Article Number: RN-AMDGPU-UNIFIED-LINUX-25-10-2
Release Date: July 17th, 2025
This article provides information on the latest release version of Radeon™ Software for Linux®.
Highlights
- Introducing Preliminary support for Ubuntu 24.04.3 using the installer version of Ubuntu 24.04.2 HWE.
- Consistent with AMD’s commitment to Open-Source software, we will be making the following changes to the composition of the Radeon Software for Linux releases, starting with 25.20:
- The Mesa Vulkan driver will be officially supported, along with Mesa OpenGL and Multimedia support. The AMD proprietary OpenGL and Vulkan drivers will no longer be included in the release.
- AMF will no longer be included in the release. AMF users are advised to transition to VA-API / Mesa Multimedia. Some examples of ffmpeg use cases with VA-API / Mesa Multimedia are shown below:
- Hardware Decode:
ffmpeg -hwaccel vaapi
- Hardware Encode:
ffmpeg -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD128 -i in.mp4 -vf hwupload,scale_vaapi=format=nv12 -c:v h264_vaapi out.mp4
- Hardware Transcode:
ffmpeg -vaapi_device /dev/dri/renderD128 -hwaccel vaapi - hwaccel_output_format vaapi -i in.mp4 -c:v hevc_vaapi out.mp4
- Hardware Decode:
Please feel free to direct any questions or comments to the AMD Online Service Request.
AMD Linux GPU Drivers Guidelines
AMD Linux GPU drivers are open source and integrated into popular Linux distributions (some of them are listed at Compatible 64-bit Operating Systems). For many use cases, AMD recommends using AMD GPU Linux drivers available from Linux distributions. Some of these use cases are described below:
- Using AMD APU products with any popular and up-to-date Linux distribution.
- Using AMD discrete GPU products that are well supported by a popular Linux distribution.
- Using a notebook or desktop PC pre-loaded with Linux and/or certified by a Linux distribution vendor.
- Using a Linux distribution that is not compatible with Radeon™ Software for Linux® such as:
- Fedora 42
- Pop!_OS
- Linux Mint 22
- Arch Linux
When using a very recent AMD discrete GPU that is not yet well supported by recent versions of Linux distributions, AMD recommends the most recent release of Radeon™ Software for Linux®. Many users find it convenient to migrate to AMD GPU Linux drivers available from Linux distributions once they've been updated to include support for the latest AMD GPU products.
Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer can be downloaded from the following links:
- Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer version 25.10.2 for Ubuntu 22.04.5 HWE
- Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer version 25.10.2 for Ubuntu 24.04.2 HWE
- Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer version 25.10.2 for RHEL 8.10
- Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer version 25.10.2 for RHEL 9.6
- Radeon™ Software for Linux® installer version 25.10.2 for SLED/SLES 15 SP7
Installing Radeon™ Software for Linux®
For detailed instructions on how to install or uninstall Radeon™ Software for Linux®, please refer to Radeon™ Software for Linux® installation instructions.
AMD Radeon™ Product Family Compatibility
Radeon™ Software for Linux® is compatible with the following AMD products (level of compatibility may vary from product to product within each series; for details, please refer to AMD Drivers and Support :
Graphics Series |
Professional Graphics Series |
AMD Radeon™ AI PRO R9700 | AMD Radeon™ PRO W7000 |
AMD Radeon™ RX 9000 | AMD Radeon™ PRO W6000 |
AMD Radeon™ RX 7000 | AMD Radeon™ PRO VII |
AMD Radeon™ RX 6000 | AMD Radeon™ PRO W5000 |
AMD Radeon™ VII | Radeon™ PRO WX x200 |
AMD Radeon™ RX 5000 | Radeon™ PRO WX x100 |
Radeon™ RX Vega | Radeon™ PRO |
AMD Radeon™ RX 500 | AMD Radeon™ Pro Duo |
AMD Radeon™ RX 400 | FirePro™ Wx100 |
AMD Radeon™ R9 Fury / Fury X / Nano | FirePro™ Wx000 |
AMD Radeon™ R9 360 / 380 / 380X / 390 / 390X | |
AMD Radeon™ R9 285 / 290 / 290X |
AMD Radeon™ Product Compatibility with 64-bit Linux Distributions
- Ubuntu 22.04.5 HWE
- Ubuntu 24.04.2
- RHEL 8.10
- RHEL 9.6
- SLED/SLES 15 SP7
Known Issues
- Sometimes freezing occurs when using the keyboard to switch to another VT console under Ubuntu 24.04.2 and kernel version 6.11.029 on Navi48 systems. The issue is specific to that kernel version alone. As a workaround, switching to another VT console (for example, going to Ctrl+Alt+F3 and then going back to Ctrl+Alt+F2) recovers the system.
- Primary display corruption is intermittently observed in mGPU scenarios involving Navi31 workstation cards under Ubuntu 24.04.2. The issue is observed only in installations with the option
--usecase=workstation and not with the option --usecase=graphics.
© 2025 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. The information contained herein is for informational purposes only and is subject to change without notice. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this document, it may contain technical inaccuracies, omissions and typographical errors, and AMD is under no obligation to update or otherwise correct this information. ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES, INC. MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES WITH RESPECT TO THE ACCURACY OR COMPLETENESS OF THE CONTENTS OF THIS DOCUMENT AND ASSUMES NO LIABILITY OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSES, WITH RESPECT TO THE OPERATION OR USE OF AMD HARDWARE, SOFTWARE OR OTHER PRODUCTS DESCRIBED HEREIN. NO LICENSE, INCLUDING IMPLIED OR ARISING BY ESTOPPEL, TO ANY INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IS GRANTED BY THIS DOCUMENT. This notice does not change the terms and limitations applicable to the purchase or use of AMD's products that may be set forth in a separate signed agreement between you and AMD.