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Top Linux driver for AMD Radeon HD 7970

Top Linux driver for AMD Radeon HD 7970

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MilitaryGaming
Junior Member
10
07-12-2016, 10:27 AM
#1
Hello, I'm a seasoned Linux user who recently upgraded my old GTS450 Video Card to an HD7970. I wish I had understood the implications before making the change. Driver support for this card is quite challenging on Ubuntu Linux. fglrx performs well, but I require at least Ubuntu 16.04 for certain tasks. Support for this driver has been removed after Ubuntu 14.04 Stock drivers were dropped on 16.04, leaving me with only 12-15fps performance (it runs smoothly above 60 fps in Windows 7). The amdgpu-pro driver isn't working at all. Whenever I try to run it, it just doesn't function properly—sometimes it fails completely or only supports 2D. If it does support 3D, the card seems to struggle with ramp-up clock and stays in low-power mode. If anyone has a successful workaround for this GPU on Linux, please share! My searches are getting quite repetitive. Also, I'm planning to upgrade my LTS 16.04 Ubuntu to versions 17.04 and 17.10 for the new MESA drivers and Wayland support, plus the upcoming features in 18.04. Thanks!
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MilitaryGaming
07-12-2016, 10:27 AM #1

Hello, I'm a seasoned Linux user who recently upgraded my old GTS450 Video Card to an HD7970. I wish I had understood the implications before making the change. Driver support for this card is quite challenging on Ubuntu Linux. fglrx performs well, but I require at least Ubuntu 16.04 for certain tasks. Support for this driver has been removed after Ubuntu 14.04 Stock drivers were dropped on 16.04, leaving me with only 12-15fps performance (it runs smoothly above 60 fps in Windows 7). The amdgpu-pro driver isn't working at all. Whenever I try to run it, it just doesn't function properly—sometimes it fails completely or only supports 2D. If it does support 3D, the card seems to struggle with ramp-up clock and stays in low-power mode. If anyone has a successful workaround for this GPU on Linux, please share! My searches are getting quite repetitive. Also, I'm planning to upgrade my LTS 16.04 Ubuntu to versions 17.04 and 17.10 for the new MESA drivers and Wayland support, plus the upcoming features in 18.04. Thanks!

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EJ25
Junior Member
22
07-24-2016, 09:05 PM
#2
Experience the same problem with your new setup—switched from my old GTX560 to R9 280, but you can't reach 1920x1080 on your Windows PC. (It seems it runs smoothly on your Windows machine.)
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EJ25
07-24-2016, 09:05 PM #2

Experience the same problem with your new setup—switched from my old GTX560 to R9 280, but you can't reach 1920x1080 on your Windows PC. (It seems it runs smoothly on your Windows machine.)

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Jaewan14
Junior Member
39
07-27-2016, 04:56 PM
#3
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Jaewan14
07-27-2016, 04:56 PM #3

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Ayla_belle_56
Member
61
07-27-2016, 05:32 PM
#4
Sorry for the confusion. The system you have is Debian9, not Ubuntu. The documentation mentions AMDGPU support for newer AMD GPUs in Debian 9, but the AMDGPU-Pro page lists only certain distributions. Since Ubuntu is built on Debian, you don’t need to install separate drivers—just ensure your hardware matches the supported options.
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Ayla_belle_56
07-27-2016, 05:32 PM #4

Sorry for the confusion. The system you have is Debian9, not Ubuntu. The documentation mentions AMDGPU support for newer AMD GPUs in Debian 9, but the AMDGPU-Pro page lists only certain distributions. Since Ubuntu is built on Debian, you don’t need to install separate drivers—just ensure your hardware matches the supported options.

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cocochip50
Member
193
07-27-2016, 07:26 PM
#5
Found this excellent article, to answer my own question. Apparently there is "driver-less" install (what ever that means), screen resolution went from 1024 x something to 1920 x1080, got to run some 3D bench marks - Unigine Heaven at 45fps. Haven't tested dual monitor set up yet. I'm a wooden league noob at linux, but maybe something like that can be done to Ubuntu.
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cocochip50
07-27-2016, 07:26 PM #5

Found this excellent article, to answer my own question. Apparently there is "driver-less" install (what ever that means), screen resolution went from 1024 x something to 1920 x1080, got to run some 3D bench marks - Unigine Heaven at 45fps. Haven't tested dual monitor set up yet. I'm a wooden league noob at linux, but maybe something like that can be done to Ubuntu.

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Sushi292
Member
179
07-29-2016, 07:36 PM
#6
Sure, I'll look into your "driverless" topic this evening. Just to clarify, are you referring to default open source or MESA drivers?
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Sushi292
07-29-2016, 07:36 PM #6

Sure, I'll look into your "driverless" topic this evening. Just to clarify, are you referring to default open source or MESA drivers?

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Draker59
Member
126
07-31-2016, 11:04 AM
#7
Using this PPA with open-source drivers can enhance performance. Mesa has made significant improvements since Ubuntu 16.04 was launched.
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Draker59
07-31-2016, 11:04 AM #7

Using this PPA with open-source drivers can enhance performance. Mesa has made significant improvements since Ubuntu 16.04 was launched.

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tommy0627
Junior Member
2
08-14-2016, 01:26 PM
#8
Tried this PPA but broke my Linux setup. I'm attempting a fresh install of 16.04 now and planning to retry Padoka. There are some strange problems—can't decide which monitor gets the launcher anymore, and I can't deactivate "sticky edges." I'm getting really frustrated right now... Maybe I'll have to reinstall completely, but that means clearing my home folder... not sure what to do.
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tommy0627
08-14-2016, 01:26 PM #8

Tried this PPA but broke my Linux setup. I'm attempting a fresh install of 16.04 now and planning to retry Padoka. There are some strange problems—can't decide which monitor gets the launcher anymore, and I can't deactivate "sticky edges." I'm getting really frustrated right now... Maybe I'll have to reinstall completely, but that means clearing my home folder... not sure what to do.

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waffleman601
Member
166
08-15-2016, 12:59 PM
#9
Updates are coming along. I have the same card, but no particular Linux distro is set in mind—just something recent would be best. I’m aiming for smooth operation for mining, though some think it’s risky. If needed, I could even test it on Windows. Thanks!
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waffleman601
08-15-2016, 12:59 PM #9

Updates are coming along. I have the same card, but no particular Linux distro is set in mind—just something recent would be best. I’m aiming for smooth operation for mining, though some think it’s risky. If needed, I could even test it on Windows. Thanks!

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200
08-23-2016, 02:34 PM
#10
On a 7970 it would also need manual setup to turn off Radeon and rely solely on amdgpu https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/AMD...K)_support All explained there If anything changed you would notice that by launching a recent Linux live USB and observing the driver it uses
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monsterman1108
08-23-2016, 02:34 PM #10

On a 7970 it would also need manual setup to turn off Radeon and rely solely on amdgpu https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/AMD...K)_support All explained there If anything changed you would notice that by launching a recent Linux live USB and observing the driver it uses

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