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ROCm

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ROCm
Developer(s)AMD
Initial releaseNovember 14, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-11-14)
Stable release
6.2.2 / September 27, 2024; 2 months ago (2024-09-27)[1]
RepositoryMeta-repository
github.com/ROCm/ROCm
Written inC, C++, Python, Fortran, Julia
MiddlewareHIP
EngineAMDgpu kernel driver, HIPCC, a LLVM-based compiler
Operating systemLinux, Windows[2]
PlatformSupported GPUs
PredecessorClose to metal, Stream, HSA
Size<2 GiB
TypeGPGPU libraries and APIs
LicenseMIT License
Websitewww.amd.com/en/products/software/rocm.html

ROCm[3] is an Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) software stack for graphics processing unit (GPU) programming. ROCm spans several domains: general-purpose computing on graphics processing units (GPGPU), high performance computing (HPC), heterogeneous computing. It offers several programming models: HIP (GPU-kernel-based programming), OpenMP (directive-based programming), and OpenCL.

ROCm is free, libre and open-source software (except the GPU firmware blobs[4]), and it is distributed under various licenses. ROCm initially stood for Radeon Open Compute platform; however, due to Open Compute being a registered trademark, ROCm is no longer an acronym — it is simply AMD's open-source stack designed for GPU compute.

Background

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The first GPGPU software stack from ATI/AMD was Close to Metal, which became Stream.

ROCm was launched around 2016[5] with the Boltzmann Initiative.[6] ROCm stack builds upon previous AMD GPU stacks; some tools trace back to GPUOpen and others to the Heterogeneous System Architecture (HSA).

Heterogeneous System Architecture Intermediate Language

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HSAIL[7] was aimed at producing a middle-level, hardware-agnostic intermediate representation that could be JIT-compiled to the eventual hardware (GPU, FPGA...) using the appropriate finalizer. This approach was dropped for ROCm: now it builds only GPU code, using LLVM, and its AMDGPU backend that was upstreamed,[8] although there is still research on such enhanced modularity with LLVM MLIR.[9]

Programming abilities

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ROCm as a stack ranges from the kernel driver to the end-user applications. AMD has introductory videos about AMD GCN hardware,[10] and ROCm programming[11] via its learning portal.[12]

One of the best technical introductions about the stack and ROCm/HIP programming, remains, to date, to be found on Reddit.[13]

Hardware support

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ROCm is primarily targeted at discrete professional GPUs,[14] but unofficial support includes the Vega family and RDNA 2 consumer GPUs.

Accelerated Processor Units (APU) are "enabled", but not officially supported. Having ROCm functional there is involved.[15]

Professional-grade GPUs

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AMD Instinct accelerators are the first-class ROCm citizens, alongside the prosumer Radeon Pro GPU series: they mostly see full support.

The only consumer-grade GPU that has relatively equal support is, as of January 2022, the Radeon VII (GCN 5 - Vega).

Consumer-grade GPUs

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Name of GPU series Southern
Islands
Sea
Islands
Volcanic
Islands
Arctic
Islands/Polaris
Vega Navi 1X Navi 2X
Released Jan 2012 Sep 2013 Jun 2015 Jun 2016 Jun 2017 Jul 2019 Nov 2020
Marketing Name Radeon HD 7000 Radeon Rx 200 Radeon Rx 300 Radeon RX 400/500 Radeon RX Vega/Radeon VII(7 nm) Radeon RX 5000 Radeon RX 6000
AMD support No Current
Instruction set GCN instruction set RDNA instruction set
Microarchitecture GCN 1st gen GCN 2nd gen GCN 3rd gen GCN 4th gen GCN 5th gen RDNA RDNA 2
Type Unified shader model
ROCm[16] No Yes[17] Yes Yes[18] Yes
OpenCL 1.2 (on Linux: 1.1 (no Image support) with Mesa 3D) 2.0 (Adrenalin driver on Win7+)
(on Linux: 1.1 (no Image support) with Mesa 3D, 2.0 with AMD drivers or AMD ROCm)
2.0 2.1[19]
Vulkan 1.0
(Win 7+ or Mesa 17+)
1.2 (Adrenalin 20.1, Linux Mesa 3D 20.0)
Shader model 5.1 5.1
6.3
6.4 6.5
OpenGL 4.6 (on Linux: 4.6 (Mesa 3D 20.0))
Direct3D 11 (11_1)
12 (11_1)
11 (12_0)
12 (12_0)
11 (12_1)
12 (12_1)
11 (12_1)
12 (12_2)
/drm/amdgpu[a] Experimental[20] Yes
  1. ^ DRM (Direct Rendering Manager) is a component of the Linux kernel.

Software ecosystem

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Learning resources

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AMD ROCm product manager Terry Deem gave a tour of the stack.[21]

Third-party integration

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The main consumers of the stack are machine learning and high-performance computing/GPGPU applications.

Machine learning

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Various deep learning frameworks have a ROCm backend:[22]

Supercomputing

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ROCm is gaining significant traction in the top 500.[24] ROCm is used with the Exascale supercomputers El Capitan[25][26] and Frontier.

Some related software is to be found at AMD Infinity hub.

Other acceleration & graphics interoperation

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As of version 3.0, Blender can now use HIP compute kernels for its renderer cycles.[27]

Other Languages

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Julia
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Julia has the AMDGPU.jl package,[28] which integrates with LLVM and selects components of the ROCm stack. Instead of compiling code through HIP, AMDGPU.jl uses Julia's compiler to generate LLVM IR directly, which is later consumed by LLVM to generate native device code. AMDGPU.jl uses ROCr's HSA implementation to upload native code onto the device and execute it, similar to how HIP loads its own generated device code.

AMDGPU.jl also supports integration with ROCm's rocBLAS (for BLAS), rocRAND (for random number generation), and rocFFT (for FFTs). Future integration with rocALUTION, rocSOLVER, MIOpen, and certain other ROCm libraries is planned.

Software distribution

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Official

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Installation instructions are provided for Linux and Windows in the official AMD ROCm documentation. ROCm software is currently spread across several public GitHub repositories. Within the main public meta-repository, there is an XML manifest for each official release: using git-repo, a version control tool built on top of Git, is the recommended way to synchronize with the stack locally.[29]

AMD starts distributing containerized applications for ROCm, notably scientific research applications gathered under AMD Infinity Hub.[30]

AMD distributes itself packages tailored to various Linux distributions.

Third-party

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There is a growing third-party ecosystem packaging ROCm.

Linux distributions are officially packaging (natively) ROCm, with various degrees of advancement: Arch Linux,[31] Gentoo,[32] Debian, Fedora ,[33] GNU Guix, and NixOS.

There are spack packages.[34]

Components

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There is one kernel-space component, ROCk, and the rest - there is roughly a hundred components in the stack - is made of user-space modules.

The unofficial typographic policy is to use: uppercase ROC lowercase following for low-level libraries, i.e. ROCt, and the contrary for user-facing libraries, i.e. rocBLAS.[35]

AMD is active developing with the LLVM community, but upstreaming is not instantaneous, and as of January 2022, is still lagging.[36] AMD still officially packages various LLVM forks[37][38][9] for parts that are not yet upstreamed – compiler optimizations destined to remain proprietary, debug support, OpenMP offloading, etc.

Low-level

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ROCk – Kernel driver

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ROCm – Device libraries

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Support libraries implemented as LLVM bitcode. These provide various utilities and functions for math operations, atomics, queries for launch parameters, on-device kernel launch, etc.

ROCt – Thunk

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The thunk is responsible for all the thinking and queuing that goes into the stack.

ROCr – Runtime

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The ROC runtime is a set of APIs/libraries that allows the launch of compute kernels by host applications. It is AMD's implementation of the HSA runtime API.[39] It is different from the ROC Common Language Runtime.

ROCm – CompilerSupport

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ROCm code object manager is in charge of interacting with LLVM intermediate representation.

Mid-level

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ROCclr Common Language Runtime

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The common language runtime is an indirection layer adapting calls to ROCr on Linux and PAL on windows. It used to be able to route between different compilers, like the HSAIL-compiler. It is now being absorbed by the upper indirection layers (HIP and OpenCL).

OpenCL

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ROCm ships its installable client driver (ICD) loader and an OpenCL[40] implementation bundled together. As of January 2022, ROCm 4.5.2 ships OpenCL 2.2, and is lagging behind competition.[41]

The AMD implementation for its GPUs is called HIPAMD. There is also a CPU implementation mostly for demonstration purposes.

HIPCC

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HIP builds a `HIPCC` compiler that either wraps Clang and compiles with LLVM open AMDGPU backend, or redirects to the NVIDIA compiler.[42]

HIPIFY

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HIPIFY is a source-to-source compiling tool. It translates CUDA to HIP and reverse, either using a Clang-based tool, or a sed-like Perl script.

GPUFORT

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Like HIPIFY, GPUFORT is a tool compiling source code into other third-generation-language sources, allowing users to migrate from CUDA Fortran to HIP Fortran. It is also in the repertoire of research projects, even more so.[43]

High-level

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ROCm high-level libraries are usually consumed directly by application software, such as machine learning frameworks. Most of the following libraries are in the General Matrix Multiply (GEMM) category, which GPU architecture excels at.

The majority of these user-facing libraries comes in dual-form: hip for the indirection layer that can route to Nvidia hardware, and roc for the AMD implementation.[44]

rocBLAS / hipBLAS

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rocBLAS and hipBLAS are central in high-level libraries, it is the AMD implementation for Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms. It uses the library Tensile privately.

rocSOLVER / hipSOLVER

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This pair of libraries constitutes the LAPACK implementation for ROCm and is strongly coupled to rocBLAS.

Utilities

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  • ROCm developer tools: Debug, tracer, profiler, System Management Interface, Validation suite, Cluster management.
  • GPUOpen tools: GPU analyzer, memory visualizer...
  • External tools: radeontop (TUI overview)

Comparison with competitors

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ROCm competes with other GPU computing stacks: Nvidia CUDA and Intel OneAPI.

Nvidia CUDA

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Nvidia's CUDA is closed-source, whereas AMD ROCm is open source. There is open-source software built on top of the closed-source CUDA, for instance RAPIDS.

CUDA is able run on consumer GPUs, whereas ROCm support is mostly offered for professional hardware such as AMD Instinct and AMD Radeon Pro.

Nvidia provides a C/C++-centered frontend and its Parallel Thread Execution (PTX) LLVM GPU backend as the Nvidia CUDA Compiler (NVCC).

Intel OneAPI

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Like ROCm, oneAPI is open source, and all the corresponding libraries are published on its GitHub Page.

Unified Acceleration Foundation (UXL)

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Unified Acceleration Foundation (UXL) is a new technology consortium that are working on the contiuation of the OneAPI initiative, with the goal to create a new open standard accelerator software ecosystem, related open standards and specification projects through Working Groups and Special Interest Groups (SIGs). The goal will compete with Nvidia's CUDA. The main companies behind it are Intel, Google, ARM, Qualcomm, Samsung, Imagination, and VMware.[45]

See also

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  • AMD Software – a general overview of AMD's drivers, APIs, and development endeavors.
  • GPUOpen – AMD's complementary graphics stack
  • AMD Radeon Software – AMD's software distribution channel

References

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  1. ^ "ROCm 6.1.2 Release". GitHub. Retrieved October 16, 2024.
  2. ^ "New HIP SDK helps democratize GPU Computing". July 27, 2023.
  3. ^ "Question: What does ROCm stand for? · Issue #1628 · RadeonOpenCompute/ROCm". Github.com. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  4. ^ "Debian -- Details of package firmware-amd-graphics in buster". Packages.debian.org. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  5. ^ "AMD @ SC16: Radeon Open Compute Platform (ROCm) 1.3 Released, Boltzmann Comes to Fruition". anandtech.com. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  6. ^ "AMD @ SC15: Boltzmann Initiative Announced - C++ and CUDA Compilers for AMD GPUs". anandtech.com. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  7. ^ "HSA Programmer's Reference Manual: HSAIL Virtual ISA and Programming Model, Compiler Writer, and Object Format (BRIG)" (PDF). HSA Foundation. May 2, 2018. Retrieved August 1, 2023.
  8. ^ "User Guide for AMDGPU Backend — LLVM 13 documentation". Llvm.org. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  9. ^ a b "The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure". GitHub. January 19, 2022.
  10. ^ "Introduction to AMD GPU Hardware". June 12, 2020 – via www.youtube.com.
  11. ^ "Fundamentals of HIP Programming". Archived from the original on February 7, 2023.
  12. ^ "ROCm™ Learning Center". AMD.
  13. ^ "AMD ROCm / HCC programming: Introduction". December 26, 2018.
  14. ^ "AMD Documentation - Portal".
  15. ^ "Here's something you don't see every day: PyTorch running on top of ROCm on a 6800M (6700XT) laptop! Took a ton of minor config tweaks and a few patches but it actually functionally works. HUGE!". December 10, 2021.
  16. ^ "ROCm Getting Started Guide v5.2.3".
  17. ^ "HOW-TO: Stable Diffusion on an AMD GPU". September 23, 2022.
  18. ^ "Any update on 5700 Xt support?". GitHub.
  19. ^ "AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT Specs". TechPowerUp. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  20. ^ Larabel, Michael (December 7, 2016). "The Best Features of the Linux 4.9 Kernel". Phoronix. Retrieved December 7, 2016.
  21. ^ "ROCm presentation". HPCwire.com. July 6, 2020. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  22. ^ "AMD Introduces Its Deep-Learning Accelerator Instinct MI200 Series GPUs". Infoq.com. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  23. ^ "Using CuPy on AMD GPU (experimental)".
  24. ^ "AMD Chips Away at Intel in World's Top 500 Supercomputers as GPU War Looms". November 16, 2020.
  25. ^ "El Capitan Supercomputer Detailed: AMD CPUs & GPUs to Drive 2 Exaflops of Compute".
  26. ^ "Livermore's el Capitan Supercomputer to Debut HPE 'Rabbit' Near Node Local Storage". February 18, 2021.
  27. ^ "Blender 3.0 takes support for AMD GPUs to the next level. Beta support available now!". Gpuopen.com. November 15, 2021. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  28. ^ "AMD ROCm ⋅ JuliaGPU". juliagpu.org.
  29. ^ "ROCm Installation v4.3 — ROCm 4.5.0 documentation". Rocmdocs.amd.com. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  30. ^ "Running Scientific Applications on AMD Instinct Accelerators Just Got Easier". HPCwire.com. October 18, 2021. Retrieved January 25, 2022.
  31. ^ "ROCm for Arch Linux". Github.com. January 17, 2022. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  32. ^ "Gentoo Linux Packages Up AMD ROCm, Makes Progress On RISC-V, LTO+PGO Python". Phoronix.com. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  33. ^ "Fedora & Debian Developers Look At Packaging ROCm For Easier Radeon GPU Computing Experience". Phoronix.com. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  34. ^ Gamblin, Todd; LeGendre, Matthew; Collette, Michael R.; Lee, Gregory L.; Moody, Adam; de Supinski, Bronis R.; Futral, Scott (November 15, 2015). "The Spack Package Manager: Bringing Order to HPC Software Chaos" – via GitHub.
  35. ^ Bloor, Cordell. "20211221 Packaging session notes and small update". debian-ai@lists.debian.org (Mailing list). Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  36. ^ "[Debian official packaging] How is ROCm LLVM fork still needed? · Issue #2449 · ROCm-Developer-Tools/HIP". GitHub.
  37. ^ "Aomp - V 14.0-1". GitHub. January 22, 2022.
  38. ^ "The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure". GitHub. January 10, 2022.
  39. ^ "HSA Runtime Programmer's Reference Manual" (PDF). HSA Foundation. May 2, 2018. Retrieved August 1, 2023.
  40. ^ "Khronos OpenCL Registry - The Khronos Group Inc". www.khronos.org.
  41. ^ "List of OpenCL Conformant Products - The Khronos Group Inc". www.khronos.org. February 3, 2022.
  42. ^ "Figure 3. HIPCC compilation process illustration. The clang compiler".
  43. ^ "AMD Publishes Open-Source "GPUFORT" as Newest Effort to Help Transition Away from CUDA".
  44. ^ Maia, Julio; Chalmers, Noel; T. Bauman, Paul; Curtis, Nicholas; Malaya, Nicholas; McDougall, Damon; van Oostrum, Rene; Wolfe, Noah (May 2021). ROCm Library Support & Profiling Tools (PDF). AMD.
  45. ^ "Exclusive: Behind the plot to break Nvidia's grip on AI by targeting software". Reuters. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
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