Radeon HD 7000 Series

From HandWiki
Revision as of 18:27, 2 September 2021 by imported>MainAI (fix)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
AMD Radeon HD 7000 Series
AMD Radeon graphics logo
Release dateJanuary 9, 2012
CodenameSouthern Islands
London
Trinity
Sea Islands
ArchitectureTeraScale 2
TeraScale 3
GCN 1st gen
GCN 2nd gen
Transistors
  • 292M 40 nm (Cedar)
  • 370M 40 nm (Caicos)
  • 716M 40 nm (Turks)
  • 1.500M 28 nm (Cape Verde)
  • 2.080M 28 nm (Bonaire)
  • 2.800M 28 nm (Pitcairn)
  • 4.313M 28 nm (Tahiti)
Cards
Entry-level73xx - 76xx
Mid-range7750
7770
7790
High-end7850
7870
7950
7970
Enthusiast7990
API support
Direct3D
  • Direct3D 12.0 (feature level 11 1) (GCN version) [1]
  • Shader Model 5.1
OpenCLOpenCL 2.0 (GCN version) [2]
OpenGLOpenGL 4.5[3][4] [5][6][7] OpenGL 4.6 (GCN only, Win 7+ and Adrenalin 18.4.1+, Linux Mesa: WIP) [8]
VulkanVulkan 1.0 (GCN only) [4] [5][9]
SPIR-V
History
PredecessorRadeon HD 6000 Series
VariantRadeon HD 8000 series
SuccessorRadeon R5/R7/R9 200 series

The Radeon HD 7000 Series, based on "Southern Islands", is further products series in the family of Radeon GPUs developed by AMD.[10] AMD builds Southern Islands series graphics chips based on the 28 nm manufacturing process at TSMC.[11] The primary competitor of Southern Islands, Nvidia's GeForce 600 Series (also manufactured at TSMC), also shipped during Q1 2012, largely due to the immaturity of the 28 nm process.[12]

Architecture

This article is about all products under the Radeon HD 7000 Series brand. Graphics Core Next was introduced with the Radeon HD 7000 Series.

Multi-monitor support

The AMD Eyefinity-branded on-die display controllers were introduced in September 2009 in the Radeon HD 5000 Series and have been present in all products since.[14]

Video acceleration

Both Unified Video Decoder (UVD) and Video Coding Engine (VCE) are present on the dies of all products and supported by AMD Catalyst and by the free and open-source graphics device driver#ATI/AMD.

OpenCL (API)

OpenCL accelerates many scientific Software Packages against CPU up to factor 10 or 100 and more. Open CL 1.0 to 1.2 are supported for all Chips with Terascale and GCN Architecture. OpenCL 2.0 is supported with GCN 2nd Gen. or 1.2 and higher) [15] For OpenCL 2.1 and 2.2 only Driver Updates are necessary with OpenCL 2.0 conformant Cards.

Vulkan (API)

API Vulkan 1.0 is supported for all with GCN Architecture. Vulkan 1.1 (GCN 2nd Gen. or 1.2 and higher) will be supported with actual drivers in 2018 (here only HD 7790).[16]

Desktop products

The die and package of a Radeon HD 7870 graphics card.

The 28 nm product line is divided in three dies (Tahiti, Pitcairn, and Cape Verde), each one roughly double in shader units compared to its small brethren (32, 20, and respectively 10 GCN compute units). While this gives roughly a doubling of single-precision floating point, there is however a significant departure in double-precision compute power. Tahiti has a maximum ¼ double precision throughput relative to its single precision throughput, while the other two smaller consumer dies can only achieve a 1/16 ratio.[17] While each bigger die has two additional memory controllers widening its bus by 128 bits, Pitcairn however has the same front-end dual tesselator units as Tahiti giving it similar performance to its larger brethren in DX11 tessellation benchmarks.[17]

Radeon HD 7900

Codenamed Tahiti, the Radeon HD 7900 series was announced on December 22, 2011. Products include the Radeon 7970 GHz Edition, Radeon HD 7970 and Radeon HD 7950.[18] The Radeon HD 7970 features 2048 usable stream cores,[upper-alpha 1] whereas the Radeon HD 7950 has 1792 usable stream cores, as 256 out of the 2048 cores are disabled during product binning which detects defective areas of a chip. The cards are the first products to take advantage of AMD's new "Graphics Core Next" compute architecture. Both cards are equipped with 3 GB GDDR5 memory and manufactured on TSMC's 28 nm process. The Tahiti GPU is also used in the Radeon HD 7870 XT, released November 19, 2012. In this case one quarter of the stream processors are disabled, giving 1536 usable cores. Additionally, the memory interface is downgraded from 384-bit to 256-bit, along with a memory size reduction from 3 GB to 2 GB.

Radeon HD 7800

Codenamed Pitcairn, the Radeon HD 7800 series was formally unveiled on March 5, 2012, with retail availability from March 19, 2012. Products include the Radeon HD 7870 and Radeon HD 7850. The Radeon HD 7870 features 1280 usable stream cores, whereas the Radeon HD 7850 has 1024 usable stream cores. Both cards are equipped with 2GB GDDR5 memory (some 7850s offer 1GB) and manufactured on TSMC's 28 nm process.[20]

Radeon HD 7700

Codenamed Cape Verde, the Radeon HD 7700 series was released on February 15, 2012. Products include the Radeon HD 7770 GHz Edition and Radeon HD 7750. The Radeon HD 7770 GHz Edition features 640 stream cores based on the GCN architecture, whereas the Radeon HD 7750 has only 512 usable stream cores. Both cards are equipped with 1 GB GDDR5 memory and manufactured in 28 nm. On March 22, 2013 another card, Radeon HD 7790, was introduced in this series. This card is based on the Bonaire architecture, which features 896 stream cores using 2nd Generation GCN technology, an incremental update. On May 2013, AMD launched the Radeon HD 7730, based on the Cape Verde LE graphics processor. It features a 128-bit memory bus, 384 stream cores, 8 ROPs, and a core clock speed of up to 800 MHz. The HD 7730 came with GDDR5 and DDR3 variants, running on memory clock speeds of 1125 MHz and 900 MHz, respectively. Load power usage was lowered by 14.5% (47W) compared to the Radeon HD 7750 (55W).[21][22]

Chipset table

A Radeon HD 7750 card, using a fanless design.

Desktop products

  • HD 7790 model is designed more like the 7800/7900 models rather than the 7700 featuring 2x primitive rate instead of 1x which is found in the other 7700 cards.[23]
  • Bonaire XT is the only card in the 7000 series to support True Audio.


IGP (HD 7xxx)

  • All models feature the UNB/MC Bus interface
  • All models do not feature double-precision FP
  • All models feature angle independent anisotropic filtering, UVD3.2, and Eyefinity capabilities, with up to four outputs.
  • All models are based on the TeraScale 3 (VLIW4) used in the Radeon HD 69xx Series (Cayman) GPUs.


Mobile products

Integrated (IGP) products

Radeon Feature Matrix

Graphics device drivers

AMD's proprietary graphics device driver "Catalyst"

AMD Catalyst is being developed for Microsoft Windows and Linux. As of July 2014, other operating systems are not officially supported. This may be different for the AMD FirePro brand, which is based on identical hardware but features OpenGL-certified graphics device drivers.

AMD Catalyst supports all features advertised for the Radeon brand.

Free and open-source graphics device driver "Radeon"

The free and open-source drivers are primarily developed on Linux and for Linux, but have been ported to other operating systems as well. Each driver is composed out of five parts:

  1. Linux kernel component DRM
  2. Linux kernel component KMS driver: basically the device driver for the display controller
  3. user-space component libDRM
  4. user-space component in Mesa 3D;
  5. a special and distinct 2D graphics device driver for X.Org Server, which if finally about to be replaced by Glamor

The free and open-source "Radeon" graphics driver supports most of the features implemented into the Radeon line of GPUs.[7]

The free and open-source "Radeon" graphics device drivers are not reverse engineered, but based on documentation released by AMD.[24]

See also

Notes

  1. Corresponding to 32 cores in "the closest reasonable mapping to the equivalent in a CPU".[19]:60

References

  1. "AMD Catalyst™ 15.7.1 Driver for Windows® Release Notes". AMD. https://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/Pages/AMDCatalyst15-7-1WINReleaseNotes.aspx. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  2. "AMD OpenCL™ 2.0 Driver". AMD. https://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/Pages/OpenCL2-Driver.aspx. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  3. "AMD Radeon Software Crimson Edition Beta". AMD. https://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/pages/amd-radeon-software-crimson-edition-beta.aspx. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "AMD Radeon Software Crimson Edition 16.3 Release Notes". AMD. https://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/Pages/AMD_Radeon_Software_Crimson_Edition_16.3.aspx. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 "AMDGPU-PRO Driver for Linux Release Notes". 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-01-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20170127020154/https://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/Pages/AMDGPU-PRO-Driver-for-Linux-Release-Notes.aspx. Retrieved 2018-04-23. 
  6. "Mesamatrix". mesamatrix.net. https://mesamatrix.net/. Retrieved 2018-04-22. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 "RadeonFeature". X.Org Foundation. https://www.x.org/wiki/RadeonFeature/. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  8. https://www.geeks3d.com/20180501/amd-adrenalin-18-4-1-graphics-driver-released-opengl-4-6-vulkan-1-1-70/
  9. "AMD Open Source Driver for Vulkan". GPUOpen. https://gpuopen.com/gaming-product/amd-open-source-driver-for-vulkan/. Retrieved 2018-04-20. 
  10. Demerjian, Charlie (April 6, 2011). "AMD will out the 'Southern Islands' GPU architecture early". SemiAccurate. http://semiaccurate.com/2011/04/06/amd-will-out-the-southern-islands-gpu-architecture-early/. Retrieved October 1, 2013. 
  11. "Report: TSMC wins key 40-, 28-nm deals". EETimes. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. https://www.webcitation.org/5zmVlG9a7. Retrieved 2011-06-28. 
  12. Charlie Demerjian (July 19, 2011). "Southern Islands, Kepler, and Apple’s A6 process puzzle outed". http://semiaccurate.com/2011/07/19/southern-islands-kepler-and-apples-a6-process-puzzle-outed/. Retrieved December 1, 2013. 
  13. https://www.khronos.org/conformance/adopters/conformant-products#submission_318
  14. "AMD Eyefinity: FAQ". AMD. 2011-05-17. http://support.amd.com/en-us/kb-articles/Pages/AMDEyefinityFAQs.aspx. Retrieved 2014-07-02. 
  15. https://www.khronos.org/conformance/adopters/conformant-products
  16. https://www.khronos.org/conformance/adopters/conformant-products#submission_318
  17. 17.0 17.1 "Review: AMD Radeon HD 7850 & 7870" (in fr). BeHardware. March 5, 2012. http://www.behardware.com/art/imprimer/856/. Retrieved August 22, 2013. 
  18. "AMD Radeon HD 7000 series reviewed" (in en-US). Hardware.Info. https://us.hardware.info/reviews/2609/amd-radeon-hd-7000-series-reviewed. 
  19. Gaster, Benedict; Howes, Lee; Kaeli, David R.; Mistry, Perhaad; Schaa, Dana (2012). Heterogeneous Computing with OpenCL: Revised OpenCL 1.2 Edition. Morgan Kaufmann. 
  20. "AMD Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition & Radeon HD 7850 Review: Rounding Out Southern Islands". AnandTech. http://www.anandtech.com/show/5625/amd-radeon-hd-7870-ghz-edition-radeon-hd-7850-review-rounding-out-southern-islands. Retrieved August 22, 2013. 
  21. http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/radeon-hd-7730-cape-verde-review,3575.html
  22. https://www.amd.com/en-us/products/graphics/desktop/7000/7700#
  23. "AMD launches Radeon 7790: Meet the Xbox 720's GPU". ExtremeTech. 2013-03-22. http://www.extremetech.com/gaming/151367-amd-launches-radeon-7790-meet-the-xbox-720s-gpu. Retrieved 2013-11-10. 
  24. "AMD Developer Guideds". http://developer.amd.com/resources/documentation-articles/developer-guides-manuals/. 

External links