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Linux 6.5-rc4 Brings Change For Enabling STIBP On AMD Zen 4 Auto IBRS Systems
Linux 6.5-rc4 Brings Change For Enabling STIBP On AMD Zen 4 Auto IBRS Systems
13 Hours Ago - AMD - x86/urgent - 2 Comments

Last weekend I wrote about Zen 4's Automatic IBRS security feature needing STIBP enabled for protecting user-space processes. Single-Threaded Indirect Branch Predictors though haven't been enabled up to now with the Auto IBRS functionality on Linux. But the x86/urgent pull request sent out today ahead of the Linux 6.5-rc4 tagging makes that change.

29 July

GnuCOBOL 3.2 Released After 2+ Years In Development
GnuCOBOL 3.2 Released After 2+ Years In Development
29 July 09:00 AM EDT - GNU - GnuCOBOL 3.2 - 11 Comments

For those fond of the COBOL programming language and continuing to make use of it in new development efforts, GnuCOBOL 3.2 was released on Friday as the latest feature update for this 21+ year old free software effort around being an open-source COBOL implementation.

28 July

Running The AMD EPYC 9754 "Bergamo" CPUs With A 320W cTDP To Enhance Power Efficiency
Running The AMD EPYC 9754 "Bergamo" CPUs With A 320W cTDP To Enhance Power Efficiency
28 July 10:25 AM EDT - Processors - 7 Comments

The new AMD EPYC Bergamo and Genoa-X processors have been very fascinating in the lab from the performance angle and the many different features and knobs provided by these new high-end server processors focused on dense cloud and energy-efficient deployments and HPC/AI, respectively. With Bergamo the flagship AMD EPYC 9754 provides 128 cores with SMT and the Zen 4C cores still boast AVX-512. Another nifty aspect on this high core count CPU catering to cloud service providers is the adjustable TDP from 320 to Watts. Prior Phoronix benchmarks have looked at the default 360 Watt performance and the 400W at the high-end with power determinism mode while today's article is looking at the efficiency gains made possible by pulling back to a 320W cTDP.

Intel's oneAPI Construction Kit 3.0 Released
Intel's oneAPI Construction Kit 3.0 Released
28 July 06:32 AM EDT - Intel - oneAPI Construction Kit 3.0 - 1 Comment

Announced in early June by Intel-owned Codeplay Software was the oneAPI Construction Kit for helping to bring SYCL codebases to new processor/accelerator architectures with an emphasis on AI and HPC. Today marks the release already of the oneAPI Construction Kit 3.0.

Richard Hughes Developing New "Passim" Local Caching Server
Richard Hughes Developing New "Passim" Local Caching Server
28 July 06:17 AM EDT - Free Software - Passim - 10 Comments

Richard Hughes is the Red Hat developer who is most prominently known for leading the Linux Vendor Firmware Service (LVFS) and Fwupd development as well as formerly being behind the ColorHug monitor color calibration hardware effort and PackageKit, among other open-source software. He's recently been developing a new software project called Passim that today he announced to the world.

LLVM 18 Lands -march=arrowlake / arrowlake-s / lunarlake
LLVM 18 Lands -march=arrowlake / arrowlake-s / lunarlake
28 July 05:56 AM EDT - LLVM - LLVM Clang 18 - 1 Comment

Going along with LLVM's recent additions around supporting new Intel instructions coming with future generation Core CPUs, the LLVM 18 Git development code has now landed support for actually honoring -march=arrowlake, -march=arrowlake-s, and -march=lunarlake targets.

27 July

AMD Releases HIP SDK For Windows
AMD Releases HIP SDK For Windows
27 July 04:41 PM EDT - Radeon - AMD HIP SDK For Windows - 20 Comments

This afternoon AMD announced the availability of the HIP SDK for Microsoft Windows as a portion of their ROCm computing platform with support for various professional and consumer GPUs.

DNF5 Isn't Ready For Fedora 39 - Now Delayed To Fedora 41
DNF5 Isn't Ready For Fedora 39 - Now Delayed To Fedora 41
27 July 02:21 PM EDT - Fedora - No DNF5 For Fedora 39 - 26 Comments

For over a year Fedora / Red Hat has been planning for major package management changes with DNF5. The hope for months has been to use DNF5 by default for Fedora 39 but that is no longer going to work out... FESCo has decided to reject DNF5 for Fedora 39 and then due to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 branching with Fedora 40, this means DNF5 isn't expected by default until at least Fedora 41 in late 2024.

LXD Maintainership Being Limited To Canonical Employees
LXD Maintainership Being Limited To Canonical Employees
27 July 06:43 AM EDT - Ubuntu - Tightening The Rope - 39 Comments

Earlier this month Canonical asserted control over the LXD project. As another step in tightening up control over this container management extension for Linux Containers (LXC) is now apparently limiting LXD maintainership rights to only Canonical employees.

GCC 13.2 Released With 58+ Bugs Fixed
GCC 13.2 Released With 58+ Bugs Fixed
27 July 05:56 AM EDT - GNU - GCC 13.2 - 8 Comments

Released back in April was GCC 13.1 as the first stable release in the GCC 13 series that brought Modula-2 language support, more C++23/C23 features, and other new CPU targets supported from Arm to Intel. Debuting today is GCC 13.2 as the first point release in the series to ship dozens of bug fixes.

26 July

The AVX-512 Performance Advantage With AMD EPYC Bergamo
26 July 03:30 PM EDT - Processors - 62 Comments

While this week was the surprise announcement of Intel AVX10 and with that taking the super-set of AVX-512 to both E and P core processors in the future, for next year's Xeon "Sierra Forest" server processors at up to 144 cores, it appears they will lack AVX-512/AVX10. Intel's AVX10 announcement noted initial support with Granite Rapids processors that will debut next year but no mention of the E-core-only Sierra Forest. With the AVX10 only coming to P/E core client processors after Granite Rapids, it would appear the high density Sierra Forest generation will miss out on AVX10/AVX-512 and not appear until Clearwater Forest. Meanwhile with the 128-core AMD EPYC "Bergamo" processors now shipping, there is AVX-512 with the Zen 4C cores. Here are some benchmarks looking at the AVX-512 impact for Bergamo.

NVK Merge Request Opened For Landing Open-Source NVIDIA Vulkan Driver In Mesa
26 July 08:12 AM EDT - Nouveau - NVK Merge Soon? - 38 Comments

NVK as the open-source NVIDIA Vulkan driver being developed for Mesa has to this point been developed out-of-tree as it's been in its early stages, depends upon Nouveau DRM kernel driver improvements, and ultimately isn't too useful until the Nouveau GSP/re-clocking situation is sorted out upstream. But overnight the merge request was opened to introduce NVK to mainline Mesa.

New AMDGPU Firmware Published For Upcoming Radeon GPUs
26 July 06:36 AM EDT - Radeon - AMDGPU Firmware - 1 Comment

There's been talk of new Radeon RX 7000 series graphics cards this quarter and adding some weight to that is AMD publishing several new firmware files for different intellectual property blocks of IP versions previously not seeing firmware binaries in the linux-firmware.git repository.

25 July

Per-Policy CPU Performance Boosting Proposed For Linux
25 July 08:52 AM EDT - Hardware - Per-Policy CPU Performance Boosting - 1 Comment

For processors supporting CPU performance boosting with higher performance states available beyond the base states, Linux allows toggling the boosting on a per-CPU basis. However, a new patch proposed this week would allow per-policy performance boosting where capable.

AMD Begins Rolling Out Driver Patches For Next-Gen GPU IP Blocks
25 July 08:00 AM EDT - Radeon - AMD New IP Blocks - 3 Comments

As part of AMD's recent Linux graphics driver development approach of enabling new GPU support gradually on a IP block-by-block basis rather than big monolithic patch series marked by colorful fishy codenames, it's worked out well for getting new hardware support rolling into the kernel early and without revealing any combined details on yet-to-be-released graphics processors. This week has seen some new IP block patches surface.

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