Originally posted by RealNC
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The Main DRM Pull Request For The Linux 2.6.37 Kernel
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It's been many months since the 2.6.36 merge window closed, and ALL that was accomplished in that time on the Radeon side is:
"introduce new fences on R600 ASICs and newer, spread spectrum improvements on R500 and newer, Radeon HD 5000 series blit support, PLL fixes, and a number of tiling fixes."
Why is development moving so excruciatingly slow? At that pace, we will never, ever get rid of fglrx. It will still be the premium performance choice for years to come.
What is happening? Is anything stalling the development?
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Originally posted by droidhacker View PostI think that he means that there will be... initial experimental support for [some] power management features.
So far, the blob does a lot more than just changing the clocks. So, laptop users, don't expect too much gains in autonomy.
On the other hand, some people (like me) have their GPU under-clocked by default, this means PM will get them a nice performance improvement.
One feature that should also be included in the 2.6.38 is the pageflip API. Some users get up to 5 times more FPS (in open arena) on nv4x. Sounds good doesn't it?
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Originally posted by M?P?F View PostSorry to say that, but Power management won't be "supported" on nouveau.
It may "work", but we don't expect it to work nicely for anyone.
You'll have to wait until Linux 2.6.38 before you get something half-way working. There is so much work to be done.
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Sorry to say that, but Power management won't be "supported" on nouveau.
It may "work", but we don't expect it to work nicely for anyone.
You'll have to wait until Linux 2.6.38 before you get something half-way working. There is so much work to be done.
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The Main DRM Pull Request For The Linux 2.6.37 Kernel
Phoronix: The Main DRM Pull Request For The Linux 2.6.37 Kernel
David Airlie has just called upon Linus Torvalds to pull in his DRM kernel tree for the Linux 2.6.37 kernel merge window. We have talked about many of these features before that are now entering the mainline Linux kernel code-base as new capabilities of the open-source Linux graphics stack, but here's the list of what made the cut for Linux 2.6.37 and details on some of the features we have yet to discuss...
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