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Linux 4.10 Is Hopefully In Good Shape For AMD Zen / Ryzen Processors
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Not 100% sure, but generally the features going into newer kernels are for performance in server environments more than desktop.
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Originally posted by hxfhjkl View PostWill it be possible to backport these to older kernels, or is zen 4.10+ exclusive?
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Originally posted by Kano View PostCurrently still the main thing to get old code running fast is raw speed/core.
Originally posted by Kano View PostHard to get full load with games and 8 cores.
Originally posted by Kano View PostMany new boards only feature USB 3(.1) ports.Last edited by pal666; 24 December 2016, 08:28 PM.
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Originally posted by Kano View PostMany new boards only feature USB 3(.1) ports. ... Linux is relatively uncritical in this case, Windows 7 and older have got problems. (Intel does not provide USB 3.0 drivers for XP btw.)
Linux "livecds" can boot fine over usb 3.0 since a long while, the rest is about lack of hardware support of the newest stuff unless you run bleeding edge distros, that is well-known on Linux.
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First of all a new CPUs are usally always backwards compatibe - this ist not the same as with GPUs. If you can not use one of the new security features it does not matter at all. If a CPU requires optimized binaries to run those with a reasonable speed then this CPU hast no chance to be successful. Currently still the main thing to get old code running fast is raw speed/core. Otherwise only selected benchmarks will run fine or when you configure dedicated cores for VMs and run lots of em. Hard to get full load with games and 8 cores. Phenom required special hacks in the kernel to workaround bugs - not good for marketing.
Another thing is the board where you put the CPU. Many new boards only feature USB 3(.1) ports. This means you need a PCI-E card with legacy USB 2.0 ports or a modified install image. Linux is relatively uncritical in this case, Windows 7 and older have got problems. (Intel does not provide USB 3.0 drivers for XP btw.) The same could apply for very new onboard nics - if you require a very old kernel then extra drivers or an older external nic ist required.
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Originally posted by eydee View PostSounds like a non-issue. The CPUs will still take at least a month or more to arrive. Probably more, 2 or 3 months. By that time 4.10 will be obsolete. Distros sticking to older versions will probably backport code from something that's available then. (5.x?)
Last edited by tomtomme; 24 December 2016, 03:48 PM.
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Sounds like a non-issue. The CPUs will still take at least a month or more to arrive. Probably more, 2 or 3 months. By that time 4.10 will be obsolete. Distros sticking to older versions will probably backport code from something that's available then. (5.x?)
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Originally posted by hxfhjkl View PostWill it be possible to backport these to older kernels, or is zen 4.10+ exclusive?
I'd bet that Red Hat will back port the Zen code to the 2.6 and 3.10 kernels as used in RHEL 6 and RHEL 7. As big of a deal as Zen is, Red Hat will likely ensure their OS runs out of the box on it, and can be safely pre-installed by Dell, HP, IBM, etc. on new servers. They actively do this for newly released intel chips, so why wouldn't they for Zen? https://access.redhat.com/support/policy/intel
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Will it be possible to backport these to older kernels, or is zen 4.10+ exclusive?
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Linux 4.10 Is Hopefully In Good Shape For AMD Zen / Ryzen Processors
Phoronix: Linux 4.10 Is Hopefully In Good Shape For AMD Zen / Ryzen Processors
AMD's upcoming Ryzen (Zen) processors appear to be in good enough shape that they are working on the current mainline kernel as far as I can tell based upon limited information available prior to getting my hands on the CPUs or getting any official announcement from AMD, but some Linux kernel patches have yet to be mainlined. The yet-to-be-merged work appears to be more for non-core features and Zen server functionality with those CPUs shipping later than the upcoming Ryzen desktop CPUs...
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