
Linux Hardware Reviews, Performance Benchmarks & Open-Source / Free Software News
Updated: 24 min 49 sec ago
Sway Compositor Lands Wayland Tearing Control Support
A one year old merge request to support Wayland's Tearing Control protocol (tearing-control-v1) has finally been merged into the Sway compositor codebase...
Firefox 129 Now Available With HTTPS Replacing HTTP As Default Protocol
Mozilla Firefox 129.0 is now available for download ahead of its formal release announcement on Tuesday. Making Firefox 129 notable is that for non-local sites it's now replacing HTTP with HTTPS by default. Firefox will now aim for HTTPS as the default protocol on non-local sites...
LLVM OpenMP Runtime Lands Improvements For Intel Meteor Lake
A three month old merge request finally landed in mainline LLVM Git this past week to deliver improvements initially for Intel Meteor Lake processors...
Linux 6.12 To Add New Build Options For More Fine-Grained Control Over CPU Mitigations
The Linux 6.12 kernel cycle later this year is expected to see a number of new Kconfig options introduced for greater build-time control over what CPU speculative execution security mitigations are included as part of the kernel build...
LLVM/Clang 20 Compiler Begins Seeing Intel AVX10.2 Support
In-step with the GCC compiler beginning to see Intel AVX10.2 support patches, the LLVM Clang 20 Git code is already seeing initial AVX10.2 code merged for this open-source compiler...
Linux 6.11-rc2 Addresses A Lot Of "Silly Noise"
The second weekly release candidate of Linux 6.11 is now available for testing...
GNOME Shell 47 Beta Brings Hardware Encoding When Screen Recording & More
As the next step toward releasing GNOME 47.0 in mid-September, the GNOME 47 beta release is imminent and today the GNOME Shell and Mutter compositor "47.beta" releases were made...
GNU Binutils 2.43 Released With Intel APX Assembler Preparations & More
GNU Binutils 2.43 is out as stable this Sunday as the newest update to this important piece of the open-source GNU compiler toolchain...
The Open-Source AMD GPU Linux Kernel Graphics Driver Nears 5.8 Million Lines
Last August I wrote an article about the open-source AMD GPU kernel driver crossing 5 million lines of code -- including their overzealous header files -- and following the recent Linux 6.11 merge window curiosity got the best of me with how much larger the kernel driver is now that the initial RDNA4 support is merged... Well, it's about to cross 5.8 million lines, or about a 16% increase just over the past year...
Linux 6.11-rc2 To Recognize More AMD Zen 5 CPUs
Ahead of the Linux 6.11-rc2 kernel due for release later today there is the weekly "x86/urgent" material to merge...
New Intel Linux Patches Continue Working To Improve Hybrid CPU Task Placement
Building off some "request for comments" patches sent out in April, a new set of patches appeared on Friday for the Intel P-State Linux driver for setting the asymmetric CPU capacity on hybrid systems. This is another attempt at helping to improve the Linux kernel scheduler behavior in ensuring optimal task placement between Intel Core processors having a mix of P and E cores. This patch series in particular helps when SMT / Hyper Threading support is disabled or like with upcoming Lunar Lake processors where there is no HT support...
Btrfs Stakeholders In Fedora Eye Bootable Snapshots & Transparent Encryption
It's been four years now that the Btrfs file-system has been the default for Fedora on the desktop. The Fedora and Btrfs love affair has been going well and is only getting better with more integration enhancements planned and a special interest group (SIG) now getting off the ground for furthering these efforts...
Rust-Written Redox OS Now Has A Working Web Server
The Redox OS project that is a from scratch open-source operating system written in the Rust programming language now has a working web server, among other improvements achieved during the month of July...
Linux 6.12 To Drop Old Code That Slows Down CPU Frequency Polling
The Linux 6.12 kernel cycle later this year has a change coming that will impact users of the "Schedutil" CPU frequency scaling governor. This change is dropping the "LATENCY_MULTIPLIER" that has been within the kernel code the past two decades to slowdown how frequent the CPU frequency evaluation occurs. In turn the revised logic can allow for that CPUFreq frequency re-evaluation to occur more often...
Immutable Version Of Arch-Based Manjaro Linux Available For Testing
For those intrigued by the likes of the likes of Fedora Silverblue, Vanilla OS, and NixOS for an immutable Linux distribution but desiring something based on Arch Linux, Manjaro Linux has an immutable variant now available for testing...
Limine 8.0 Bootloader Released With LoongArch Support
While not as common as GRUB or systemd-boot, a new version of Limine is now available for this open-source, modern-focused and portable multi-protocol bootloader...
GNOME Disks Adds New Standalone UI For Managing/Mounting Disk Images
In addition to the KDE development activity this week, GNOME developers have also been busy polishing their desktop ahead of their next GNOME release in September...
This Week In KDE: "Plasma Is Feeling Really Solid These Days!"
KDE developer Nate Graham is out with his usual weekend update that recaps all of the interesting KDE development activities for the past week...
Canonical Evaluating -O3 Optimized Packages For Ubuntu Linux
With Ubuntu 24.04 LTS the engineers at Canonical began focusing more on the performance of Ubuntu and establishing a performance team at the company. This work is ongoing and for Ubuntu 24.10 they are exploring another exciting area: leveraging "-O3" compiler optimizations for Ubuntu packages. Available today is an experimental build of the Ubuntu desktop and server ISOs that are compiled for the -O3 optimization level...
AMD Releases ROCm 6.2 With New Components, Improves PyTorch & TensorFlow
As expected, AMD has released ROCm 6.2 as the newest version of their open-source GPU compute stack for Radeon graphics cards and Instinct accelerators. ROCm 6.2 is a big update with several new software components, improving the existing PyTorch and TensorFlow support, and a variety of other enhancements as AMD works to better compete with NVIDIA's CUDA...