Intel has ramped up the pace for next-gen enablement at Linux as the firm pushes out vital updates for Lunar Lake and Xe2 GPU architectures.
Well, it seems like every other firm is rushing to support their upcoming Linux products. Intel also looks determined since the company has uploaded multiple patches, ensuring enablement for its future architectures.
Phoronix reports that Intel engineers have been busy preparing their drivers for the upcoming Lunar Lake architecture since the firm uploaded new merge requests at MESA 24.2, focusing on the CPU's device information and early ray-tracing support for the Xe2 graphics architectures.
Speaking about Lunar Lake first, Intel has added an initial for Lunar Lake device information, which includes the lineup's graphics PCI device IDs. Interestingly, the firm has added an "INTEL_FORCE_PROBE" environment variable with the associated PCI IDs as well, which is an attempt to allow Lunar Lake's graphics architecture to work with the driver despite not being fully supported. This move was seen in the Xe kernel drivers as well, and the primary purpose of it is to experiment with things around, but it does show that we are near to official launch timelines.
The new graphics device IDs added are 0x6420, 0x64a0, & 0x64b0, along with the experimental variable. Moreover, the 11 new patches added also mentioned early support for Xe2 ray tracing, although details weren't too much to mention here.
So, with that, it's safe to say that Lunar Lake Linux adopters might not need to worry much about out-of-box support for Linux. Still, there could be a few compromises that might require some self-adjustments, like a "rolling release distribution."
News Source: Phorornix
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