Am 09.01.20 um 16:09 schrieb Richard Shaw: > With the AMD graphics card drivers being open sourced I'm considering moving > away from NVidia on my next graphics card purchase but I'm concerned because > of all the driver issues I've heard about on Windows. I'm using AMD cards for ~8 years with Fedora now. I experienced some issues but nothing I'd consider a major blocker (I had similar problems with intel-based gfx cards in my laptops). These were mostly regressions and usually there was a workaround. - There were times when there was a chance that the kernel locked up after resuming from suspend (maybe 1/3 tries). - Garbled screen after resume (old r600g driver, workaround was to switch to the console + back manually) - I have one extremly old dosbox game which will hang my GPU when using AMD's "DC" mode with X.org. Workaround: Disable DC with kernel parameter (and loose HDMI audio) I'm not using accelerated video encode/decore (as far as I know) nor OpenCL (getting ROCm to work with Fedora is a *major* pain point). One the plus side I always had a free driver and kernel bisections were easy. AMD cards always worked out of the box after install (though there were times when I used mesa.git and/or AMD kernel trees for bisection). I could use Wayland from the first day and GPU performance seems to be ok (I'm not much of a gamer). Also I found that the AMD mesa developers are pretty responsive if you are able to pinpoint a regression to a specific commit. Felix _______________________________________________ users mailing list -- users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Fedora Code of Conduct: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/project/code-of-conduct/ List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx