Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Posted Jan 19, 2011 5:45 UTC (Wed) by jiu (guest, #57673)In reply to: Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld) by lmb
Parent article: Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Posted Jan 19, 2011 10:39 UTC (Wed)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (8 responses)
The trouble we have is that the X Windows Server has a batshit insane driver model. You have 3 or 4 different drivers programmed by different groups that all try to do similar things with the same single piece of hardware.
Get rid of X Windows Server and switch to a driver model were you have one driver that supports many different APIs then you will start to see major improvement. There is only so much you can do to band-aid over broken design.
Also the other major issue with Linux and open source drivers is that despite all the rhetoric and grandstanding when it comes to software the average Linux user does not mind shoveling massive amounts of Windows driver code into their kernel in order to get acceptable graphics performance.
Not only does this remove any motivation for actually fixing anything (since it now works well enough) it also prevents the very thing that would be the first real step to fixing Linux drivers. Any changes to or modifications to X or Linux graphics in a attempt to fix anything will break the Nvidia driver and cause users to cry out bloody murder.
Posted Jan 19, 2011 10:53 UTC (Wed)
by mjthayer (guest, #39183)
[Link] (5 responses)
Posted Jan 19, 2011 11:29 UTC (Wed)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (4 responses)
Yeah something like that. I mispoke a bit, we don't need to get rid of 'X Windows' so much as getting rid of X windows having anything to do with graphics drivers.
There should only be one DDX for X on Linux and it should be 'DDX Linux' (or whatever). The same X driver code running on all the different video cards.
Then lower down there should only be one driver for one piece of hardware. Do it's job and do it well with proper layered design of *kernel* <--> *graphics driver* <---> *applications* and all that happy Unixy design stuff.
Posted Jan 19, 2011 17:48 UTC (Wed)
by mslusarz (guest, #58587)
[Link] (3 responses)
Posted Jan 20, 2011 8:38 UTC (Thu)
by mjthayer (guest, #39183)
[Link] (2 responses)
Is that in a usable state? Are any DDX drivers actually using it?
Posted Jan 20, 2011 9:32 UTC (Thu)
by ernstp (guest, #13694)
[Link] (1 responses)
Not really I think, but I read that someone had tried it and sounded like it runs and works partially at least.
> Are any DDX drivers actually using it?
AFAIK it _is_ a DDX driver.
Posted Jan 20, 2011 9:46 UTC (Thu)
by mjthayer (guest, #39183)
[Link]
> AFAIK it _is_ a DDX driver.
Ah, I had assumed from my limited knowledge of Gallium3D that it would only become a DDX driver once it (the state tracker) was combined with a given Gallium3D driver.
Posted Jan 20, 2011 15:56 UTC (Thu)
by zlynx (guest, #2285)
[Link] (1 responses)
It implements the OpenGL standards correctly and is one of the only drivers to do so.
Nvidia has actual teams of people who test their driver quality using well-designed test suites that cover all the possibilities. Not two developers and a few beta users that only test Tuxracer, glxgears and Compiz.
In my personal experiences the Nvidia driver is very stable. Just don't run it with 4K kernel stacks.
All in all, Nvidia and its Linux driver is the *very best* advanced graphics support available for Linux.
I'm not seeing the lack of quality here.
Posted Jan 23, 2011 2:37 UTC (Sun)
by SteveAdept (guest, #5061)
[Link]
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
What was that metal again? Palladium? Titanium? Platinum?
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
Firefox 4 Beta 9 Gives Short Shrift to Linux Users (PCWorld)
