Intel Arc Graphics A580 / A750 / A770 Linux Performance For Early 2024

Written by Michael Larabel in Graphics Cards on 2 February 2024 at 01:00 PM EST. Page 6 of 6. 10 Comments.

More data for those interested is available via this result page. There is also the 4K-focused benchmark data that is more taxing on the Intel Arc Graphics too.

Below is a look at the NVIDIA vs. Intel Arc Graphics OpenCL compute performance. Again when switching over to Ubuntu 22.04 LTS will be a fresh look at the AMD ROCm/OpenCL compute in the mix.

FluidX3D benchmark with settings of Test: FP32-FP32. RTX 4090 was the fastest.
FluidX3D benchmark with settings of Test: FP32-FP16S. RTX 3090 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: FP32 Compute. RTX 4090 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: INT64 Compute. RTX 4080 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: INT16 Compute. RTX 4090 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: INT32 Compute. RTX 4090 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: INT8 Compute. RTX 4090 was the fastest.
ProjectPhysX OpenCL-Benchmark benchmark with settings of Operation: Memory Bandwidth Coalesced Write. RTX 4090 was the fastest.

The Intel Arc Graphics OpenCL / GPU compute performance continues working out rather well for its fully open-source driver stack. The Intel Compute Runtime also continues running well across different Linux distributions and non-enterprise releases unlike the AMD ROCm stack that is more catering to the key enterprise / LTS Linux distribution releases as far as the official support goes.

The Intel Arc Graphics open-source Linux driver support continues improving with each new Linux kernel and Mesa release. Though we're beginning to hit the limits of the current-generation DG2/Alchemist hardware and ultimately will be interesting to see how the next-generation Arc Graphics hardware is able to compete under Linux and leverage all of the open-source work invested into Alchemist.

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Michael Larabel

Michael Larabel is the principal author of Phoronix.com and founded the site in 2004 with a focus on enriching the Linux hardware experience. Michael has written more than 20,000 articles covering the state of Linux hardware support, Linux performance, graphics drivers, and other topics. Michael is also the lead developer of the Phoronix Test Suite, Phoromatic, and OpenBenchmarking.org automated benchmarking software. He can be followed via Twitter, LinkedIn, or contacted via MichaelLarabel.com.