The Kernel Analyzer (1.12), which use regularly, suddenly stopped compiling programs apparently for no reason. It will parse opencl code and find errors as before, but then fails to compile anything beyond that point, ISA or IL, giving only the message.
It's a universal failure, not even empty kernels compile, if fails with all possible combinations of KA settings and all selected drivers. I have completely uninstalled all AMD software, drivers and tools, cleaned the windows 7 registry and reinstalled several versions of display drivers and SDKs. No change. Nothing in the system has changed, except perhaps the installation of the latest display driver v9.00 but I frequently change display drivers.
Compiling and running programs works fine as always. I did find 2 odd clues.
The difference is that v1.9 and earlier versions do not allow use of the current installed driver to compile, version 1.10 and later do. (yes, I have tried selecting older drivers in the newer analyzers and it does not work).
It seems that somehow the newer versions cannot connect to the drivers/compilers, a link has been broken and no amount of cleaning, uninstalling, or reinstalling can fix it.
Any clues are greatly appreciated!
Thanks.
Solved! Go to Solution.
When KernelAnalyzer uses the installed driver, it uses code from OpenCL.dll (which is a very thin layer over amdocl.dll).
It also uses aticalcl.dll and aticalrt.dll (which are thin layers over aticaldd.dll).
If you want to do experiments to see what drivers work with each other and KernelAnalyzer,
you can copy dll files into the directory with AMDAPPKernelAnalyzer.exe.
Those dll files will be used in preference to those in \windows\system32 and \windows\syswow64.
My guess about what went wrong with KernelAnalyzer is that you managed to get a mis-matched set of dlls.
It really takes an official release and Catalyst Install Manager to be sure everything is matched up right.
The v9.00 driver package is ... not yet official.
Given recent packaging changes, a mismatch probably won't break actual OpenCL code,
but it can break KernelAnalyzer.
I'll also note that the version number information displayed with "Use Installed Driver" in KernelAnalyzer
comes (via ADL) from registry entries that Catalyst Install Manager sets. If you use experimental drivers
like v9.00, be suspicious of those version numbers.
Hi Dralla,
Can you please provide more details on the problem i.e. what are the steps you did and this problem occured?
- Did Kernel Analyzer v1.12 stopped working the moment you upgraded you display driver to the latest version?
- When kernel Analyzer v1.12 was working for you, which version of display driver you wer using?
- Can you please provide your system setup i.e. OS, bitness, GPU, CPU, Display driver, SDK versions installed?
kalyanpk, thanks for your very quick response.
I have now learned how to fix it and maybe which files are involved.
Yes, I've retested and it happens exactly after installing the unofficial display driver v9.00 with SDK 2.7 installed and a working KA. It does not happen when installing another recent driver, 8.981.2.1_hotfix_win7.exe. The system is win7 64 bit, 8GB, with 3 GPUs, 1x6970 and 2x7970 one of which is headless. Over time I've installed most all drivers since 1.92 but usually roll back to 1.92 because of other issues, I use the most recent versions of the SDK as they comes out.
HOW TO FIX
Once the Kernel Analyzer problem occurs, it cannot be fixed by uninstalling any/all AMD packages, or by reinstalling any earlier drivers and/or SDKs ( I tried several drivers, SDK 2.6, 2.5, etc.). The only way to remove the problem (that I found) is to do all of the following
from C:\Windows\system32.
12/03/2011 09:28 AM 67,584 amdave64.dll
06/12/2012 08:40 PM 32,934,400 amdocl64.dll
06/12/2012 09:15 PM 53,248 amdverag.dll
12/03/2011 09:28 AM 70,656 atisamu64.dll
06/12/2012 08:48 PM 26,936 ativvsnl.dat
06/12/2012 08:48 PM 25 ativvsny.dat
12/03/2011 09:39 AM 157,152 ativvsva.dat
12/03/2011 09:39 AM 204,960 ativvsvl.dat
from C:\Windows \SysWOW64
12/03/2011 09:28 AM 69,632 amdave32.dll
06/12/2012 08:35 PM 27,676,160 amdocl.dll
06/12/2012 08:35 PM 71,168 atisamu32.dll
06/12/2012 08:48 PM 26,936 ativvsnl.dat
06/12/2012 08:48 PM 25 ativvsny.dat
12/03/2011 09:39 AM 157,152 ativvsva.dat
12/03/2011 09:39 AM 204,960 ativvsvl.dat
I'm not sure which files are involved but suspect amdocl64.dll and amdocl.dll because they can only be removed manually. My guess is the problem will occur with other versions of the Kernel Analyzer, i.e., it's the fault of the v9.00 driver package.
Again, thanks, drallan
When KernelAnalyzer uses the installed driver, it uses code from OpenCL.dll (which is a very thin layer over amdocl.dll).
It also uses aticalcl.dll and aticalrt.dll (which are thin layers over aticaldd.dll).
If you want to do experiments to see what drivers work with each other and KernelAnalyzer,
you can copy dll files into the directory with AMDAPPKernelAnalyzer.exe.
Those dll files will be used in preference to those in \windows\system32 and \windows\syswow64.
My guess about what went wrong with KernelAnalyzer is that you managed to get a mis-matched set of dlls.
It really takes an official release and Catalyst Install Manager to be sure everything is matched up right.
The v9.00 driver package is ... not yet official.
Given recent packaging changes, a mismatch probably won't break actual OpenCL code,
but it can break KernelAnalyzer.
I'll also note that the version number information displayed with "Use Installed Driver" in KernelAnalyzer
comes (via ADL) from registry entries that Catalyst Install Manager sets. If you use experimental drivers
like v9.00, be suspicious of those version numbers.
Thanks for the detailed answer. Such details are sometimes helpful and always interesting.
For certain, this was precipitated by installing the unofficial, beta, v9.00 drivers.
Allan