AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 / Radeon 8060S Support

dmc522

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Jul 7, 2025
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Hi, I'm an avid user of proxmox in my homelab.

I'm looking into upgrading my kit as i would like to add running local llms to the stack and adjacent tools.

The mini pc i'm looking the Framwork Mini PC which has
AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 with the Radeon 8060S iGPU
Looking at the 128GB Memory Config.

Does proxmox support this cpu/gpu combo?
Will i be able to pass through the gpu into a windoes or linux vm/lxc?
Any limitations i should be aware of.

Thank You.
 
Just to elaborate a bit, I've been pretty pleased with the Linux support on the FW 13 laptop. I've got the AMD one and they officially support a number of distros on it, which I took as a good sign. Debian Bookworm isn't one of them but I've been running it for a year with good success. I used the backport kernels and firmware to get improved video but that's it. Recently updated to Trixie/testing with no problems. Everything works, including bluetooth, wifi, and the fingerprint sensor.

Based on that, I expect decent Linux support from Framework. I figure that by the time I get my FW Desktop Debian Trixie will be released and maybe PVE 9 will be close :)
 
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hello guys,
did anybody successfully passthrough the 8060s gpu to vms using proxmox 8.4?
i use amd ryzen 9 ai max 395.
 
hello guys,
did anybody successfully passthrough the 8060s gpu to vms using proxmox 8.4?
i use amd ryzen 9 ai max 395.

Have you found anything?

Just got my Beelink GTR9 Pro — was looking for any guidance to setup proxmox properly on it. Or Any BIOS changes needed.

I guess will go without changes ans see how it goes.
 
Bump up,
it would be very nice to know, before purchase an AI Max+ 395,
if this works out.
Passthrough the GPU to an VM.
Is it still possible to share the RAM so flexible with the CPU/GPU.
 
I got my FW desktop. PVE 9.0 runs fine on it. No issues so far. The GPU works with virtio-gl, which gives decent desktop performance for my usage. It replaces a Xeon D-1541 that was getting old. Relative to that it is very fast and has twice the core count with similar idle power.

Passing the only display to a VM seems like a bad idea to me from the get-go as there is no serial port. No display or serial port makes recovery from mistakes a lot more annoying. I have a JetKvm hooked up to it so basically the same management features as IPMI on my previous machine.

ETA: Basically, for a home user this is a pretty good virtualization host. It is also "living room friendly" and Framework actually cares about Linux.
 
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