Package Details: linux-ck 6.12.1-1

Git Clone URL: https://aur.archlinux.org/linux-ck.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: linux-ck
Description: The Linux kernel and modules with ck's hrtimer patches
Upstream URL: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Linux-ck
Licenses: GPL-2.0-only
Provides: KSMBD-MODULE, VIRTUALBOX-GUEST-MODULES, WIREGUARD-MODULE
Replaces: virtualbox-guest-modules-arch, wireguard-arch
Submitter: graysky
Maintainer: graysky
Last Packager: graysky
Votes: 459
Popularity: 0.24
First Submitted: 2011-07-22 14:51 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2024-11-23 13:58 (UTC)

Dependencies (14)

Required by (7)

Sources (6)

Latest Comments

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whoops commented on 2012-12-08 20:27 (UTC)

Sorry, I don't fully understand the categories. Is Phenom II X6 = K10 = Opteron = Option 1? Or is it a case for "Generic-x86-64"? Thanks!

graysky commented on 2012-12-08 16:23 (UTC)

I tested the 'kernel-36-gcc47-1.patch' written by André Ramnitz using three different machines running a generic x86-64 kernel and an otherwise identical kernel running with the optimized gcc options. Conclusion: There are small but real speed increases using a make endpoint to running with this patch. Details: 1) Three test machines: Intel Xeon X3360, Intel i7-2620M, Intel Core i7-3660K. 2) All ran the make benchmark (linked below) 35 times while booted into a 'generic' kernel. Then all ran the same make benchmark 35 times after booting into an optimized kernel. Below are the optimizations chosen for each machine. 2a) X3360 = core2 2b) i7-2620M = corei7-avx 2c) i7-3660K = core-avx-i 3) Analyzed resulting distributions for statistical significance via ANOVA plots that clearly show statistically significant albeit small differences. Links to ANOVA plots: http://s19.postimage.org/68urcofzn/corei7_avx.png http://s19.postimage.org/ozwomuak3/core_avx_i.png http://s19.postimage.org/d0l6fj4z7/core2.png References: Bash script that controls the benchmark: https://github.com/graysky2/bin/blob/master/bench Log file generated by script: http://repo-ck.com/bench/compile_time_optimization.txt.gz

graysky commented on 2012-12-08 16:22 (UTC)

Bump to v3.6.9-3 Changelog: Added the kernel-36-gcc47-1.patch by André Ramnitz that adds additional CPU family support. Commit: http://pkgbuild.com/git/aur-mirror.git/commit/linux-ck?id=5e6d83e6cc2c6027f876509611368d74b469fedd

graysky commented on 2012-12-08 16:20 (UTC)

Thanks for the info, misc.

misc commented on 2012-12-04 14:01 (UTC)

Well, I think that has resolved itself. localmodconfig *is* streamline_config.pl — as is localyesconfig. Both are simply an "alias" then also set as variable (see scripts/kconfig/Makefile) that have the script behave differently.

graysky commented on 2012-12-04 12:17 (UTC)

'''Bump to v3.6.9-2''' *Changelog: Incorporated fat-3.6.x.patch as does the ARCH package. *Commit: http://pkgbuild.com/git/aur-mirror.git/commit/linux-ck?id=2d661e58d8f8983755e86ed66e7e1630dbdd4d41

graysky commented on 2012-12-04 10:25 (UTC)

@misc - If memory serves me, Steven told me that the perl script you mentioned differs from the call to `make localmodconfig` somehow. Plz follow-up with him and let me know. @xzy3186 - Not sure... plz try with the linux package from [testing] and verify that it isn't an upsteam bug.

misc commented on 2012-12-04 00:53 (UTC)

Seeing that streamline_config.pl is still being actively maintained ( http://bit.ly/YJ1T4X ), wouldn't it be worth to try out how it performs? Only as precursor to localmodcfg, not on its own, of course. I mean, if the Steven Rostedt still truly considered it such a bad idea, wouldn't they have removed it by now?