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The world of 7nm is here, as AMD have today released their new GPU and CPU series with the Radeon RX 5700 and Ryzen 3000.

“We are proud to deliver our newest AMD Radeon graphics cards and AMD Ryzen processor products to create the ultimate PC gaming platform with leadership performance at every price point,” said Dr. Lisa Su, President and CEO, AMD. “AMD is committed to driving innovation and competition across the computing and graphics markets to give PC enthusiasts, gamers and creators incredible experiences and unmatched value.”

AMD's new Radeon RX 5700 series is the first to use their new "RDNA" architecture, which AMD claim will provide up to "1.25x" higher performance per clock and up to "1.5x" higher performance per watt versus the older Graphic Core Next (GCN) architecture. For the new GPU it comes in three editions:

  • 50th Anniversary Edition Radeon RX 5700 XT - $449
    • 40 compute units, 2,560 stream processors, 8GB GDDR6
    • Base clock: 1,680MHz, Game Clock: 1,830MHz, Boost Clock: "up to" 1,980MHz
  • Radeon RX 5700 XT - $399
    • 40 compute units, 2,560 stream processors, 8GB GDDR6
    • Base clock: 1,605MHz, Game Clock: 1,755MHz, Boost Clock: "up to" 1,905MHz
  • Radeon RX 5700 - $349
    • 36 compute units, 2,304 stream processors, 8GB GDDR6
    • Base clock: 1,465MHz, Game Clock: 1,625MHz, Boost Clock: "up to" 1,725MHz

It may be a little confusing, with them now advertising three different possible speeds. The Base Clock is the minimum level you would expect it to run at, with the Game Clock being around where you would expect it to be whilst gaming and the Boost Clock is supposed to be the max. However, AMD is apparently being quite conservative with it so you might see it go higher.

AMD also released the "Radeon Software for Linux" 19.30 driver today to add in support for the new series. Although they only list "Ubuntu 18.04.2" as being compatible with it. For the Mesa drivers, you're likely going to need the latest code which will make up Mesa 19.2 that's scheduled to release next month.

On the CPU side, things are just as exciting with two sets of CPUs. These arrived with the new X570 chipset for AMD Socket AM4. The first are their higher-end main desktop Zen 2 processors:

  • Ryzen 9 3900X - $499
    • 12 cores/24 threads - TDP: 105w - 4.6GHz boost/3.8GHz base
  • Ryzen 7 3800X - $399
    • 8 core/16 threads - TDP: 105w - 4.5GHz boost/3.9GHz base
  • Ryzen 7 3700X - $329
    • 8 cores/16 threads - TDP: 65w - 4.4GHz boost/3.6GHz base
  • Ryzen 5 3600X - $249
    • 6 cores/12 threads - TDP: 95w - 4.4GHz boost/3.8GHz base
  • Ryzen 5 3600 - $199
    • 6 cores/12 threads - TDP 65w - 4.2GHz boost/3.6GHz base

There's also the Ryzen 9 3950X with 16 cores and 32 threads, which is not launching until September.

For those looking for a processor with integrated graphics, they also launched these two still on Zen+:

  • Ryzen 5 3400G - $149
    • 4 cores/8 threads - TDP: 65w - 4.2GHz boost/3.7GHz base
    • Radeon RX Vega 11 (1400 MHz)
  • Ryzen 3 3200G - $99
    • 4 cores/4 threads - TDP: 65w - 4.0GHz boost/3.6GHz base
    • Radeon Vega 8 (1250 MHz)

If you're looking to grab one of the new Ryzen 3xxx series, you might want to keep in mind what Phoronix discovered, with newer Linux distributions failing to boot which is a big ouch. However, they seem to work fine with Ubuntu 18.04 LTS and other older distributions.

Aside from the usual teething issues with new hardware, it's really great to see AMD offer some solid competition to both NVIDIA and Intel! It's looking like an all-AMD box could be really great for gaming offering both good performance and pretty good prices too.

Additionally, AMD released version 3.0 of AMD uProf, a performance analysis tool that works on Linux. This latest version adds support for 3rd Gen AMD Ryzen, more Linux distributions supported like openSUSE Leap 15 and SLES 12 & 15. On top of that it also now supports Linux kernel profiling and kernel-space drivers and more.

Sorry for the delay, AMD decided at some point to stop sending us press releases.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: AMD, Hardware
23 Likes
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27 comments
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Liam Dawe Jul 7, 2019
Added a bit on the new release of AMD uProf, seems fitting to be here.
Shmerl Jul 8, 2019
Interesting benchmarks on how RAM frequency affects Zen 2 performance: https://www.techpowerup.com/review/amd-zen-2-memory-performance-scaling-benchmark
Scoopta Jul 8, 2019
I'm really considering upgrading to an RX 5700 XT...or maybe a Radeon VII. Honestly I'm not sure which but my R9 Fury doesn't always give me the performance I want anymore. I'll probably wait a bit till Debian sid gets the new mesa version. I've also heard you need kernel 5.3 but I build my kernels from source so once the release candidates hit for that I'll be good. Honestly if I do go with the 5700 XT I'll be waiting for partner cards as I really don't like the blower design.


Last edited by Scoopta on 8 July 2019 at 6:20 am UTC
KuJo Jul 8, 2019
QuoteSorry for the delay, AMD decided at some point to stop sending us press releases.
Did AMD give a (good) reason for this?

GOL is one of the largest, if not the largest, web sites dedicated to gaming on Linux. How can AMD, which offers acceptable Linux support on the one hand, on the other hand stop sending press releases to the website that reaches a large part of their Linux customers?

It's incomprehensible for me because it should be a cinch to add another email address to a mailing list. Even more incomprehensible to me is why an address like GOL's is removed from it.


Last edited by KuJo on 8 July 2019 at 7:13 am UTC
Termy Jul 8, 2019
For those not aware: Ryzen 3xxx / X570 doesn't boot on newer Kernel/Systemd-Combo:
https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=ryzen-3700x-3900x-linux&num=1
hopefully that's resolved soon :/
Liam Dawe Jul 8, 2019
Quoting: KuJo
QuoteSorry for the delay, AMD decided at some point to stop sending us press releases.
Did AMD give a (good) reason for this?

GOL is one of the largest, if not the largest, web sites dedicated to gaming on Linux. How can AMD, which offers acceptable Linux support on the one hand, on the other hand stop sending press releases to the website that reaches a large part of their Linux customers?

It's incomprehensible for me because it should be a cinch to add another email address to a mailing list. Even more incomprehensible to me is why an address like GOL's is removed from it.
No reply on it yet. I did also email them to ask where to find their press images, the ones you often see in articles on other sites. They asked for examples, i gave some and then no reply again.


Last edited by Liam Dawe on 8 July 2019 at 8:10 am UTC
Eike Jul 8, 2019
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Looks like it'll be an AMD CPU for the first time since... Athlon? this year (and an Nvidia GPU)! :)

Anybody got an idea if 8 cores will be way more future-proof than six cores?
Is/will gaming be making use of them?
daishord Jul 8, 2019
Quoting: liamdawe
Quoting: KuJo
QuoteSorry for the delay, AMD decided at some point to stop sending us press releases.
Did AMD give a (good) reason for this?
No reply on it yet.
Maybe they use tracking pixels in the marketing mails and if your mailer blocks them they automagically remove recipients "never" reading the mails? It's a not uncommon issue with mailings lists.

Quoting: liamdaweI did also email them to ask where to find their press images, the ones you often see in articles on other sites.
https://mars.amd.com/Site/AMDResourceLibrary?lang=en :)
Liam Dawe Jul 8, 2019
Quoting: daishord
Quoting: liamdawe
Quoting: KuJo
QuoteSorry for the delay, AMD decided at some point to stop sending us press releases.
Did AMD give a (good) reason for this?
No reply on it yet.
Maybe they use tracking pixels in the marketing mails and if your mailer blocks them they automagically remove recipients "never" reading the mails? It's a not uncommon issue with mailings lists.

Quoting: liamdaweI did also email them to ask where to find their press images, the ones you often see in articles on other sites.
https://mars.amd.com/Site/AMDResourceLibrary?lang=en :)
No idea on the tracking stuff, as for that link the info wasn't live when I last checked it, as news sites get the access earlier. Frustrating to see it all now live <_<
jarhead_h Jul 9, 2019
I have seen enough that a R9-3900X/ASUS StrixX570-f/RX5700XT/TridentZ32GB3200DDR4-8x4 will be my next rig. 500GB 970EvoPlus NVME for boot drive until the PCIE4.0 models are out and mature. Next year I can sell the Strix and buy a Crosshair VIII formula for a dedicated liquid cooling setup. No NVIDIA issues. Pair with a LG 32-inch QHD (32GK850F-B) for a really solid performer. Going to be getting a new sound system for my Onkyo speakers so that I can use them again instead of the awful TV speakers/headphone combo I currently gritt my teeth through. Can't wait.
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