There are some features in OpenCL that have hardware requirements. This means that even if a particular vendor's OpenCL implementation (the platform) supports an OpenCL version, the device might not. So, it is entirely possible for the versions returned from the CL_DEVICE_VERSION
and CL_PLATFORM_VERSION
queries to differ.
This will probably start to happen more frequently when OpenCL 2.0 implementations start appearing, as there is plenty of hardware on the market that doesn't have the necessary support for OpenCL 2.0 features. Imagine a system that has two devices from Vendor X: a new Device A that can run OpenCL 2.0, and a much older Device B that can't. In this instance, the platform version may be OpenCL 2.0, but the device version could be OpenCL 2.0 for Device A and OpenCL 1.2 for Device B.
The CL_DRIVER_VERSION
is for getting a vendor specific version number for the implementation. This number could using any version numbering system that the vendor uses to keep track of different software releases, and is completely independent from OpenCL version numbers (although some vendors may well include the OpenCL version here too).
So, in order to be sure that both the device and platform support your required OpenCL version, you should just need to check CL_DEVICE_VERSION
.