GPUOpen

GPUOpen
Original author(s) Advanced Micro Devices
Developer(s) Advanced Micro Devices
Initial release January 26, 2016 (2016-01-26)[1]
Development status In development
Written in C, C++, GLSL
Operating system Linux, Microsoft Windows
Type Game effects libraries, GPU debugging, CPU & GPU profiling
License MIT License
Website gpuopen.com
GPUOpen SDKs on GitHub
GPUOpen Effects on GitHub

GPUOpen is a middleware software suite originally developed by AMD's Radeon Technologies Group that offers advanced visual effects for computer games. It was announced on December 15, 2015[2][3][4][5][6] and released on January 26, 2016. GPUOpen serves as an alternative to, and a direct competitor of Nvidia GameWorks. GPUOpen is similar to GameWorks in that it encompasses several different graphics technologies as its main components that were previously independent and separate from one another.[4] GPUOpen is entirely open source software.

Rationale

Nicolas Thibieroz, AMD's Senior Manager of Worldwide Gaming Engineering, argues that "it can be difficult for developers to leverage their R&D investment on both consoles and PC because of the disparity between the two platforms" and that "proprietary libraries or tools chains with “black box” APIs prevent developers from accessing the code for maintenance, porting or optimizations purposes."[7] He says that upcoming architectures, such as AMD's Rx 400 series "include many features not exposed today in PC graphics APIs."

AMD designed GPUOpen to be a competing open-source middleware stack released under the MIT License. The libraries are intended to increase software portability between video game consoles, PCs and also High-performance computing.[8]

Components

GPUOpen unifies many of AMD's previously separate tools and solutions into one package, also fully open-sourcing them under the MIT License.[3] GPUOpen also makes it easy for developers to get low-level GPU access.[9]

Additionally AMD wants to grant interested developers the kind of low-level "direct access" to their GCN-based GPUs, that surpasses the possibilities of Direct3D 12 or Vulkan. AMD mentioned e.g. a low-level access to the Asynchronous Compute Engines (ACEs). The ACE implement "Asynchronous Compute", but they cannot be freely configured neither under Vulkan nor under Direct3D 12.

GPUOpen is made up of several main components, tools, and SDKs.[4]

GPUOpen – Games and CGI

Software for computer-generated imagery (CGI) used in development of computer games and movies alike.

Visual effects libraries

The official AMD directory seems to be: https://github.com/GPUOpen-Effects/.

Name source-code API OS Visual effects
TressFX 3.0 TressFX D3D 11 Windows 64-bit rendering of hair, fur, and grass
GeometryFX GeometryFX geometrical things
AOFX AOFX Ambient occlusion
ShadowFX ShadowFX Shadows

Tools

The official AMD directory seems to be: https://github.com/GPUOpen-LibrariesAndSDKs/.

Name source-code API OS Task
CodeXL CodeXL Direct3D, OpenGL, OpenCL, Vulkan Linux
Windows
software development tool suite that includes a GPU debugger, a GPU profiler, a CPU profiler, a static OpenCL kernel analyzer and various plugins. no longer branded as an AMD product.[10]
static analyzer for AMD CodeXL amd-codexl-analyzer Direct3D, OpenGL, OpenCL Linux
Windows 64bit
Off-line compiler and performance analysis CLI-tool for processing: OpenCL kernels, HLSL shaders and GLSL shaders
part of the AMD CodeXL tools suite
Requires either Radeon Software Crimson Edition or AMD Catalyst to be installed to run this tool.[11]
D3D 12 plug-in for GPU PerfStudio amd-gpuperfstudio-dx12 Direct3D 12 Windows a plug-in to GPU PerfStudio/GPU perfstudio[12]
Tootle amd-tootle agnostic Linux
Windows
Triangle Order Optimization Tool; originally developed in 2006; can be easily integrated as part of a rendering or mesh pre-processing tool chain[13] Cf. http://mgarland.org/files/papers/quadrics.pdf

Having been released by ATI Technologies under the BSD license in 2006? HLSL2GLSL is not part of GPUOpen. Whether similar tools for SPIR-V will be available remains to be seen, as is the official release of the Vulkan (API) itself. Source-code that has been defined as being part of GPUOpen is also part of the Linux kernel (e.g. amdgpu and amdkfd[14]), Mesa 3D and LLVM.

Software development kits

Name source-code API OS Task
LiquidVR SDK LiquidVR D3D 11 Windows improves the smoothness of virtual reality.[15] The aim is to reduce latency between hardware so that the hardware can keep up with the user's head movement, eliminating the motion sickness. A particular focus is on dual GPU setups where each GPU will now render for one eye individually of the display
FireRays SDK FireRays_SDK agnostic Linux, OS X, Windows A high efficiency, high performance heterogeneous ray tracing intersection library for GPU and CPU or APU on any platform.
FireRender SDK FireRenderSDK ? physically-based rendering engine
RapidFire SDK N/A ? facilitates the use of AMD's video compression acceleration SIP blocks VCE (H.264 encoder) and UVD (H.264 decoder) for "Cloud gaming"/off-site rendering

GPUOpen – Professional Compute

AMD Boltzmann Initiative: amdgpu (Linux kernel 4.2+) and amdkfd (Linux kernel 3.19+)

Software around Heterogeneous System Architecture (HSA), General-purpose computing on graphics processing units (GPGPU) and High-performance computing (HPC)

Heterogeneous System Architecture

AMD Boltzmann Initiative

AMD's "Boltzmann Initiative" (named after Ludwig Boltzmann) was announced in November 2015 at the SuperComputing15.[16][17][18][19][20] It aims to provide an alternative to Nvidia's CUDA which includes a tool to port CUDA source-code to portable (HIP) source-code which can be compiled on both HCC and NVCC.

Various

Availability

GPUOpen are available under the MIT license to the general public through GitHub starting in January 26, 2016.[3]

Interlocking with other free software projects

There is interlocking between GPUOpen and well established and widespread free software projects, e.g. Linux kernel, Mesa 3D and LLVM.

See also

References

  1. AMD: GPUOpen (2016-01-26). "Welcome to GPUOpen".
  2. Maximum PC (2015-12-15). "AMD Radeon Technologies Group Summit: GPUOpen and Software". Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  3. 1 2 3 AnandTech (2015-12-15). "AMD's GPUOpen bundle of developer tools in 2016". Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  4. 1 2 3 Tom's Hardware (2015-12-15). "AMD GPUOpen: Doubling Down On Open-Source Development". Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  5. Heinz Heise (2015-12-16). "AMDs Open-Source-Initiative GPUOpen: Direkte GPU-Kontrolle und bessere Treiber" (in German).
  6. PC Games Hardware (2015-12-16). "AMD GPU Open: Radeon-Software wird bald zu 100 % Open-Source" (in German).
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305020432/http://gpuopen.com/welcometogpuopen/
  8. wccftech.com (2015-12-15). "AMD’s Answer To Nvidia’s GameWorks, GPUOpen Announced". Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  9. HotHardware (2015-12-15). "AMD Goes Open Source, Announces GPUOpen Initiative, New Compiler And Drivers For Linux And HPC". Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  10. AMD GPUOpen (2016-04-19). "CodeXL 2.0 made open-source".
  11. AMD GPUOpen (2016-01-26). "CodeXL Static Analyzer CLI".
  12. AMD GPUOpen (2016-01-26). "Create Your own GPU PerfStudio Direct3D 12 Plugin".
  13. AMD GPUOpen (2016-01-26). "Have You Tootled Your 3D Models?".
  14. "Linux kernel 4.2 /drivers/gpu/drm/amd".
  15. Heinz Heise (2015-03-04). "LiquidVR: Neues Virtual-Reality-SDK von AMD" (in German).
  16. AnandTech (2015-11-16). "AMD@SC15: Boltzmann Initiative Announced - C++ and CUDA Compilers for AMD GPUs".
  17. Heinz Heise (2015-11-17). "Supercomputer: AMD startet Software-Offensive "Boltzmann"" (in German).
  18. 3dcenter.org (2015-11-16). "AMDs Boltzmann-Initiative geht direkt gegen nVidias CUDA" (in German).
  19. AMD (2015-11-16). "AMD Launches ‘Boltzmann Initiative’".
  20. AMD (2015-11-16). "A Defining Moment for Heterogeneous Computing".
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