Latest Linux Hardware Reviews, Open-Source News & Benchmarks

11 November

Rust Developers Move Ahead With Preparing To Upstream More Code Into The Linux Kernel
Rust Developers Move Ahead With Preparing To Upstream More Code Into The Linux Kernel
11 November 05:36 AM EST - Linux Kernel - More Rust In The Kernel - 20 Comments

With the upcoming Linux 6.1 kernel release there is the initial Rust infrastructure merged for enabling the use of the Rust programming language for future kernel drivers and other kernel code. But that state in Linux 6.1 is the very basics and not yet practical while now a secondary sent of "Rust for Linux" patches have been sent out for enabling more kernel development to happen with Rust.

LibreOffice Enables RISC-V 64-bit Support
LibreOffice Enables RISC-V 64-bit Support
11 November 05:15 AM EST - RISC-V - LibreOffice + RISC-V - 11 Comments

If the royalty free open-source processor ISA RISC-V is to enjoy success on the Linux desktop, obviously it needs an office suite... LibreOffice as the open-source office suite alternative to Microsoft Office is now seeing proper RISC-V 64-bit support.

10 November

AMD EPYC 9554 & EPYC 9654 Benchmarks - Outstanding Performance For Linux HPC/Servers
AMD EPYC 9554 & EPYC 9654 Benchmarks - Outstanding Performance For Linux HPC/Servers
10 November 02:30 PM EST - Processors - 38 Comments

After showcasing the AMD EPYC 9004 "Genoa" series and geeking out over AMD's reference platform running the Linux-powered open-source OpenBMC, it's time to move on to benchmarking. For evaluating the EPYC Genoa performance under Linux, AMD kindly provided review samples of the EPYC 9654 flagship 96-core processor, the EPYC 9554 64-core processor, and the EPYC 9374F 32-core high frequency CPU. In today's benchmark review I am looking at the EPYC 9554/9654 CPUs while the EPYC 9374F will be featured in its own review in the coming days on Phoronix.

AMD Launches EPYC 9004 "Genoa" Processors - Up To 96 Cores, AVX-512, Incredible Performance
AMD Launches EPYC 9004 "Genoa" Processors - Up To 96 Cores, AVX-512, Incredible Performance
10 November 02:30 PM EST - Processors - 16 Comments

Following September's successful launch of the AMD Ryzen 7000 series "Zen 4" desktop processors, today AMD is lifting the embargo on their EPYC 9004 series "Genoa" server processors. EPYC Genoa takes AMD server processors to the new SP5 socket, up to 96 cores / 192 threads per socket, AVX-512 with Zen 4, twelve channels of DDR5 system memory, and much more -- all combined it puts AMD and the industry at new levels of HPC performance. I've been benchmarking the AMD EPYC Genoa processors the past few weeks to astounding success. This article is looking more at the feature set and platform for Genoa while separately are my initial AMD EPYC 9554 / EPYC 9654 Linux review and benchmarks.

PipeWire 0.3.60 Released With Many Fixes, Improvements
PipeWire 0.3.60 Released With Many Fixes, Improvements
10 November 08:14 AM EST - PipeWire - PipeWire 0.3.60 - 28 Comments

PipeWire 0.3.60 is out today as the newest update to this software used for managing audio and video streams on Linux. With modern Linux distributions PipeWire is increasingly used now as the replacement to PulseAudio in addition to its video capabilities.

9 November

NVIDIA Proposing New Linux API For Dynamic Mux Switching With Modern Dual-GPU Laptops
NVIDIA Proposing New Linux API For Dynamic Mux Switching With Modern Dual-GPU Laptops
9 November 05:49 AM EST - NVIDIA - Dynamic Mux Switching - 24 Comments

While the VGA_Switcheroo has long been part of the Linux kernel for laptops with hybrid (dual GPU) graphics for switching between the GPUs on platforms with a hardware mux switch, this current API has been found to be ineffective for the latest laptops like those with "NVIDIA Advanced Optimus" support. Thus NVIDIA is working on and proposing a new Linux user-space API around dynamic mux switching.

8 November

AMD Joins The Cloud Hypervisor Project Started By Intel
8 November 02:00 PM EST - Intel - AMD + Cloud Hypervisor - 4 Comments

Over the past three years one of Intel's many promising open-source software projects has been the Rust-written Cloud Hypervisor. Cloud Hypervisor started as just a modern, security-focused, cloud-centric Rust VMM hypervisor for modern hardware/software. It began as just one of many open-source software projects at Intel but last year was folded into the Linux Foundation umbrella while Intel continues to be a major contributor to the project. Coming as a bit of a surprise today is AMD announcing they have joined the Cloud Hypervisor project.

Fedora 38 Looking At A Phosh Image For Mobile Devices
8 November 12:30 PM EST - Fedora - Fedora Mobility With Phosh - 18 Comments

It looks like Fedora could be taking on more mobile ambitions with a Phosh image now proposed for running that Wayland shell focused on smartphones and tablets while delivering a good GNOME-based experience. Separately, a change proposal is expected for also introducing a Fedora Linux image with KDE Plasma Mobile.

NVIDIA Makes The PhysX 5.1 SDK Open-Source
8 November 10:17 AM EST - NVIDIA - Open-Source PhysX - 45 Comments

Back in 2019 NVIDIA open-sourced the PhysX 4.1 SDK and was working on a PhysX 5.0 open-source code drop while we haven't heard anything more on the matter in the past two years. Coming out this morning as a surprise is the NVIDIA PhysX 5.1 SDK open-source release.

ASRock X670E PG Lightning - Nice AMD Zen 4 Motherboard For $250 USD
8 November 10:00 AM EST - Motherboards - 17 Comments

When it comes to new AMD AM5 motherboards featuring an X670 series chipset, one of the cheapest options right now is the ASRock X670E PG Lightning that retails for around $249 USD. I picked up one of these motherboards at launch and has been working out well on Linux for those wanting to build a cost-minded AMD Zen 4 desktop system.

Mesa Developers Eye Removing Clover Once Rusticl OpenCL Code Hits Parity
8 November 08:00 AM EST - Mesa - Rusticl Wins - 12 Comments

New to the upcoming Mesa 22.3 release is Rusticl as a Rust-written OpenCL implementation for Mesa drivers. Rusticl supports OpenCL 3.0, handles OpenCL images and other features, works with multiple drivers, and is modern and maintained. Already among Mesa developers is a discussion that has begun around removing the older "Clover" OpenCL Gallium3D implementation once Rusticl has firmly hit parity with that older, unmaintained state tracker.

Linux's New Compute Accelerator Framework Quickly Taking Shape
8 November 05:36 AM EST - Linux Kernel - Compute Accelerator Subsystem - 2 Comments

Towards the end of October there finally came about a patch series fleshing out the "accel" subsystem for the Linux kernel in preparing this new subsystem/framework that builds atop the Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) code and is designed for all the up and coming AI accelerator drivers for the kernel. Given the number of accelerator drivers from different vendors eyeing mainline kernel adoption, this new compute accelerator framework is quickly being formed.

NVK Vulkan Driver Starting Work On New Compiler
8 November 05:17 AM EST - Nouveau - NVK Compiler - 49 Comments

The NVK open-source NVIDIA Vulkan driver that was started earlier this year and has been progressing nicely the past few months is starting to see work now on its own shader compiler where as up to this point has been relying on existing Nouveau Mesa code for code generation.

7 November

Some AMD RDNA3 Fixes Land In Mesa Git Ahead Of December's Radeon RX 7900 Series Launch
7 November 06:55 AM EST - Radeon - Mesa Fixes - 2 Comments

With the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT / RX 7900 XTX having been announced last week and set to ship on 13 December, it's down to crunch time for ensuring that the open-source Linux driver support is in shape. Unlike on the Windows side where it's just expected of the user to navigate to AMD.com and download a convenient driver installer, on Linux that's not exactly the case. AMD will likely have their Radeon Software for Linux driver package on their website but that is limited in scope to their few supported enterprise/LTS Linux distributions supported, while most gamers/enthusiasts will be left wondering about the Linux kernel and Mesa versioning requirements.

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