F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Alder Lake performance on Linux in May 2022 was evaluated.

Alder Lake performance on Linux in May 2022 was evaluated.

Alder Lake performance on Linux in May 2022 was evaluated.

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Unravl
Junior Member
13
04-08-2021, 04:22 AM
#1
As a user without an Alder Lake processor, you're looking at Linux support for newer architectures now that mid-2022. The performance has likely improved compared to earlier versions, though it may still lag behind Windows 11 in some areas. Kernel updates have addressed many of these issues, with recent releases supporting the latest hardware features. The most recent stable kernels typically cover Alder Lake compatibility, but checking the latest documentation or repositories will give you the precise versions and fixes available.
U
Unravl
04-08-2021, 04:22 AM #1

As a user without an Alder Lake processor, you're looking at Linux support for newer architectures now that mid-2022. The performance has likely improved compared to earlier versions, though it may still lag behind Windows 11 in some areas. Kernel updates have addressed many of these issues, with recent releases supporting the latest hardware features. The most recent stable kernels typically cover Alder Lake compatibility, but checking the latest documentation or repositories will give you the precise versions and fixes available.

F
frozenlava109
Member
59
04-12-2021, 10:58 PM
#2
I've been using the 12th gen (12900k) in Linux for about a year now, around December. Everything seems fine. If you're referring to the scheduler for performance and efficiency cores, that's a different situation. It was initially intended for the 5.18 kernel, but it appears they've added it to the 5.16 kernel recently. From what I found online, it seems they're gradually integrating this into older kernels too, like the 5.15 version. You might need a more recent kernel regardless. My Z690 board required a fairly updated kernel for its onboard hardware (NIC, sound, etc.) to work properly.
F
frozenlava109
04-12-2021, 10:58 PM #2

I've been using the 12th gen (12900k) in Linux for about a year now, around December. Everything seems fine. If you're referring to the scheduler for performance and efficiency cores, that's a different situation. It was initially intended for the 5.18 kernel, but it appears they've added it to the 5.16 kernel recently. From what I found online, it seems they're gradually integrating this into older kernels too, like the 5.15 version. You might need a more recent kernel regardless. My Z690 board required a fairly updated kernel for its onboard hardware (NIC, sound, etc.) to work properly.