rHXN

dn3500 - 1 hour ago
I don't understand the kernel problem. Why did he feel he had to rebuild the kernel weekly? When the amdgpu stopped working why couldn't he just go back to the last working kernel?
M95D - 50 minutes ago
He said he needed patches to make the GPUs work. Kernel package auto-updated does not have those patches and overwrites the custom kernel he built every time there was an update available.
trentor - 30 minutes ago
You can disable automatic kernel updates on almost every distribution. Most people that use secure boot and Nvidia do it.
nevi-me - 53 minutes ago
I presumed that as a kernel developer, he would run the kernel he runs, which would require rebuilding periodically. Daily doesn't make sense, monthly is too infrequent given the rate of change in the kernel.

My speculation though. When I was building an app I was using, I used to run a recent stable build on my device instead of just the one released in the Play Store. Simplifies having to keep multiple devices.

edg5000 - 1 hour ago
> there was no org.freedesktop.Platform.GL.nvidia in Flatpak repositories for AArch64

All he had to do was build some packages from source, right? It's really worth learning how to do this, since it removes a lot of constraints.

And the kernel patch should land in the kernel pretty soon, I hope? He won't have to run a patched kernel forever. Should be possible to get that in a release in a year or so?

HerbManic - 4 hours ago
I'm not surprised at the outcome. These Ampere system single core/thread performance is pretty low and that is where you feel it. The OS/software simply cannot allocate the threads across enough cores effectively to make up for this difference.

This is why things like the Apple M Series feels so fast, because while they don't win the multi core performance especially when going up against a 80 core beast like this, they have single thread performance exactly were it is needed.

Maybe we will need 80 cores in future, that is cool but for daily home use it is still just way too much for what we need.

akoboldfrying - 59 minutes ago
Apple M series is also aarch64 architecture, isn't it? Could you explain more why you expect Ampere to be slow but M series to be fast?
rwmj - 32 minutes ago
Apple design their own Arm-compatible cores from scratch. Ampere use a modified Arm Neoverse N1 core. In addition, the Ampere server that Marcin is using is about 6 years old, and would have been tuned for core count over single thread performance (good for web serving). Basically Arm's own cores aren't nearly as good as Apple's at the best of times, and having a 6 year old server makes things even worse.
dzaima - 32 minutes ago
Ampere Altra is for cloud/datacenters/servers where multithreaded throughput is approximately all that matters. Apple M series is for consumers.
10000truths - 45 minutes ago
I'm not sure why the author didn't attempt to dive deeper into the error message he saw. amd_vcn_dec sounds like it's an issue with the GPU's video decoding logic. If there's a timeout when trying to process a decode request, it may be that power management for the GPU is buggy somehow. Given that this is a server build and idle power consumption is likely not a big deal, I'd suggest pinning the GPU power state to see if it resolves the issue (see amdgpu.ppfeaturemask and amdgpu.runpm kernel parameters).
fragmede - 1 hour ago
Fascinating! I've been running the laptop version-ish of this experiment with the 14M9610, and my major complaint is Device Tree sucks. It's been explained to me why all of ARM can't just enumerate devices like PCs do, but it still sucks. This means every ARM device starts off in custom kernel territory, which makes all sorts of hacks okay to begin with, since you need a custom kernel anyway.
bpye - 1 hour ago
ACPI does exist for Aarch64, but is only really used for Windows client devices, and server hardware - though I think the Ampere hardware in the article would use ACPI not DT.

If you want to run Linux on one of the modern Qualcomm Windows laptops, you still generally end up needing to use device tree.

bestouff - 48 minutes ago
This is not completely true. You can use a generic kernel with a custom device tree.

The only problem is that distributions currently tend to package them together, but that shouldn't be obligatory.

M95D - 47 minutes ago
> my major complaint is Device Tree sucks

Why? Device tree is great. You can patch it yourself if something doesn't work, add overlays, etc.

rwmj - 27 minutes ago
It's a bad solution compared to having the hardware just enumerate itself like PCI does. (No one uses the firmware supplied DTs because they're usually broken.)
anthonj - 2 hours ago
I see the problem, but I don't see a clear analysis on the actual source of the problem. I assumed the issue was mainly single core performance, but he is also suggesting context switches could be the cause?

So could you fix that with a new scheduler? Or you just need another SoC with better single core performance? I could imagine that the latter already exists, just not in soc with >16 cores. My naive view is that such high core count system comes with tradoff on core size and interconnect/memeory bus complexity.

And I mean.. my phone is a middle lower end device and for sure I can play youtube videos (maybe in a popup as well) and run the browser without noticing that much difference from my laptop.

NavinF - 1 hour ago
I don't think youtube playback is a relevant comparison since it uses ~0 CPU. Pretty much all phones have hardware accelerated decoding. Lots of TVs and streaming devices use an ancient Android phone SoC yet they too can play YT and run a browser. The entire UI is often a local web app.
KaiserPro - 2 hours ago
I think the single core performance would be bearable if it wasn't combined with maintaining a custom built kernel.
john_alan - 43 minutes ago
I’ve been using ARM Debian desktop stably for a long time. I don’t see what the issue is, am I missing something or is this just his hardware choice?
ginko - 1 hour ago
I wonder if a source-based distro like Gentoo would have made OP's life slightly easier. Portage for instance should allow you to maintain a set of patches to automatically apply when you update your kernel. Those flatpak problems also shouldn't exist there.
lonelyasacloud - 51 minutes ago
At very least it would have given all those cores something to do :-)
__patchbit__ - 5 hours ago
Can the ThinkPad T14 ARM Snapdragon variant function without pain as a daily Linux/BSD driver?
bpye - 59 minutes ago
When I looked at this before I found https://github.com/kuruczgy/x1e-nixos-config - reasonable though not 100% support.

I believe Ubuntu also has semi official X1 elite support, no idea if they're working on the latest generation.

sedatk - 3 hours ago
Snapdragon has excellent single-thread performance (unlike Ampere) if that’s what you’re asking.
izacus - 3 hours ago
No. The driver support is very poor and won't run at all well.

Even. Setting it up is a pain: https://github.com/Jeremiah-Hawley/Linux-on-Snapdragon

It can run Windows well though.

shevy-java - 4 hours ago
Without pain? I mean, there is pain when using Linux. It just works better than, say, Windows.
hparadiz - 1 hour ago
I just setup Gentoo on a Lenovo laptop last week. It was the least painful process for a Linux laptop of my entire career. Everything just works. Even sleep and the fingerprint sensor for sudo. LLM tuis replaced Google entirely.

I can't even say there was any pain whatsoever. The experience is now more akin to MacOS circa 10.6.x years.

izacus - 1 hour ago
Was it a Snapdragon laptop? Because if it wasn't, then it has nothing to do with the OPs question.
hparadiz - 1 hour ago
Driver support for that particular Lenovo is 100%. You just recompile. The issue is more to do with the CPU not being as good as say an AMD AI Max or an M4.
cmrdporcupine - 2 hours ago
I use a DGX Spark every day as my daily driver and it's great. I barely use the "AI" facilities of it, but as an Aarch64 desktop Linux, I have no complaints.
rvz - 2 hours ago
The AArch64 desktop experiment started in 2020 with the Macbook M1 and it ended in 2026 with great success with Apple phasing out support for Intel.

It is called Apple Silicon.

jeroenhd - 1 hour ago
If you think running a Linux desktop on an Ampere is bad, try running it on an M5 Mac!
preisschild - 2 hours ago
Which is somewhat useless because it doesn't properly support ACPI/UEFI so that you can boot other operating systems
laurencerowe - 2 hours ago
Wasn’t booting other operating systems supported from early on (two months after release of M1)? It was reverse engineering the graphics hardware that took time and effort.
boxed - 2 hours ago
Linux on apple silicon is a thing though: https://asahilinux.org/
preisschild - 2 hours ago
True, but they had to implement their own bootloader chain and because of such overhead they need a lot of effort to port to each new apple SoC generation
boxed - 20 minutes ago
Ok.. and? That's job someone has already done, so what does it matter?

From what I've understood there's significant backwards compatibility for the new SoCs, so the significant work they need to do is to support new features, not getting things running.

shevy-java - 4 hours ago
The Desktop Linux will take over from here guys. Next year it will be ready, together with GNU Hurd for everyone and their Grandma.
mort96 - 2 hours ago
Has anyone ever pretended that (non-Apple) ARM hardware running Linux makes for a remotely suitable desktop experience for the general public or are you shadow boxing here?