Linux Kernel 4.13 Officially Released (softpedia.com)
prisoninmate writes: As expected, the Linux 4.13 kernel series was made official this past weekend by none other than its creator, Linus Torvalds, which urges all Linux users to start migrating to this version as soon as possible. Work on Linux kernel 4.13 started in mid-July with the first Release Candidate (RC) milestone, which already gave us a glimpse of the new features coming to this major kernel branch. There are, of course, numerous improvements and support for new hardware through updated drivers and core components. Highlights of Linux kernel 4.13 include Intel's Cannon Lake and Coffee Lake CPUs, support for non-blocking buffered I/O operations to improve asynchronous I/O support, support for "lifetime hints" in the block layers and the virtual filesystem, AppArmor enhancements, and better power management. There's also AMD Raven Ridge support implemented in the AMDGPU graphics driver, which received numerous improvements, support for five-level page tables was added in the s390 architecture, and the structure randomization plugin was added as part of the build system.
I'm thinking to upgrade my computer but I want to make sure Linux can take it... Linux has never been great with support for new hardware but a poorly supported CPU really surprised me.
AMD has a recall on the crashy Ryzens. Contact customer service if you're affected.
Errata happen, but If you want to be pissed about something, let it be AMD's refusal to provide thermal management documentation. It's insane - they will eventually capitulate and release the docs, but right now they're killing a golden opportunity they've created to disrupt Intel's previous lead, because sysadmins and systems integrators need to know how hot their systems are running.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
According to numerous reports, early ryzen chips had a silicon bug. If this is hitting you, you can RMA the chip. Recent ryzen chips seem to be stable.
As someone who has been working on an init system for Linux, I can assure you that there is literally no event for when a mount has occurred! The best you can do is poll /proc/self/mountinfo to see if it's changed since you last looked. Udev had mount event support but it was so buggy and wrong that they decided to remove it completely!
New processor support is nice but how about better event support for userspace programs?
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
The terms of the replacement are that you have to return the chip in all of the original retail packaging, including all paper inserts, manuals, and logo stickers, with your original receipt.
Jebus! What's next, Vogon poetry?
Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
It's a bit like Google, Facebook, et al., where you are the product. Only in this case you are the QA. Bleeding edge distros like Fedora* and I'd wager others like Debian Sid and Ubuntu Artful will update to 4.13 and you get to be the guinea pig if you're using one of them.
* Yes, Fedora has already indicated that they're going to rebase the kernel in Fedora 25 and 26 to 4.13 after it's soaked in rawhide for a bit.
I want an event when a monitor is connected or disconnected. I have to poll in /sys to find when that happens.
It's kinda weird that to select the BFQ io scheduler I have to specify it on the boot grub line. But I can still change from noop/deadline/cfg on the command prompt.
I've been really happy with BFQ, but having to select the elevator=bfq on the grub is annoying and sometimes 4.13 hangs. Then I end up with manually editting my grub for some kernels...
AMD has a recall on the crashy Ryzen chips, but only sort of. The terms of the replacement are that you have to return the chip in all of the original retail packaging, including all paper inserts, manuals, and logo stickers, with your original receipt. I don't know anyone who keeps all of this crap after they build a PC.
I always keep that stuff, and system builders are generally happy to chuck it into a bag for you and include it if you ask. Having to peel the sticker off the case is annoying, but ok.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Would you prefer these distros not exist then?
Errata happen, but If you want to be pissed about something, let it be AMD's refusal to provide thermal management documentation.
Interesting. Do you have some source?
You're right, apart from the fact that being the QA is nothing like being the product of course. And you've figured out the QA part in FOSS now? Impressive since it almost says so in the definition...
I feel so sig.
sysfs is generated using uevents from the kernel. That is an event you can detect via netlink. see also: NETLINK_KOBJECT_UEVENT
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Old info. Its was under NDA and license was stupid, it got sorted a few days ago.
@rozhuk-im: That helped, thanks. Patch for the k10temp driver submitted upstream. Too late for the v4.14 kernel, but it will be available in v4.15.
https://github.com/groeck/lm-sensors/issues/16