Intel Arc GPUs get a badly needed gaming boost with a simple driver fix
Date:
Mon, 25 Jul 2022 09:54:58 +0000
Description:
The update should provide a huge boost to ray tracing performance across the entire Arc graphics card line.
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A single line of code - thats all it took for a massive increase in ray tracing performance on Intels Arc Alchemist GPUs , thanks to Intel graphics driver engineer Lionel Landwerlin. With Intel's new graphics cards
floundering somewhat with performance woes and driver teething issues, its a welcome sight.
Landwerlin describes the change as "like a 100x (not joking) improvement" in the text description of his merge request for the new line of code. That sounds like hyperbole, but a quick dig through the requests details makes it immediately clear that it's not.
Dont worry; we wont get overly complex with this explanation. Intels DG2 "Alchemist" GPU has been in development for years, and Intel has been aiming to implement Vulkan ray tracing capabilities since at least 2020. When this driver was originally written, a minor oversight from the original engineer saw the GPU draw from system memory (the motherboard-mounted RAM) rather than local memory (the GPUs onboard VRAM).
This resulted in a huge performance drop because the GPU needed to
communicate with the system memory to process ray tracing directives, which introduced a level of memory latency that was unacceptable. The fix - a lone line of code that flags the local memory for the allocation of ray tracing processes - means that performance is now at the level it should have been
all along. Analysis: Intel needs every advantage it can get right now
Intels heavily-delayed Arc GPU series is finally appearing in the wild, with the budget A3 cards available now in some Asian markets while the more powerful gaming-oriented A7 GPUs are already being teased for a global
launch.
Still, Intel should be worried; initial impressions of Arc have been lackluster, and serious competition is on the way in the form of Nvidias Lovelace and AMDs RDNA 3 GPUs. The first-gen Arc cards look like theyll compete with the current-gen offerings from Team Green and Team Red, but
Intel needs to get these cards on sale fast if it wants to secure any significant amount of market share.
This driver fix, combined with signs that Intel might have erred on the side of caution with the power draw of Arc cards resulting in lower initial gaming performance, indicates that Intel could yet remain competitive with the best graphics cards on the market. We still have hope that the Arc series will become a serious competitor to GeForce and Radeon, but only time will tell. But hey, at least crypto miners wont be scalping them .
From Phoronix .
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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/news/intel-arc-gpus-get-a-badly-needed-gaming-boost- with-a-simple-driver-fix/
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