Hi, I also have a freesync screen connected to my card.
How you can verify that freesync is "really" activated? I found the latest amd driver to be not stable at all in term of FPS. -- Deldycke Quentin On 17 February 2017 at 10:19, Øyvind Aasen <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > I have been fiddling around a bit to get AMD freesync to work on my setup, > and this is how I got it to work. > > The solution is the same workaround used by Nvidia users use to hide that > the machine is running inside a VM, the steps taken from Alex blog post are > > "The GeForce card is nearly as easy, but we first need to work around some > of the roadblocks Nvidia has put in place to prevent you from using the > hardware you've purchased in the way that you desire (and by my reading > conforms to the EULA for their software, but IANAL). For this step we > again need to run virsh edit on the VM. Within the <features> section, > remove everything between the <hyperv> tags, including the tags > themselves. In their place add the following tags: > > <kvm> > <hidden state='on'/> > </kvm> > > Additionally, within the <clock> tag, find the timer named hypervclock, > remove the line containing this tag completely. Save and exit the edit > session." > > The issue seems to be that the crimsons installer does not install the > display driver part of the graphics card driver when it detects that it is > running inside a VM. > > Øyvind > > _______________________________________________ > vfio-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/vfio-users > >
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