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Raspberry Pi 4's V3D Mesa Driver Nearing OpenGL ES 3.1

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  • StandaSK
    replied
    Originally posted by M@yeulC View Post

    I have an old galaxy trend lite that should be compatible, as far as I know, and I plan to work on it with postmarketos
    That phone also only has the VC4 GPU, unfortunately.
    Though, I do have a pretty similiar phone - the Samsung Galaxy Chat (also for use with postmarketOS :P )

    Leave a comment:


  • M@yeulC
    replied
    Originally posted by StandaSK View Post
    Is there anything other than the Raspberry 4 that could be able to use the v3d driver? Do any phones use such Broadcom SoCs? I remember some old phones using Broadcom SoCs, but those only had the VC4 GPU.
    I have an old galaxy trend lite that should be compatible, as far as I know, and I plan to work on it with postmarketos

    Leave a comment:


  • metallurge
    replied
    Originally posted by wizard69 View Post
    Very interesting, PI4 is certainly a new generation of hardware. That is great but the foundation really needs to get with it and focus on a 64 bit distro. I would be surprised if in the 2-3 years that PI5 comes out it would really be able to leverage a modern distro.
    I believe there is a beta version of Ubuntu Mate 64 bit floating around.

    Leave a comment:


  • system32
    replied
    Originally posted by wizard69 View Post
    Very interesting, PI4 is certainly a new generation of hardware. That is great but the foundation really needs to get with it and focus on a 64 bit distro. I would be surprised if in the 2-3 years that PI5 comes out it would really be able to leverage a modern distro.
    /boot/config.txt
    #kernel=kernel8.img
    arm_64bit=1
    will boot 64 bit Linux Kernel 4.19.75 on RPI3 and RPI4.
    Manjaro (ArchLinux) has 64 bit for RPI3 and RPI4.
    ArchLinuxArm has 64 bit on RPI3. Should be available soon on RPI4.
    Fedora is also promising 64bit on RPI4 soon.

    Leave a comment:


  • entropy
    replied
    Btw, what is the state of RPi 4 and Vulkan support?

    Is it technically possible at all and if so, anyone working on it?

    Leave a comment:


  • wizard69
    replied
    Very interesting, PI4 is certainly a new generation of hardware. That is great but the foundation really needs to get with it and focus on a 64 bit distro. I would be surprised if in the 2-3 years that PI5 comes out it would really be able to leverage a modern distro.

    Leave a comment:


  • milkylainen
    replied
    Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
    Hmm now that I think of it, I find it a bit weird that Broadcom SoCs are so rarely found in other consumer devices.
    I guess stuff like Allwinner and Rockchip are used since they're cheaper, where stuff like Exynos and Snapdragon are used when you care more about performance.
    I think it's much because Broadcom does not focus much on the high performance generic embedded segment.
    They focus a lot on full scale (Linux 32-bit MMU+) but still smaller embedded CPUs. Network element CPUs, Accelerator CPUs etc.
    The "I have a big ass A72 and some nice GPU power" does not seem to be a segment for them.
    It's more that the RPi foundation has a CPU made for them, but not available for anyone else.

    Don't know why though. They can apparently do it and make a living selling the CPUs for peanuts (RPi CPUs).
    Otherwise I guess they would stop selling it to the RPi foundation.

    Leave a comment:


  • schmidtbag
    replied
    Originally posted by StandaSK View Post
    Is there anything other than the Raspberry 4 that could be able to use the v3d driver? Do any phones use such Broadcom SoCs? I remember some old phones using Broadcom SoCs, but those only had the VC4 GPU.
    Hmm now that I think of it, I find it a bit weird that Broadcom SoCs are so rarely found in other consumer devices.
    I guess stuff like Allwinner and Rockchip are used since they're cheaper, where stuff like Exynos and Snapdragon are used when you care more about performance.

    Leave a comment:


  • Space Heater
    replied
    Originally posted by StandaSK View Post
    Is there anything other than the Raspberry 4 that could be able to use the v3d driver? Do any phones use such Broadcom SoCs? I remember some old phones using Broadcom SoCs, but those only had the VC4 GPU.
    Broadcom SoCs are often found in cable or satellite set top boxes, and voip desk phones.

    Leave a comment:


  • L_A_G
    replied
    AFAIK the only thing that's known to use this particular SoC is a Sky satellite box. Phones tend to use SoCs built specifically for mobile applications and Qualcomm doesn't make them. They do however make WiFi and Bluetooth modems along with various other smaller chips like power control ICs. Apple, Samsung (at least with their Exynos devices) and Nintendo have a history of using their WiFi+Bluetooth modems.

    Not that this SoC is unsuitable for use in a phone, just look at the Librem using an SoC intended for very similar use cases, but most phone makers these days tend to go for SoCs with built-in 3G/4G/5G modems provided by Qualcomm and a few smaller players like MediaTek (after Qualcomm snuffed out the competition with incredibly anti-competitive license agreements).

    Leave a comment:

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