AMD Ryzen 5 2500U / Radeon Vega 8 Graphics drivers for Ubuntu 18.04
Does anyone know what additional drivers are required for "AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor with Radeon™ Vega 8 Graphics" on Ubuntu 18.04 ?
EDIT 1
Additional information -
Laptop model : Acer Swift 3 (should also be applicable for Dell Inspiron 15 5575)
Processor : AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor
GPU : Radeon™ Vega 8 (Integrated)
Queries / Issues -
- Fractional scaling not available (How to ?)
- Display resolution 1600x900 not available (How to ?)
- Does it need any additional GPU driver (e.g. AMDGPU Pro) ?
Acer community thread on this topic link
amd-graphics
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
Does anyone know what additional drivers are required for "AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor with Radeon™ Vega 8 Graphics" on Ubuntu 18.04 ?
EDIT 1
Additional information -
Laptop model : Acer Swift 3 (should also be applicable for Dell Inspiron 15 5575)
Processor : AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor
GPU : Radeon™ Vega 8 (Integrated)
Queries / Issues -
- Fractional scaling not available (How to ?)
- Display resolution 1600x900 not available (How to ?)
- Does it need any additional GPU driver (e.g. AMDGPU Pro) ?
Acer community thread on this topic link
amd-graphics
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35
add a comment |
Does anyone know what additional drivers are required for "AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor with Radeon™ Vega 8 Graphics" on Ubuntu 18.04 ?
EDIT 1
Additional information -
Laptop model : Acer Swift 3 (should also be applicable for Dell Inspiron 15 5575)
Processor : AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor
GPU : Radeon™ Vega 8 (Integrated)
Queries / Issues -
- Fractional scaling not available (How to ?)
- Display resolution 1600x900 not available (How to ?)
- Does it need any additional GPU driver (e.g. AMDGPU Pro) ?
Acer community thread on this topic link
amd-graphics
Does anyone know what additional drivers are required for "AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor with Radeon™ Vega 8 Graphics" on Ubuntu 18.04 ?
EDIT 1
Additional information -
Laptop model : Acer Swift 3 (should also be applicable for Dell Inspiron 15 5575)
Processor : AMD Ryzen™ 5 2500U Mobile Processor
GPU : Radeon™ Vega 8 (Integrated)
Queries / Issues -
- Fractional scaling not available (How to ?)
- Display resolution 1600x900 not available (How to ?)
- Does it need any additional GPU driver (e.g. AMDGPU Pro) ?
Acer community thread on this topic link
amd-graphics
amd-graphics
edited Sep 18 '18 at 16:17
Rupam
asked Jul 11 '18 at 4:26
RupamRupam
13115
13115
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35
add a comment |
There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35
There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
If anyone is still struggling with display resolution (tiny font) on Linux, here is what i did on my Linux Mint 19 (i switched to Mint).
Open control center
, click on Appearance
, go to Fonts
tab, make sure Subpixel smoothing (LCDs)
is selected and click on the Details
button.
Under Resolution
, turn off Automatic Detection
, then change the Dots per inch (DPI)
value to 120 (works pretty well in my case, fine tune the value according to your need).
Screenshots:
Firefox:
Make the following changes if you use Firefox.
Open Firefox
, then type about:config
in the address bar and hit enter, click on I accept the risk
, on the next page, search for layout.css.devPixelsPerPx
and modify the value to 1.3
.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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If anyone is still struggling with display resolution (tiny font) on Linux, here is what i did on my Linux Mint 19 (i switched to Mint).
Open control center
, click on Appearance
, go to Fonts
tab, make sure Subpixel smoothing (LCDs)
is selected and click on the Details
button.
Under Resolution
, turn off Automatic Detection
, then change the Dots per inch (DPI)
value to 120 (works pretty well in my case, fine tune the value according to your need).
Screenshots:
Firefox:
Make the following changes if you use Firefox.
Open Firefox
, then type about:config
in the address bar and hit enter, click on I accept the risk
, on the next page, search for layout.css.devPixelsPerPx
and modify the value to 1.3
.
add a comment |
If anyone is still struggling with display resolution (tiny font) on Linux, here is what i did on my Linux Mint 19 (i switched to Mint).
Open control center
, click on Appearance
, go to Fonts
tab, make sure Subpixel smoothing (LCDs)
is selected and click on the Details
button.
Under Resolution
, turn off Automatic Detection
, then change the Dots per inch (DPI)
value to 120 (works pretty well in my case, fine tune the value according to your need).
Screenshots:
Firefox:
Make the following changes if you use Firefox.
Open Firefox
, then type about:config
in the address bar and hit enter, click on I accept the risk
, on the next page, search for layout.css.devPixelsPerPx
and modify the value to 1.3
.
add a comment |
If anyone is still struggling with display resolution (tiny font) on Linux, here is what i did on my Linux Mint 19 (i switched to Mint).
Open control center
, click on Appearance
, go to Fonts
tab, make sure Subpixel smoothing (LCDs)
is selected and click on the Details
button.
Under Resolution
, turn off Automatic Detection
, then change the Dots per inch (DPI)
value to 120 (works pretty well in my case, fine tune the value according to your need).
Screenshots:
Firefox:
Make the following changes if you use Firefox.
Open Firefox
, then type about:config
in the address bar and hit enter, click on I accept the risk
, on the next page, search for layout.css.devPixelsPerPx
and modify the value to 1.3
.
If anyone is still struggling with display resolution (tiny font) on Linux, here is what i did on my Linux Mint 19 (i switched to Mint).
Open control center
, click on Appearance
, go to Fonts
tab, make sure Subpixel smoothing (LCDs)
is selected and click on the Details
button.
Under Resolution
, turn off Automatic Detection
, then change the Dots per inch (DPI)
value to 120 (works pretty well in my case, fine tune the value according to your need).
Screenshots:
Firefox:
Make the following changes if you use Firefox.
Open Firefox
, then type about:config
in the address bar and hit enter, click on I accept the risk
, on the next page, search for layout.css.devPixelsPerPx
and modify the value to 1.3
.
answered Jan 6 at 5:00
RupamRupam
13115
13115
add a comment |
add a comment |
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There are no additional drivers needed. Fractional scaling has nothing to do with drivers, and it is available (though the GNOME UI might not allow it). Display resolution should be fine, assuming the display supports it.
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 16:21
On windows 10, 1600x900 is available and works fine. But the same is not available on Ubuntu / Linux Mint. I tried to add the resolution manually but it resulted in blank screen (ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2017/04/…)
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 16:25
OK. The timings were probably wrong then. You are trying to use that resolution on the internal display? If so, why instead of the native resolution of the panel?
– dobey
Sep 18 '18 at 17:17
Because this laptop has a 1920x1080 display, and using the full resolution its almost not usable as the fonts are very small. Hence the solution would be to have fractional scaling (125%, windows has this) or using a lower display resolution like 1600x900 .
– Rupam
Sep 18 '18 at 17:35