Originally posted by Neuro
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Originally posted by signor_rossi View PostUps, knew about the security fixes but forgot that you don't get new package versions, but I am also used completely to the rolling release scheme now after almost ten years with Gentoo and Arch. :-)
I run Squeeze on my laptop, which is the current testing. Though I've got a self-built radeon stack from git code in there too. If you want a usable desktop rather than one that is years out of date I'd suggest switching to Squeeze.
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Originally posted by agd5f View PostSome users get flashes on the screen when the clocks change. At this point 2.6.33 is closed for new features. Hopefully something will land in 2.6.34.
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Originally posted by Ghworg View PostThen you want to switch to testing or unstable, which are both rolling releases. Unstable is debian's version of bleeding edge, it's still horridly out of date compared to say Gentoo, but that is where stuff goes first for Debian. After 10 days if a package passes certain tests (like not having any new bugs) the package gets copied to testing, so things are a bit safer there and only a little more outdated.
I run Squeeze on my laptop, which is the current testing. Though I've got a self-built radeon stack from git code in there too. If you want a usable desktop rather than one that is years out of date I'd suggest switching to Squeeze.
When I have more free time AND a faster internet, I may think about the "bleeding edge" again, but I'm sure I'm not alone settling with an "outdated" but stable system. I still like to read about the new stuff, though.
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Originally posted by pvtcupcakes View PostWould the patches apply to the DRM module or the KMS driver? If it's the KMS driver, I thought you could add all the features you want in staging.
I've never seen a KMS driver, but a radeon drm module with KMS enabled.
But that's just me.
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Originally posted by Loris View PostI always thought the DRM modules consisted of a generic drm module plus a specific radeon module (or nouveau-something, or intel-whatever, ...).
I've never seen a KMS driver, but a radeon drm module with KMS enabled.
But that's just me.
If it gets in now, it can be tested by a lot more people, so when .34 rolls around KMS could be ready to get out of staging.
But the radeon DRM module isn't in staging, so if it affects that, then I can see why it wouldn't be merged now.
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Originally posted by agd5f View PostThe UMS drivers have basic support for lowering the engine clock and PCIE lanes either statically, or dynamically during DPMS on/off. The current KMS patches are here:
All radeons should be supported.
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Originally posted by obino View PostThank you: indeed they all applied and now my laptop is usable with KMS (it runs too hot wihtout power saving).
I was surprised by how well these new patches keep the beast from overheating my notebook. A big thank you to all the devs, and gods and geniuses who are working on the open source drivers. Really.
I was wondering... are you using an rc3 or rc4 tarball of linux, or an updated git version? Did you apply 0001-drm-radeon-kms-use-wait-queue-events-for-VBLANK-sync.patch (another patch, different from the one you jumped before)?
Thank you.
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