Linux 6.14 Preps UHBR For Intel Panther Lake, Lower Alchemist GPU Power Use With Whitelisted CPUs

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • phoronix
    Administrator
    • Jan 2007
    • 67050

    Linux 6.14 Preps UHBR For Intel Panther Lake, Lower Alchemist GPU Power Use With Whitelisted CPUs

    Phoronix: Linux 6.14 Preps UHBR For Intel Panther Lake, Lower Alchemist GPU Power Use With Whitelisted CPUs

    Intel software engineers this week sent out two pull requests landing more of their final kernel graphics driver feature changes destined for the upcoming Linux 6.14 kernel...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
  • Quackdoc
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2020
    • 4950

    #2
    I love DG2 stuff, I hope they wire up the knobs for monitoring and overclocking soon though

    Comment

    • Valeintin
      Junior Member
      • Dec 2024
      • 17

      #3
      Can you address when Intell will add native HDMI 2.1 48 gbit/s in desktop Arrow Lake? Works fine on windows with my LG C9.
      Last edited by Valeintin; 08 January 2025, 07:27 PM.

      Comment

      • PapagaioPB
        Junior Member
        • Jul 2024
        • 9

        #4
        In your view, is Intel committed to the Open Source drivers for its GPUs? Do you think we'll reach the same level as RADV, meaning performance equal to or better than Windows?

        I'm asking because I'm still deciding which new GPU to buy, either an Intel B580 or perhaps an RX 9060 XT.

        Comment

        • Quackdoc
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2020
          • 4950

          #5
          Originally posted by PapagaioPB View Post
          In your view, is Intel committed to the Open Source drivers for its GPUs? Do you think we'll reach the same level as RADV, meaning performance equal to or better than Windows?

          I'm asking because I'm still deciding which new GPU to buy, either an Intel B580 or perhaps an RX 9060 XT.
          Intel has been in the game since the beginning. IIRC it was one of, if not the first vulkan driver in mesa. I would say they are very commited personally. I don't think you will reach radv levels of parity this generation. XE kernel driver is still new and the cards themselves are still relatively new. That being said, I'm going with intel. I have had enough of AMD's driver bugs and my A380 has been rock solid for me personally.

          Comment

          • PapagaioPB
            Junior Member
            • Jul 2024
            • 9

            #6
            Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post

            Intel has been in the game since the beginning. IIRC it was one of, if not the first vulkan driver in mesa. I would say they are very commited personally. I don't think you will reach radv levels of parity this generation. XE kernel driver is still new and the cards themselves are still relatively new. That being said, I'm going with intel. I have had enough of AMD's driver bugs and my A380 has been rock solid for me personally.
            I really want to support Intel as well, much more than AMD, but it seems the community gives a lot of support to AMD, and the development of RADV seems to be everyone's focus. Many companies hire people to work on RADV, whereas Intel seems to be on its own with the development of ANV. Do you or anyone else have any idea how many developers Intel allocates to ANV?

            Comment

            • DanaG
              Phoronix Member
              • Aug 2010
              • 75

              #7
              I still have a bone to pick with them about this, and their *chirping crickets* response to it. Well, that, and the high idle power draw. Even if the new ones fix both things, I don't think I'll buy them, just as a matter of principle.

              The huc doens't work on xe driver. I tried to change "i915.enable_guc=2 to xe.enable_guc=2" in cmdline, but it doesn’t work. Is the HUC loaded and enabled on XE?...

              Comment

              • Quackdoc
                Senior Member
                • Oct 2020
                • 4950

                #8
                Originally posted by DanaG View Post
                I still have a bone to pick with them about this, and their *chirping crickets* response to it. Well, that, and the high idle power draw. Even if the new ones fix both things, I don't think I'll buy them, just as a matter of principle.

                https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/x...l/-/issues/234
                is huc even needed on XE? last I checked i915 does everything xe does now.

                Comment

                • Adarion
                  Senior Member
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 2058

                  #9
                  I'm not really into the matter: But on the surface this article (and what it covers) seems to say that GPUs are dependent on CPUs for power savings. Huh? That sounds weird to me. I mean, the GPU should be able to operate on its own, to clock down, to power-gate things that are not needed - independent on the specific CPU. All the CPU should have to do with it is to be connected via bus(es) and run the driver software.
                  But why all that "Aww, no, you are an ABC CPU, I cannot powersave while you're near!"?
                  Puzzling, at least for me. Does anybody have good insights on that?
                  Stop TCPA, stupid software patents and corrupt politicians!

                  Comment

                  • cutterjohn
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2009
                    • 313

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Valeintin View Post
                    Can you address when Intell will add native HDMI 2.1 48 gbit/s in desktop Arrow Lake? Works fine on windows with my LG C9.
                    even current alchemist HDMI port is merely a DP->HDMI adapter internally... there is no native HDMI support, plus Ive found the builtin converter to be flakey, so have resorted to using my own DP->HDMI converter...

                    ...although at the time there were alot of firmware and driver updates, so that builtin converter MAY be in better shape now, and for all I know may offer more functionality than my external converter, but it'd all be stuff that I don't use/care about as the HDMI monitor is my crappiest monitor anyways... (1080p, 75Hz just used as an auxiliary display... data, docs, so it's also in portrait orientation... does these jobs well enough...)

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X