Radeon Pro

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AMD Radeon Pro
Radeon Pro Logo
Design firm Advanced Micro Devices
Type Professional workstations

Radeon Pro is AMD's brand of professional oriented GPUs. It replaced AMD's FirePro brand in 2016. Compared to the Radeon brand for mainstream consumer/gamer products, the Radeon Pro brand is intended for use in workstations and the running of computer-aided design (CAD), computer-generated imagery (CGI), digital content creation (DCC), high-performance computing/GPGPU applications, and the creation and running of virtual reality programs and games.[1]

The Radeon Pro product line directly competes with Nvidia's Quadro and Tesla lines of professional workstation cards.[2]

Products

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Radeon Pro Duo 2016

The first card to be released under the Radeon Pro name was the dual GPU Radeon Pro Duo in April 2016. The card features 2 liquid cooled R9 300 Nano cores & was marketed strongly for both the running and creation of virtual reality content with the slogan "For Gamers Who Create and Creators Who Game".[3][4] The aesthetics and marketing of the Pro Duo follow that of the rest of the Fury products in the 300 series.

Radeon Pro SSG

Fiji Radeon Pro SSG

Using AMD Radeon's GCN 1.2 architecture, the Radeon Pro SSG was unveiled in July 2016. SSG stands for Solid State Graphics, and the card will couple AMD's Fiji core with solid-state storage to increase the frame buffer for rendering. This expansion of quick access storage will, therefore, relieve the issue of latency that occurs when a GPU has to retrieve information from a mass storage device via the CPU when a card's limited VRAM is maxed out in heavy workloads.[5] Users will be able to add up to 1TB of PCIe M.2 NAND flash memory to improve render and scrubbing times.[6] AMD demonstrated a 5.3 fold increase in performance on 8K video scrubbing.[7] This SSD storage space can be made available to the operating system or controlled entirely by the GPU.[8] The Fiji-based Radeon Pro SSG card was available as a beta program.[9][10]

Vega Radeon Pro SSG

In July 2017 AMD released the Vega based the Radeon Pro SSG.[11] The card utilizes 16GB of second generation ECC high bandwidth memory (HBM2), an upgrade from the Fiji-based card's 4GB of first generation HBM memory. The Vega card also increased the built in solid-state storage to 2TB.

Radeon Pro WX series

Radeon Pro WX series are graphics cards designed specifically for professional applications used in engineering, design, content creation, and science. The first Radeon Pro cards with the WX prefix to be announced were the WX 7100, the WX 5100 and the WX 4100 in July 2016.[2] These Polaris based cards are once again aimed at the traditional professional market and are set to replace the FirePro Wx100 series and FirePro Wx300 series. These cards, along with the Pro SSG, will use the new, non-toxic and energy efficient YInMn Blue, discovered by Mas Subramanian. This unique aesthetic for the Radeon Pro line will distinguish the professional products from the consumer Radeon series.[12]

The smallest card, the half-height WX 4100, is marketed for use in small form factor workstations.[13] Designed for real-time content engines and CAD and CAM manufacturing, the WX 5100 fits in between the WX 4100 and the WX 7100 in terms of performance, with the latter once again marketed with emphasis on the application of VR and other media creation, while claiming to be "The Most Affordable Workstation Solution".[1]

In June 2017, AMD announced the addition of the lower power WX 2100 and WX 3100 cards to the Radeon Pro WX series.[14] Both cards are based on the Polaris GPU and are rated at 1.25 TFLOPS. The WX 2100 has 2 GB of GDDR5 SDRAM, while the WX 3100 has 4 GB of GDDR5 memory.

In September 2017, AMD launched the WX 9100 based on the Vega architecture. The card features 16 GB of ECC HBM2 memory and is rated at 12.29 TFLOPS.[15] As the new flagship of the WX line, it greatly exceeds the performance of the older WX 7100 which is rated at 5.73 TFLOPS.[16] The WX 9100 has ISV (Independent Software Vendor) certified drivers for professional applications including Siemens NX, PTC Creo, Dassault Systèmes CATIA and 3DExperience Platform, Dassault Systèmes SOLIDWORKS, and Autodesk® Revit®.[17] The WX 9100 is particularly well-suited for mission critical workloads and complex scientific modeling because the ECC memory helps correct "single or double bit error as a result of naturally occurring background radiation."[18]

Radeon Pro 400 series

Mobile Radeon Pro parts were first revealed with the release of the 2016 update to the Apple 15" MacBook Pro.[19] These appear to be Polaris 11 derived parts with 10-16 4th generation GCN compute units, providing between 1 and 1.86 TFLOPS of performance.[20][21]

Radeon Pro Duo 2017

In April 2017 AMD announced a new version of the Radeon Pro Duo for release the following month.[22] The newer version of the Pro Duo utilizes dual GPUs from the Polaris architecture, using the same GPUs as in the WX7100. While this results a smaller number of compute units and lower theoretical performance, it allows for the inclusion of 32GB GDDR5 SDRAM and a lower board power.

Radeon Vega Frontier Edition

AMD announced in May 2017 the Radeon Vega Frontier Edition, for release in June of that year.[23][24] While not branded as a Pro product, the card is marketed within the Radeon Pro series.[25] The Radeon Vega Frontier Edition uses the new "Next-Gen Compute Unit" and 16GB of HBM2 memory for an expected 13.1 TFLOPs of single precision and 26.2 TFLOPs of half precision performance. Ultimately, two Frontier Edition products were released with either air or liquid cooling.[26] The liquid cooling part supported a higher TDP, and was able to reach and sustain higher clock speeds,[27] but otherwise the two products have similar hardware specifications.

Radeon Pro 500 series

Released in conjunction with the 2017 Apple iMac refresh, the Radeon Pro 500 series serve as GPUs for the 4K and 5K Retina Display iMacs.[28] The 500 series ranges supports 2 to 8 GB of graphics RAM with performance from 1.3 to 5.5 TFLOPS.

Radeon Pro Vega

The Radeon Pro Vega product line of GPUs were first announced in 2017 as a part of Apple's iMac Pro.[29] The two models, 56 and 64, support 8 and 16 GB of HBM2 memory, respectively.

Software

Project Loom

At an AMD event in 2016 Project Loom was announced as a collaboration between AMD and Radiant Images.[30] The real-time GPU accelerated photo and video stitching program will complement AMD's virtual reality development platform. While traditional photo stitching is not that much of a complex task, Project Loom aims to improve render times when tasked with the heavy workload of stitching together multiple high resolution angles to form a 360 degree VR experience, either to headsets or mobile devices.[31] Using AMD's Direct GMA protocol, the software allows Radeon Pro graphics cards to work directly with video capture hardware to stitch together a 30 fps, 360 degree 4k resolution video from 24, 1080p cameras at 60 fps.[32]

The software is to be competitive with Nvidia's VRWorks 360 Video SDK, and is reportedly set to be made open-source through GPUOpen.[33]

ProRender

The successor to FireRender, Radeon ProRender works with high-end graphics programs as an OpenCL photorealistic offline 3D renderer and raytracing engine.[34] ProRender aims to compete with programs such as NVIDIA's iRay and other expensive, proprietary solutions. However, AMD is making ProRender free, open source and available for all graphics hardware.[31] ProRender was released by AMD in June 2016 with support for Blender, 3D Studio Max, SolidWorks, and Maya.[35]

Driver

API OpenGL 4.5 is supported and 4.6 is in development. API Vulkan 1.0 is supported for all with GCN Architecture. Vulkan 1.1 (GCN 2. Gen. or 1.2 and higher) will be supported with actual drivers in 2018. [36]

Radeon Pro drivers allows to professional GPUs to use Single-Precision computational power to do Double-Precision calculations, at the cost of 3 FP32 operations for 1 FP64 operation.

But it is also dependent from GCN Generation. In 4th Generation FP64 is 1/16 of FP32. FP16 is double to FP32 in GCN 5th Gen. In 1st Gen to 4th it is equal to FP32.

So the theoretical amount of FP64 performance for AMD Radeon Pro GPUs, is calculated by the following formula:

\frac{(FP32-FP64)}{3}+FP64

FP64 in this case is the native performance supported by hardware.

Chipset table

Workstation

Radeon Pro WX x100, SSG, Duo and V series

Template:AMD Radeon Pro WX x100

Radeon Vega Frontier Edition series

Template:AMD Radeon Vega Frontier Edition

Mobile Workstation

Radeon Pro 400 series

Template:AMD Radeon Pro 400 Series

Radeon Pro 500 series (for Apple iMac)

Template:AMD Radeon Pro 500 Series

Radeon Pro WX mobile series

  • Half Precision Power (FP16) is equal single precision power (FP32) in 4th GCN Generation (in 5th Gen: Half Precision (FP16) = 2x SP (FP32))
Model
(Codename)
Launch Architecture
(Fab)
Transistors
Die Size
Core Fillrate[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3] Processing power[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 4]
(GFLOPS)
Memory TDP (W) Bus interface Release Price (USD)
Config[lower-alpha 5] Clock[lower-alpha 1] (MHz) Texture (GT/s) Pixel (GP/s) Single Double Bus type
& width (bit)
Size (GiB) Clock (MT/s) Band-
width (GB/s)
Radeon Pro
WX 2100 (Mobile)
(Polaris 12)[37]
March 2017 GCN 4th gen
(14 nm)[38]
2.2×109
101 mm2
512:32:16:8  ?
 ?  ? 1250
78
1/16 SP
GDDR5
64-bit
4 6000 48 35 PCIe 3.0 ×16 $ 149
Radeon Pro
WX 3100 (Mobile)
(Polaris 12)[39][40]
March 2017 512:32:16:8  ?
 ?  ? 1250
78
1/16 SP
GDDR5
128-bit
4 6000 96 50 $ 199
Radeon Pro
WX 4130 Mobile
(Polaris 11)[41]
March 2017 3.0×109
123 mm2
640:40:16:10 1000
1050
16.85 42.12 1348
84.24
1/16 SP
GDDR5
128-bit
4 6000 96 50 Unknown
Radeon Pro
WX 4150 Mobile
(Polaris 11)[42]
March 2017 896:56:16:14 1000
1050
16.85 58.97 1887
118
1/16 SP
GDDR5
128-bit
4 6000 96 50 Unknown
Radeon Pro
WX 4170 Mobile
(Polaris 11)[43]
March 2017 1024:64:16:16 1000
1050
16.85 67.39 2157
135
1/16 SP
GDDR5
128-bit
4 7000 112 50 $ 399 See WX4100
Radeon Pro
WX 7100 Mobile
(Polaris 10)[44]
March 2017 5.7×109
232 mm2
2304:144:32:36 1188 39.78 179.0 5728
358
1/16 SP
GDDR5
256-bit
8 5000 160 130 $ 799 See WX7100
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Boost values (if available) are stated below the base value in italic.
  2. Texture fillrate is calculated as the number of Texture Mapping Units multiplied by the base (or boost) core clock speed.
  3. Pixel fillrate is calculated as the number of Render Output Units multiplied by the base (or boost) core clock speed.
  4. Precision performance is calculated from the base (or boost) core clock speed based on a FMA operation.
  5. Unified Shaders : Texture Mapping Units : Render Output Units : Compute Units

See also

References

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  10. https://www.amd.com/Documents/Radeon-Pro-SSG-Technical-Brief.pdf
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  36. https://www.khronos.org/conformance/adopters/conformant-products
  37. https://www.amd.com/en/products/professional-graphics/radeon-pro-wx-2100-mobile
  38. https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-s-Polaris-Architecture.172663.0.html
  39. https://www.amd.com/en/products/professional-graphics/radeon-pro-wx-3100-mobile
  40. https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Radeon-Pro-WX-3100-Mobile-GPU.283050.0.html
  41. https://www.techpowerup.com/gpudb/3093/radeon-pro-wx-4130-mobile
  42. https://www.techpowerup.com/gpudb/3092/radeon-pro-wx-4150-mobile
  43. https://www.techpowerup.com/gpudb/3094/radeon-pro-wx-4170-mobile
  44. https://www.techpowerup.com/gpudb/3091/radeon-pro-wx-7100-mobile

External links