Intel Arc B390 graphics benchmarked on Linux with Panther Lake

A new review examines the performance of Intel's Arc B390 graphics in the Panther Lake Core Ultra X7 358H processor under Linux. Initial tests revealed challenges with default settings, but adjustments yielded competitive results against prior generations. The Xe3-based GPU supports advanced display features and benefits from recent Linux kernel and Mesa updates.

Intel's latest Panther Lake processors integrate the Arc B390 graphics, featuring 12 Xe cores and a maximum frequency of 2.5GHz. This GPU supports eDP 1.5, DisplayPort 2.1, and HDMI 2.1 outputs, enabling resolutions up to 8K at 60Hz across four displays. The review, conducted on an MSI Prestige 14 Flip AI+ laptop with the Core Ultra X7 358H, highlights the Xe3 architecture's potential on Linux.

Testing utilized Linux 6.19 and the development version of Mesa 26.0, where OpenGL and Vulkan acceleration functioned properly. Support requires Linux 6.18 or later with Mesa 25.3 or newer, though the latest versions are recommended for optimal performance. A recent linux-firmware package is essential for the Intel GuC firmware. On this MSI model, WiFi and audio operate correctly under Linux 6.19.

Early benchmarks showed limited improvements over the Lunar Lake's Xe2 graphics, prompting investigation into power settings. The laptop's default balanced mode caps power at 15W minimum and 30W maximum, lower than Intel's recommendations and differing from Windows by up to 15W in PL1 state. This configuration, unusual for an Intel Evo-certified device, hindered out-of-the-box performance.

To address this, tests switched to performance mode, applied a Thermald workaround, and enabled Intel's Low Power Mode Daemon (LPMD). These changes revealed competitive Xe3 performance compared to balanced modes on other systems.

Comparisons included the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 in an ASUS Zenbook S16, Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Lunar Lake in a Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon G13, and Core Ultra 7 155H Meteor Lake in an Acer Swift 14. A performance-optimized run on the MSI Prestige 14 aligned results more closely with peers. No data from AMD's Ryzen AI Max Strix Halo was available due to hardware constraints.

The review notes that early adopters of Panther Lake laptops, particularly the MSI model, may encounter suboptimal default performance and advises checking power profiles for better results.

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Phoronix has benchmarked the Arc B390 Xe3 graphics integrated into Intel's Panther Lake processors, finding strong performance on the open-source Intel Compute Runtime under Linux. The tests compare the new hardware against previous Intel generations and AMD's Ryzen AI competition using OpenCL and GPU compute workloads. Results highlight the graphics' out-of-the-box compatibility with Linux drivers, though some gaps remain compared to Windows.

Rapporteret af AI

Phoronix has indicated that Linux benchmarks for Intel's upcoming Panther Lake processors and Arc B390 graphics are still in the works. This news highlights ongoing interest in how these new hardware components will perform on Linux systems. The site, known for hardware testing, promises detailed reviews soon.

Razer unveiled its updated Blade 16 gaming laptop on Wednesday, featuring Intel's Core Ultra 9 386H processor from the Panther Lake series and Nvidia GeForce RTX 50-series graphics. The laptop supports up to 64GB of high-speed LPDDR5 RAM and a brighter 16-inch OLED display. Pricing starts at $3,500 for the base model.

Rapporteret af AI

Following the recent addition of Panther Lake support to its Linux NPU user-space driver, Intel has now published firmware for the neural processing unit (NPU) in its upcoming Panther Lake processors. Reported by Phoronix, this completes the Linux driver ecosystem and enables full AI feature integration on Linux systems.

 

 

 

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