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AMDgpu is an open source device driver for the Linux operating system developed by AMD to support its Radeon lineup of graphics cards (GPUs). It was announced in 2014 as the successor to the previous radeon device driver as part of AMD's new "unified" driver strategy, [3] and was released on April 20, 2015.
Armbian is a computing build framework that allows users to create system images with configurations for various single-board computers (SBCs). [2] Armbian's objective is to unify the experience across ARM single-board computers, while maintaining performance with hardware-specific optimizations.
AArch64 or ARM64 is the 64-bit Execution state of the ARM architecture family. It was first introduced with the Armv8-A architecture, and has had many extension updates. [ 2 ]
1, 2, 4 1.57 0xC05 ARM Cortex-A7: 2: 5 [3] 8: No VFPv4: Yes: 16 × 64-bit: 64-bit wide LITTLE Yes [4] 40/28 nm 8–64 KiB / core: up to 1 MiB (optional) 1, 2, 4, 8 1.9 0xC07 ARM Cortex-A8: 2: 2 [5] 13: No VFPv3: No: 32 × 64-bit: 64-bit wide No No 65/55/45 nm 32 KiB + 32 KiB: 256 or 512 (typical) KiB 1 2.0 0xC08 ARM Cortex-A9: 2: 3 [6] 8–11 ...
Intel Shadow Stack was finally merged; Exploiting ROPs is now harder; Support for Partial SMT; Performance Improvement for CPUs with a lot of cores and shared Last Level Caches; Continued Intel Meteor Lake graphics and sound enablement/improvements. Better performance for Ext4; IO_uring also seeing cool improvements; DEFLATE compression support ...
Linux device drivers for AMD hardware in August 2016. AMD's proprietary driver, AMD Catalyst for their Radeon, is available for Microsoft Windows and Linux (formerly fglrx). A current version can be downloaded from AMD's site, and some Linux distributions contain it in their repositories.
In July 2022, the Retbleed vulnerability was disclosed affecting Intel Core 6 to 8th generation CPUs and AMD Zen 1, 1+ and 2 generation CPUs. Newer Intel microarchitectures as well as AMD starting with Zen 3 are not affected. The mitigations for the vulnerability decrease the performance of the affected Intel CPUs by up to 39%, while AMD CPUs ...
The Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) is a subsystem of the Linux kernel responsible for interfacing with GPUs of modern video cards.DRM exposes an API that user-space programs can use to send commands and data to the GPU and perform operations such as configuring the mode setting of the display.