Intel today published Compute-Runtime 23.35.27191.9 as their latest update to this open-source GPU compute stack enabling OpenCL and oneAPI Level Zero support on Linux and Windows.
Unfortunately Intel hasn’t been publishing any detailed but concise change-logs on their recent Compute Runtime updates.
Over on the Intel Graphics Compiler (IGC) side that is used by the Compute-Runtime stack there is also plenty of changes too with their latest release, including starting on Arrow Lake support and other new hardware/ISA work.
Yes, the range of supported hardware by this Intel GPU compute stack is much more robust than AMD’s ROCm.
The source code for this new Intel Compute Runtime release paired with pre-built Ubuntu/Debian x86_64 binaries can be found via GitHub.
Given all the changes built up into this release over the past few months, I’ll be running some fresh benchmarks shortly on Phoronix.
The original article contains 288 words, the summary contains 142 words. Saved 51%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Intel today published Compute-Runtime 23.35.27191.9 as their latest update to this open-source GPU compute stack enabling OpenCL and oneAPI Level Zero support on Linux and Windows.
Unfortunately Intel hasn’t been publishing any detailed but concise change-logs on their recent Compute Runtime updates.
Over on the Intel Graphics Compiler (IGC) side that is used by the Compute-Runtime stack there is also plenty of changes too with their latest release, including starting on Arrow Lake support and other new hardware/ISA work.
Yes, the range of supported hardware by this Intel GPU compute stack is much more robust than AMD’s ROCm.
The source code for this new Intel Compute Runtime release paired with pre-built Ubuntu/Debian x86_64 binaries can be found via GitHub.
Given all the changes built up into this release over the past few months, I’ll be running some fresh benchmarks shortly on Phoronix.
The original article contains 288 words, the summary contains 142 words. Saved 51%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!