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Plans Being Drafted To Upstream Intel's New "Xe" Linux Graphics Driver

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  • #11
    Originally posted by TemplarGR View Post

    You are... While i do agree that testing on X won't be a priority considering it is an obsolete platform, the 2 drivers use the same interfaces with the user stack, so if one works the other should probably work the same. Only the internals of the drivers will change.
    I'm not seeing anything on Xorg Wikipedia stating the project is deprecated or obsolete, except for the X11R6.9 branch being in a frozen state, while the modular development of Xorg is on going.

    For some odd reason, I found myself laughing at the usage of the word should.

    So far, I see Wayland/Vulkan graphical interfaces are supposedly great for playing games. Or reiterate, Wayland/Vulkan supposedly provide great frames per second, with less overhead/wasted resource usage.

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    • #12
      Originally posted by rogerx View Post

      I'm not seeing anything on Xorg Wikipedia stating the project is deprecated or obsolete, except for the X11R6.9 branch being in a frozen state, while the modular development of Xorg is on going.

      For some odd reason, I found myself laughing at the usage of the word should.

      So far, I see Wayland/Vulkan graphical interfaces are supposedly great for playing games. Or reiterate, Wayland/Vulkan supposedly provide great frames per second, with less overhead/wasted resource usage.
      Since when Wikipedia is the one source for everything? Everyone knows Xorg has ceased getting serious development and is in maintenance mode....

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      • #13
        Originally posted by mangeek View Post

        It does, but it seems to be more about what's outside of the kernel than inside. Seems like the kernel drivers expose several interfaces that could end up being used to accomplish 'picture on a screen'. Are there opportunities to make a kernel driver smaller/simpler if it only exposes a DRI path? Can other interfaces be piped through DRI (thinking of the console, DDX, etc.)?
        IIUC that's how thing are done today. Most of the explanation in that blog post (until DRI) is about historical stuff to explain how we got there.
        Nowadays, instead of running X as root or having DDX drivers, we run X rootless and it includes the generic modesetting driver which leverages DRM/KMS.
        For the sake of comparison, Wayland does away with userspace drivers, and everything is run through DRM/KMS.

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        • #14
          Originally posted by TemplarGR View Post

          Since when Wikipedia is the one source for everything? Everyone knows Xorg has ceased getting serious development and is in maintenance mode....
          right... appears "maintenance mode" is probably a better terminology than abandoned or obsolete.

          ... wondering if systemd will skip maintenance mode all together, and head straight for being abandoned/obsolete... ;-)

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          • #15
            Originally posted by rogerx View Post

            right... appears "maintenance mode" is probably a better terminology than abandoned or obsolete.

            ... wondering if systemd will skip maintenance mode all together, and head straight for being abandoned/obsolete... ;-)
            Well, yeah, if you want to be pedantic about it, Xorg is not technically "abandoned", since it is still seeing some maintenance. Obsolete, yeah that applies whether it gets bugfixes and minor patches or not.

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            • #16
              Weird that the 11th gen Intel missed out? Those chips have Xe graphics etc

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              • #17
                Originally posted by gfunk View Post
                Weird that the 11th gen Intel missed out? Those chips have Xe graphics etc
                Although I have not looked-up specifically 11th gen Intel CPU, cannot remember if I have the 11th gen laptop here, I have made mention before regarding Phoenix's articles apparently improperly referencing the CPU generations in regards to this Xe driver upgrade, and should instead properly reference the GPU generations names.

                If you look-up either the Wikipedia or Intel's data specifically, think they make mention of the GPU generation with regards to the Xe driver upgrade.

                Bottom line, anything with Xe hardware is likely applicable. ... just don't hold me to the stake on this one, as somebody might decide the bus lacks required features. However, pretty sure 11th CPU generation is very very recent.

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                • #18
                  Originally posted by TemplarGR View Post

                  Well, yeah, if you want to be pedantic about it, Xorg is not technically "abandoned", since it is still seeing some maintenance. Obsolete, yeah that applies whether it gets bugfixes and minor patches or not.
                  https://www.parkersoftware.com/blog/...'t%20addressed.
                  What are obsolete software versions?
                  An outdated software program is one that's no longer supported by the vendor. This means that any new-found bugs in the program aren't addressed.

                  See obsolete thesaurus.

                  Vendors, whether X/Xorg themselves or Linux distributions, still support X/Xorg.

                  Even antique does not fit X/Xorg, as X/Xorg is relatively well utilized by many Linux distributions.

                  Per my thoughts or according to my reality, Systemd is already obsolete and deprecated, will never reach maintenance mode.​ (Eh, Systemd seems to mock my computers here, "Just try to maintain me and then just watch what happens!") Guess if I did only use a systemd O/S, such as Fedora or Ubuntu, then I would too would likely start thinking X/Xorg were obsolete.

                  It would be really funny, if in twenty or more years, we're still all running X/Xorg.

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                  • #19
                    Originally posted by uid313 View Post
                    My dream is Intel Xe graphics on a Intel-designed ARM or RISC-V CPU.
                    This is one of my big hopes for the SiFive/Intel partnership. Having a solid GPU and graphics software is key to adoption, and it would be a shame for a new hardware platform to need years of hacking (like the VideoCore or Apple Silicon GPU) before hobbyists could put it to use.

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                    • #20
                      I have read the Intel XE driver being made for (which would make sense) any CPU with Intel XE IGP (which would from 11th gen on) or for 12th gen. hardware ... so which one is right?

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