn't support NPUs, yet, AFAIK.

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          • #6
            Will video upscaling be supported for media use-cases?

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            • #7
              is there even an app that use this (or any AI) on linux? something similar to windows at least.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by oleid View Post
                Sadly, llama.cpp doesn't support NPUs, yet, AFAIK.
                There's a Xilinx fork of llama.cpp in the RyzenAI-SW repo that supports running on NPU. Unfortunately its rather PoC-style rather than a mature implementation, and its device kernel was not open source, so it's hard to contribute to the project and improve the quality.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by loganj View Post
                  is there even an app that use this (or any AI) on linux? something similar to windows at least.
                  You can use tensorflow libs for PhotoPrism as pretty basic thing, if you manage it get them working. I kinda avoid some piece of software that haven't managed to put delete all buttons where they should be, basically everywhere.

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                  • #10
                    Maybe Zen 6 comes with NPU.
                    It's time.

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