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NVIDIA Still Working On PRIME/DMA-BUF Contribution

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  • NVIDIA Still Working On PRIME/DMA-BUF Contribution

    Phoronix: NVIDIA Still Working On PRIME/DMA-BUF Contribution

    Aaron Plattner at NVIDIA is still working on the open-source "PRIME Helpers" patches for the Linux kernel. This is work towards ultimately better handling PRIME/DMA-BUF for NVIDIA Optimus Technology on Linux...

    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

  • #2
    I'm glad Nvidia still cares.

    They need goodwill if they ever want to use dma-buf themselves.

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    • #3
      Oh, so after all it is possible for nVidia to contribute code related to desktop/laptop GPUs to Linux kernel!

      must be snowing in hell or something... oh, no, wait, it's just the result of a hard stance courtesy few kernel developers

      (to be clear: I'm glad they're contributing)

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      • #4
        I hope that ATi also uses this work to handle thier "optimus-like' solution instead of using thier in house solution. If all the drivers can use ONE system for sharing GPU and transfering GPU access, and ALL contribute and improve it, then this system could really become something. As much as people here hate Nvidia and Ati at times, if we could get them to help improve and use it, then we all would benefit.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by tomato View Post
          Oh, so after all it is possible for nVidia to contribute code related to desktop/laptop GPUs to Linux kernel!
          Of course it's possible. This was never in question at all.

          What they can't do is to relicence other people's code. Just like Alan Cox can't relicence the blob and make it GPL.

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          • #6
            nVidia Optimus disaster

            Maybe nVidia cares because... Valve "asked" them to do it, because their problems with Steam for Linux on nVidia Optimus...

            Little of-topic: nVidia Optimus it is disaster even on Windows. It should be simple and working out-of-the-box, but reality is that it generates plenty of problems. Most of them are with not recognised games, but recently it is even with Mozilla Firefox - version 18 is crashing all the times on hardware with nVidia Optimus...

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            • #7
              What a shock firefox crashing

              I do understand that 2 gpus in one laptop have it's strong points i.e. gaming. But that I don't understand that manufactures stuck them almost every pony market laptops out there(damn, marketing guys great new laptop with two graphics cards and ?berd?ber gtx720m with 2GB ram for more powah...). Hopefully Haswell has strong enough igpu that it does not need other gpu to stick on every laptop outhere.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Danniello View Post
                Maybe nVidia cares because... Valve "asked" them to do it, because their problems with Steam for Linux on nVidia Optimus...

                Little of-topic: nVidia Optimus it is disaster even on Windows. It should be simple and working out-of-the-box, but reality is that it generates plenty of problems. Most of them are with not recognised games, but recently it is even with Mozilla Firefox - version 18 is crashing all the times on hardware with nVidia Optimus...
                http://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/946268

                Don't I know it, even on Windows I barely get more fps on my nvidia 540m than my i5's gpu when playing tf2. On l4d2 though, my 540m gets 4-5x fps than my i5's gpu. On minecraft, my 540m gets LOWER fps than my i5's gpu.

                Optimus is buggy, to say the least....

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                • #9
                  nVidia Optimus (when it works) is OK for people that play games occasionally and priority for them is long battery life.
                  But for people that do not care about battery and still wants laptop usable for gaming (like me - it is nightmare (works buggy on Windows, officially doesn't work on Linux). If I could - I would like to buy laptop with nVidia GPU only. The problem is that all better laptops have this annoying Optimus...

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by pingufunkybeat View Post
                    Of course it's possible. This was never in question at all.

                    What they can't do is to relicence other people's code. Just like Alan Cox can't relicence the blob and make it GPL.
                    Then why the DMA-Buf code wasn't contributed by nVidia in the first place?! It's not like the Optimus problem wasn't known for few years before! I'm not asking them to open source their blob because I know that they have other companies "precious IP" in there. Thing is, having proprietary code and contributing code to kernel is not mutually exclusive by itself. But they're in love with their proprietary crap and can't see forest for the trees (that if you get 10 competent engineers to solve a problem, 9 of them will solve it in exactly the same way).

                    I hope that this current work is not a one-off only.

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