Well I don't have a Steam deck but I know it uses an APU. Which is a GPU and CPU on the same die , what every laptop has. It might that the app doesn't recognise integrated GPUs to be powerful enough so it doesn't use them?
Steam Deck
A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.
Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.
As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title
The following is a list of suggested flairs:
[Discussion] - General discussion.
[Help] - A request for help or support.
[News] - News about the deck.
[PSA] - Sharing important information.
[Game] - News / info about a game on the deck.
[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.
Some more Steam Deck specific flairs:
[Boot Screen] - Custom boot screens/videos.
[Selling] - If you are selling your deck.
These are not enforced, but they are encouraged.
Rules:
- Follow the rules of Sopuli
- Posts must be related to the Steam Deck in an obvious way.
- No piracy, there are other communities for that.
- Discussion of emulators are allowed, but no discussion on how to illegally acquire ROMs.
- This is a place of civil discussion, no trolling.
- Have fun.
I see. Thank you.
My understanding (potentially obsolete!) is that the integrated gpu of the Deck isn’t supported by, uh… whatever the AMD equivalent of Cuda was called, also there’s a chance you’d have to install it manually too.
You need amds proprietary ROCM driver which supports stuff like ai. However i already had issues setting up anything ai on my desktop fedora system, steam deck uses an immutable fs and afaik it gets reset after every update. If doing it on a desktop pc is hard then doing it on the deck will be like walking on lego. Good luck soldier.
Thank you so much for the information!
Would other distros have different difficulty levels?
Requiring proprietary drivers is somewhat unfortunate.
From every diffusion github ive seen, they all seem to have instructions for ubuntu, so that may be your easiest bet. Same with rocm, it seems easier to install on ubuntu than other distros. Especially fedora...
So unfortunately I don't think ROCM supports the deck's APU, and it's too different for it to work by faking that it's a different GPU.
You can still do stable diffusion in CPU mode, but that will take 5-20 min per image (vs 7 seconds per image on my desktop's 6600 XT).
Overall it's not worth it unfortunately. As an alternative you might look into running stable diffusion through Google colab, which is a good way to get custom generation going for free.
I see. Thank you very much for the information.