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GPU acceleration
NixOS provides various APIs that benefit from GPU hardware acceleration, such as VA-API and VDPAU for video playback; OpenGL and Vulkan for 3D graphics; and OpenCL for general-purpose computing. This chapter describes how to set up GPU hardware acceleration (as far as this is not done automatically) and how to verify that hardware acceleration is indeed used.
Most of the aforementioned APIs are agnostic with regards to which display server is used. Consequently, these instructions should apply both to the X Window System and Wayland compositors.
OpenCL
OpenCL is a general compute API. It is used by various applications such as Blender and Darktable to accelerate certain operations.
OpenCL applications load drivers through the Installable Client Driver
(ICD) mechanism. In this mechanism, an ICD file specifies the path to
the OpenCL driver for a particular GPU family. In NixOS, there are two
ways to make ICD files visible to the ICD loader. The first is through
the OCL_ICD_VENDORS
environment variable. This variable can contain a
directory which is scanned by the ICL loader for ICD files. For example:
$ export \
OCL_ICD_VENDORS=`nix-build '<nixpkgs>' --no-out-link -A rocm-opencl-icd`/etc/OpenCL/vendors/
The second mechanism is to add the OpenCL driver package to
.
This links the ICD file under /run/opengl-driver
, where it will be visible
to the ICD loader.
The proper installation of OpenCL drivers can be verified through the
clinfo
command of the clinfo package. This command will report the
number of hardware devices that is found and give detailed information
for each device:
$ clinfo | head -n3
Number of platforms 1
Platform Name AMD Accelerated Parallel Processing
Platform Vendor Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
AMD
Modern AMD Graphics Core Next (GCN) GPUs are supported through the rocm-opencl-icd package. Adding this package to enables OpenCL support:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = [
rocm-opencl-icd
];
Intel
Intel Gen8 and later GPUs are supported by the Intel NEO OpenCL runtime that is provided by the intel-compute-runtime package. For Gen7 GPUs, the deprecated Beignet runtime can be used, which is provided by the beignet package. The proprietary Intel OpenCL runtime, in the intel-ocl package, is an alternative for Gen7 GPUs.
The intel-compute-runtime, beignet, or intel-ocl package can be added to to enable OpenCL support. For example, for Gen8 and later GPUs, the following configuration can be used:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = [
intel-compute-runtime
];
Vulkan
Vulkan is a graphics and compute API for GPUs. It is used directly by games or indirectly though compatibility layers like DXVK.
By default, if is enabled, mesa is installed and provides Vulkan for supported hardware.
Similar to OpenCL, Vulkan drivers are loaded through the Installable Client Driver (ICD) mechanism. ICD files for Vulkan are JSON files that specify the path to the driver library and the supported Vulkan version. All successfully loaded drivers are exposed to the application as different GPUs. In NixOS, there are two ways to make ICD files visible to Vulkan applications: an environment variable and a module option.
The first option is through the VK_ICD_FILENAMES
environment variable.
This variable can contain multiple JSON files, separated by :
. For
example:
$ export \
VK_ICD_FILENAMES=`nix-build '<nixpkgs>' --no-out-link -A amdvlk`/share/vulkan/icd.d/amd_icd64.json
The second mechanism is to add the Vulkan driver package to
.
This links the ICD file under /run/opengl-driver
, where it will be
visible to the ICD loader.
The proper installation of Vulkan drivers can be verified through the
vulkaninfo
command of the vulkan-tools package. This command will
report the hardware devices and drivers found, in this example output
amdvlk and radv:
$ vulkaninfo | grep GPU
GPU id : 0 (Unknown AMD GPU)
GPU id : 1 (AMD RADV NAVI10 (LLVM 9.0.1))
...
GPU0:
deviceType = PHYSICAL_DEVICE_TYPE_DISCRETE_GPU
deviceName = Unknown AMD GPU
GPU1:
deviceType = PHYSICAL_DEVICE_TYPE_DISCRETE_GPU
A simple graphical application that uses Vulkan is vkcube
from the
vulkan-tools package.
AMD
Modern AMD Graphics Core Next (GCN) GPUs are supported through either radv, which is part of mesa, or the amdvlk package. Adding the amdvlk package to makes amdvlk the default driver and hides radv and lavapipe from the device list. A specific driver can be forced as follows:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = [
pkgs.amdvlk
];
# To enable Vulkan support for 32-bit applications, also add:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages32 = [
pkgs.driversi686Linux.amdvlk
];
# Force radv
environment.variables.AMD_VULKAN_ICD = "RADV";
# Or
environment.variables.VK_ICD_FILENAMES =
"/run/opengl-driver/share/vulkan/icd.d/radeon_icd.x86_64.json";
VA-API
VA-API (Video Acceleration API) is an open-source library and API specification, which provides access to graphics hardware acceleration capabilities for video processing.
VA-API drivers are loaded by libva
. The version in nixpkgs is built to search
the opengl driver path, so drivers can be installed in
.
VA-API can be tested using:
$ nix-shell -p libva-utils --run vainfo
Intel
Modern Intel GPUs use the iHD driver, which can be installed with:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = [
intel-media-driver
];
Older Intel GPUs use the i965 driver, which can be installed with:
hardware.opengl.extraPackages = [
vaapiIntel
];
Common issues
User permissions
Except where noted explicitly, it should not be necessary to adjust user
permissions to use these acceleration APIs. In the default
configuration, GPU devices have world-read/write permissions
(/dev/dri/renderD*
) or are tagged as uaccess
(/dev/dri/card*
). The
access control lists of devices with the uaccess
tag will be updated
automatically when a user logs in through systemd-logind
. For example,
if the user alice is logged in, the access control list should look as
follows:
$ getfacl /dev/dri/card0
# file: dev/dri/card0
# owner: root
# group: video
user::rw-
user:alice:rw-
group::rw-
mask::rw-
other::---
If you disabled (this functionality of) systemd-logind
, you may need
to add the user to the video
group and log in again.
Mixing different versions of nixpkgs
The Installable Client Driver (ICD) mechanism used by OpenCL and
Vulkan loads runtimes into its address space using dlopen
. Mixing an
ICD loader mechanism and runtimes from different version of nixpkgs may
not work. For example, if the ICD loader uses an older version of glibc
than the runtime, the runtime may not be loadable due to missing
symbols. Unfortunately, the loader will generally be quiet about such
issues.
If you suspect that you are running into library version mismatches
between an ICL loader and a runtime, you could run an application with
the LD_DEBUG
variable set to get more diagnostic information. For
example, OpenCL can be tested with LD_DEBUG=files clinfo
, which should
report missing symbols.