Hi, I'm trying to get GPU acceleration on AMD to work in Blender 4.1 but I can't seem to be able to. From what I've seen it should be working with ROCm just fine but I had no luck with it.
I'm using Fedora 40 GNOME with Wayland and my GPU is RX 6800 XT.
System is up to date.
I've also installed all these packages:
The only way I have gotten it to work was by installing the official amd Linux driver and running the amd-gpu install script with the --opencl=rocr flag. The last time I tried it with my 5700xt there was a werid rendering bug so I didn't use it. :(
HIPS/ROCm targets 7k series. At least that was what I recall from my research almost a year ago when I was shopping for a machine. The 7k stuff is from the enterprise design team side of AMD, while the 6k series and before were like a totally separate thing inside the company.
I got the impression 6k and before were only targeted at gaming. IIRC there was some project talked about a few months ago about doing some more back porting of the kernel API stuff, but I didn't save the reference. I think Brody Robertson posted something about it on YT/Odyssey etc.
I'm quite certain it's supposed to be working with 6000 series and up... I've even seen people run it on 5000 series RDNA cards in Blender like 1.5y ago on Fedora 37.
Officially, Blender 3.2 works with RDNA2 and RDNA(1) graphics cards on Linux with HIP. I was able to test all of my available Radeon RX 6000 (RDNA2) graphics cards with Blender 3.2, yeah! But with all my RDNA1 tested graphics cards they all yielded Blender 3.2 having a segmentation fault.
I'm presently having issues with 40 and old Stable Diffusion/ComfyUI related to torch and stuck in a dependency loop. Almost defiantly unrelated.
When I was looking into AMD a year ago or so, the 7k thing was in a conference somewhere on YT. It had to do with some kinds of conflicts or something like that in how 7k versus the older stuff was designed and how CUDA is set up. I really don't recall the details well. I was about to pull the trigger on a 6k setup, and after seeing that info I went the other direction.
I was researching the CPU scheduler at the time and I may be blurring this and the GPU stuff together when I say: I think it was the open source team that was talking about this in a Linux Plummers conference, it might have been about the enterprise GPU stuff and about HIPS or something like that. Sorry I'm fuzzy on it.
Edit: I was always only looking for the AI side, so the back end/kernel/API was all I cared about.