Luis Chamberlain sent out the modules changes today for the Linux 6.6 merge window. Most notable with the modules update is a change that better builds up the defenses against NVIDIA’s proprietary kernel driver from using GPL-only symbols. Or in other words, bits that only true open-source drivers should be utilizing and not proprietary kernel drivers like NVIDIA’s default Linux driver in respecting the original kernel code author’s intent.

Back in 2020 when the original defense was added, NVIDIA recommended avoiding the Linux 5.9 for the time being. They ended up having a supported driver several weeks later. It will be interesting to see this time how long Linux 6.6+ thwarts their kernel driver.

  • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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    Oh wow the comments on Phoronix for this one are bonkers.

    From what I understand (because it wasn’t clear to me from either of the TLDRs posted here) Nvidia’s proprietary graphics driver has been calling parts of the kernel that they shouldn’t be, because their driver is closed source.

    These seem to be parts of the kernel that another company may own patents to, but has only licensed it to the kernel for free use with GPL open source code only, i.e. closed source/proprietary code is not allowed to use it.

    Nvidia seems to have open sourced a tiny communication shim to try and bypass this restriction, so their closed source driver talks to the shim, and the shim talks to the restricted code in the kernel, that Nvidia does not have a license to use. This is a DMCA violation, hence why the Kernel devs are putting in preventions to block the shim, as far as I can see.

    I don’t understand the small minority of commenters there defending a la soulless corp Nvidia, who is blatantly in the wrong here. Some commenters have gone as far as to call the Linux kernel maintainers “zealots”, would not be surprised if they are alts for Nvidia devs…

    Edit: typo

    • 520@kbin.social
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      Then isn’t the correct solution to sue Nvidia?

      It’s a legal issue with a legal solution.

      • Zardoz@lemmy.world
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        Yeah probably, but Nvidia can afford lawyers and delays for years. Much longer than any oss group could afford

      • cobra89@beehaw.org
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        So you want the company that licensed the patents to the Linux kernel for open source use to have to sue Nvidia for wrongly using their code? You want the company to have to spend a bunch of money suing Nvidia and possibly lose which would open the flood gates to more closed source code leeching off the Linux kernel?

        Yeah that’s going to make them want to keep licensing their IP to the Linux Foundation (which they’re probably doing for free).

        Or the maintainers can just submit a fairly simple patch to ensure that the kernel and the patents are being respected. Do you really think the first approach is the way to go?

        • 520@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Neither is having your copyright infringed. Neither is wasting volunteer manpower playing a technical game of cat and mouse

    • Tetsuo@jlai.lu
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      Just a perspective on why people would support NVIDIA here:

      • They don’t believe in copyright law so they don’t mind whoever infringe on them. Especially since here it would make the proprietary driver work better.

      • They do care about copyright law but think having a working driver outweighs respecting them.

      Not my opinion here just saying that for some people usability trumps any other aspects.

      • Solar Bear@slrpnk.net
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        They don’t believe in copyright law so they don’t mind whoever infringe on them. Especially since here it would make the proprietary driver work better.

        I don’t believe in copyright law, but I especially don’t believe in partially enforced copyright law. Nvidia doesn’t get to use copyright to protect their proprietary code while infringing on the copyright of FOSS.

      • LeFantome@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Good read. I think the root is simply, don’t care about the rights of others if it is going to cost them something personally.

      • BaconIsAVeg@lemmy.ml
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        Also, some of us are using Nvidia because we rely on software that doesn’t work on AMD. I really enjoy using Linux, but if it’s going to make my life difficult I’ll go back to using Windows with WSL.

        I agree Nvidia should resolve the licensing issues, but man GPL zealots get a such a raging hard-on for anything Nvidia related it’s funny to watch.

        • Semperverus@lemmy.world
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          Them becoming raging zealots is kind of the only realistic way to defend the GPL though. If they don’t, it’s just going to get treated like toilet paper. I’d much rather have the angry hate mob than to be disrespected by big companies who can otherwise just get away with whatever they want.

          • BURN@lemmy.world
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            And I’d like hardware that works, and proprietary drivers are really the only way that happens

              • Cynetri (he/any)@midwest.social
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                Not to knock on your point but the AMD drivers on Linux don’t support hardware video encoding unfortunately, so technically it’s not full-featured

                • Kevin@lemmy.ca
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                  I take advantage of hardware video encoding on linux with amd’s open source drivers almost every day.

            • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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              Why do you think that? Companies can open source their drivers at will, in fact at this point NVIDIA is the only major player in GPU market who hasn’t done this, what do you think makes this particular hardware so special that needs a closed source driver when every other competitor doesn’t? In fact what could possibly be the reason for a driver to need to be closed source?

        • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          Or maybe we should keep companies, which rake in billions of dollars, to a much higher standard??

          Nvidia could be better at open-sourcing their stuff. But they don’t. Blame them, not GPL.

        • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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          It’s not going to effect you. No distro is going to ship a kernel that doesn’t work with the Nvidia driver, besides maybe some rolling ones, in which case you can just use the LTS kernel. This is drama between Nvidia and the rest of the kernel maintainers, and Nvidia will update their driver to deal with it, as they have done in the past.

          Shitting on people who care about FOSS because they don’t want to see massive companies get away with blatant copyright infringement is crazy.

          • BaconIsAVeg@lemmy.ml
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            3D rendering software using iRay. I’ve started trying to learn Blender, but I’ve still got thousands spent on assets and hardware which means I’m not going to run out tomorrow and pickup a new card. It all works fine under Wine, but the amount of Nvidia hate on here is just tiring.

            • Zucca@sopuli.xyz
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              So you use iRay as the rendering engine for Blender? And (I’m assuming a lot here) iRay doesn’t use CUDA, OpenCL etc, but straight talks to the GPU via graphics drivers, thus having hardware depency for nvidia GPU?

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        Remind me of those who supports Red Hat for blocking sources and telling those who downstreams “code thief with no contribution to open source” lol.

        • LeFantome@programming.dev
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          I did not “support” Red Hat but I was pretty vocally in opposition to most of the reaction to it. I found the willful inaccuracy and even flagrant dishonestly from the “community” close to disgusting at times. So, you may be including people like me in your comment.

          In this case, it seems very straight-forward that NVIDIA is in the wrong. Not just ethically but legally as well.

          My own read is that some of the people slamming Red Hat are defending NVIDIA now. Coming away from that experience, I the over-arching principle that many adhere to most is simply whatever is best for them. Red Hat was wrong because people felt entitled to something. The kernel devs are wrong ( and NVIDIA right ) because people feel entitled to something.

    • RickyRigatoni@lemmy.ml
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      I don’t understand the small minority of commenters there defending a la soulless corp Nvidia, who is blatantly in the wrong here.

      They think they’re gonna get a free 4090 in the mail any day now.

    • lckdscl [they/them]@whiskers.bim.boats
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      Agree with your analysis, just pointing out that Phoronix forums have always been like this, or at least the tendency is to insult each other. Their culture is more toxic than any other Linux forums I’ve seen, maybe besides /g/.

    • 7u5k3n@lemmy.world
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      I need to upgrade my computer soon… this crap makes me not want to go Nvidia again. (Running a looooong in the tooth 1060.)

      • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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        Go ahead, I just ordered a new build specifically with a non-Nvidia card for the same reasons.

      • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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        The new 150$ range Amd cards are enticing. I could bring new life into my rx5500 htpc.

    • UnculturedSwine@lemmy.world
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      Thanks for the ELI5. I read the article but had a hard time parsing the significance other than Nvidia proprietary drivers bad

    • UltraFiestaMango@lemmy.ml
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      But why is it a problem if they call on parts of the kernal they shouldn’t? is it just a privacy concern, does it also impact performance? i don’t understand

      • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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        As the commenter stated, it is a copyright issue. Nvidia is not allowed to use this code in a proprietary driver.

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            If they want to use that code legally they should make their code GPL but i doubt there proprietary code gets automatically overrules. I wish it did.

            I do wonder what would happen if someone would hack and leak Nvidia’s code under the defense that they thought Nvidia to be operating legally therefor assuming there code is GPL, I presume Nvidia would need to officially confess their crime as a legal defense that they never ment to open source their own code.

            • wim@lemmy.sdf.org
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              Free Software Foundation, Inc. Vs Cisco Systems Inc. disagrees. The FSF sued Linksys for violating the license for GCC, libc etc.

              And they were forced in court to release all their WRT stuff under GPL, which is how OpenWRT got its start.

              • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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                Just the idea of nvidia being forced to open source there drivers makes me drool in sweet winners justice.

                But realistically, Nvidia feels like one of the more powerful corporations around do we stand a chance? I do hope FSF tries regardless.

                • wim@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  Linksys was part of Cisco. They had veryy deep pockets, but the FSF & SFC prevailed regardless.

                  I doubt the FSF or SFC will go after Nvidia, this has been a long standing issue and I haven’t heard about any lawsuits being brought because of it, even before Nvidia had more money than God.

              • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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                They weren’t forced to do it. They did it as part of a settlement. The outcome if they had gone to trial and lost could well have been different.

                (Also how do you even violate the license for gcc while making a router?)

            • deong@lemmy.world
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              There are lots of problems here. First, if you have to “hack” something to get the code, then it likely invalidates your own defense that you thought you were allowed to release it. Second, even if you can prove that nVidia knows that they should have to GPL their code, you still have no legal right to hack something to get it. If the hacking is illegal, then it’s illegal, even if it’s done to enable an otherwise legal activity.

        • planish@sh.itjust.works
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          I don’t see how the copyright mechanism works here. The GPL has rules about linking to GPL code, enforced by the notion that the linked binary is a protected derivative work. Going and finding out where in memory some functions are and jumping to them is not going to create a derivative work.

          The Linux devs just have a rule about who they want to call these symbols and are trying to enforce it themselves.

        • ahornsirup@artemis.camp
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          Which they technically didn’t. I’m sure Nvidia has a legal team that vetted their solution, they certainly have the money for it. At this point the “protection” against the proprietary driver is just anti-consumer.

          • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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            And I’m sure Nvidia’s legal team knows that Linux is not going to take them to court for this because it isn’t worth it. Nvidia absolutely did violate the GPL, but they have the funds to avoid any legal trouble, hence why Linux goes this other router. I don’t see how this is anti-consumer, it will not significantly effect the consumer. Nvidia will simply have to update their driver like they did when these protections were first implemented.

      • patatahooligan@lemmy.world
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        It is copyright infringement. Nvidia (and everyone writing kernel modules) has to choose between:

        • using the GPL-covered parts of the kernel interface and sharing their own source code under the GPL (a free software license)
        • not using the GPL-covered parts of the kernel interface

        Remember that the kernel is maintained by volunteers and by engineers funded by/working for many companies, including Nvidia’s direct competitors, and Nvidia is worth billions of dollars. Nvidia is incredibly obnoxious to infringe on the kernel’s copyright. To me it is 100% the appropriate response to show them zero tolerance for their copyright infringement.

        • fubo@lemmy.world
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          To expand a bit:

          The GPL-only symbols restriction is there for the benefit of proprietary developers. It ensures that their work doesn’t become a “derivative work” of the kernel’s internals, by sticking to using only the published and documented interfaces. Using published APIs doesn’t make your work a legally derivative work of the system behind those APIs (i.e. the kernel).

          If your code needs to mess around in the kernel internals, it is very likely a derivative work of the kernel; which means you need the permission of the kernel authors if you want to publish that code legally.

          The only terms under which the kernel authors grant that permission are the terms of the GPL.

          By circumventing the GPL-only symbols restriction, Nvidia is demonstrating that their driver code needs to mess with kernel internals, not just the published APIs. And that means that it probably is a derivative work of the kernel. Which, in turn, means that those drivers must be published under the GPL in order to avoid violating the kernel copyrights.

          Basically: Linus drew a line in the sand and said “As long as you don’t step over this line, you’re not pirating the kernel by releasing proprietary drivers.” And Nvidia stepped over that line.

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        Because the license for the patents that the Linux kernel is utilizing says that the code utilizing those patents must be open source. So therefore Nvidia is accessing those parts of the kernel illegally and against the license the Linux Foundation has. The Linux Foundation could lose the rights to use those patents if they’re not respecting the license.

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      If it’s a dmca violation then sue them. Do not create software “defenses” and do not make my computer experience worse.

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        With what money are they supposed to fight the multi billion dollar mega corpo exactly with dozens of lawyers??

        Also, if they fight this in court then that would mean less money for development thus making your experience even worse….

        • bankimu@lemm.ee
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          Well then don’t! Revenge code which makes it worse for people who actually use Linux isn’t a way to do this.

          • Solar Bear@slrpnk.net
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            Nvidia shipping proprietary code is what makes it worse for people who actually use Linux. They should open source their driver.

          • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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            Yeah just roll over and set a precedent for large companies to violate the kernel’s license! It’s so much easier!

    • knexcar@kbin.social
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      Because we don’t care about open source drama, we want an operating system that just works™ with our existing graphics cards and doesn’t get in the way of gaming.

      • fluxion@lemmy.world
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        Then let Nvidia deal with this drama of their own making. Linux works as intended.

          • fluxion@lemmy.world
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            The user experience is based around audited, reviewed, open source software. Everything from the licenses, distro policies, and kernel maintainership is based around that model and it has benefitted users far more than if Linux was a mess binary blobs that do not interoperate with each other in a well-defined and transparent manner.

            AMD and Intel both manage just fine, along with hundreds of other companies supporting hundreds of other pieces of hardware on top of dozens of different CPU architectures. If Nvidia insists on being a special snowflake about this then it is 100% their problem.

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        From a legal perspective, nvidia has been illegally bypassing a software license by exploiting a loophole. Linux devs fixed the loophole.

        I don’t see why I would be annoyed at Linux devs in these circumstances.

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        If that is the case, then you should be very happy to leave Linux for a proprietary OS that Nvidia works on and properly supports.

      • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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        It’s not going to effect 99% of users. Nvidia will update it as they have in the past. The large majority of distros use stable kernels by default, and it will be fixed before this makes it to one. You’re getting upset over something completely irrelevant to you.

        • knexcar@kbin.social
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          That’s a fair point, I’m not super familiar with how the Linux dev cycle works beyond “I download Mint or Ubuntu because I don’t feel like shelling out for Windows 10”.

          • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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            Distros like Ubuntu and Debian (and by extension Mint) will have their own kernel and driver packages. They will test to ensure that the package combinations they are shipping will work. I am certain they would not ship and update without functional nvidia drivers. Nvidia will most likely update their driver to function with these new protection before this change reaches a stable kernel anyways.

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            Just so we’re clear, you don’t feel like shelling for Microsoft but are okay to do so for NVIDIA? Don’t get me wrong, I also want a system that just works and I had never had a problem with using proprietary drivers, but if this doesn’t get “fixed” by the time that kernel becomes stable I’m switching to open source rather than keep an outdated kernel version, and I’m switching to AMD asap. Over a decade ago I switched to NVIDIA for a similar reason, and I discovered back then that it’s just not worth fighting against a proprietary driver that doesn’t co-operate with the system.

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              I’m still rocking the Windows 10 education license I got for “free” through college, but once Microsoft deprecates it I’ll consider switching to Linux. I have a Nvida card I got a long time ago, and I’d prefer to keep using it if possible. I haven’t looked into upgrading yet but when I do I’ve got to shell out no matter what brand I pick.

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                Depending on the card and your use case the open source drivers might be good enough, although more modern NVIDIA cards are clock locked to the proprietary driver. Nevertheless it’s almost a guarantee that NVIDIA will do something before this kernel goes live for any major distro.

                In short NVIDIA has been a crappy company in Linux support unfortunately until very recently they were the least worse option, but now with all of the other manufacturers open sourcing their drivers and not locking their GPUs NVIDIA is less and less appealing so the kernel developers can start to push back against their bullshit.

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        This thing exists.

        But you have to pay for it.

        Otherwise you might have to deal with the wishes of the people you aren’t paying.

      • Solar Bear@slrpnk.net
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        Okay, then continue not caring as the people who do take care of things. Don’t worry your pretty little head about it.

  • intelati@programming.dev
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    Riddle me this, why is there such a thing as proprietary drivers for anything? Especially consumer facing products like this?

    Don’t you want anyone and anything using your product in any situation? Help me understand NVIDIA’s bit with this?

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      Driver code might expose some underlying secret sauce they’re using in the hardware. That’s the justification they always used to give, at any rate. At this point, though, it’s probably some code they’ve inherited from an acquisition that has a bunch of legal encumbrance stopping it from being open sources.

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      Likely a combination of 4 things:

      1. They have third party firmware in their blobs that they are under NDA regarding the source code.

      2. They believe in the source code is a large part of their success and don’t want to reveal it.

      3. They believe giving out the source code will allow many inferior variants of the software, impacting their brand.

      4. Control; the more source code they have in mesa the more of their code can be rejected by mesa. Keeping their stuff as blobs allows them to put in whatever hacks they want.

      • uis@lemmy.world
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        1. They can open their code without merging into mesa

        2. They don’t want you to use “old” GPUs

          • uis@lemmy.world
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            1. Getting to use GPL-only symbols
            2. Still much easier for distros
            3. Example of drivers

            And again we are talling about code not being rejected as main goal.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      I assume nVidia have licensed other code that they don’t have the rights to distribute the source code for.

      I get what the GPL fans want here, but it’s just going to lead to a gimped driver, no driver, or an even larger shim between the open and closed source bits. The Linux market is too small for nVidia to care.

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        The Linux market is too small for nVidia to care.

        The Linux gaming market is too small for Nvidia to care, but the GPU computing market isn’t.

        • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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          So we can add “use an older kernel” and “use a modified kernel with that protection removed” to the list of options.

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            Using an older kernel isn’t a long-term solution. And according to the kernel devs, either using and older kernel in that way or modifying the kernel to remove these protections still violates the license even if it bypasses the technical protections.

            (I’m guessing Nvidia will keep shimming and rely on either not being sued or winning the lawsuit.)

          • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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            1 year ago

            As long as they get support for it. Big corps don’t buy anything without 7 layers of scapegoats to point at.

      • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        The Linux market is massive for Nvidia. Nobody is using Windows for ML and everybody is using Nvidia for ML.

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              Yes, but you don’t need graphical drivers to do ML on a GPU, you just need the part of the drivers that lets you do ML. Accelerated graphics are almost completely unrelated. Nvidia can stop offering graphics drivers while still ofering ML drivers and still make a very good living.

              Even if they continue offering graphics drivers they don’t have to offer them for free. Their main clients are people who do professional graphical and video editing, who can drop hefty sums on driver licensing because they already pay a lot for the hardware and support. Gamers are a tiny amount of their revenue, and over 90% of that tiny revenue is Windows anyway.

              At this point Nvidia can snap their fingers and discontinue all their support for the consumer market just like that and won’t even feel it. The only reason they bother with free Windows graphics is that Windows gamers still generate a non-negligible amount of revenue by buying the overpriced desktop cards, and the only reason they bother with Linux graphics drivers is because it’s free beta testing. The Linux desktop market is a ridiculously tiny population in terms of gamers, but it’s a sizable population in terms of QA.

              • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                Yes but this article is talking about the entire nvidia kernel driver… Why are you assuming this doesn’t apply to the parts necessary for ML?

                • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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                  The top level comment in this thread is talking about “consumer facing products”. ML is not a mainstream consumer use of Nvidia drivers. Most of the people who got a bee in their bonnet about Nvidia drivers not being open source are desktop users interested in the graphics drivers.

                  Either way, I don’t understand the issue. If people don’t like the fact Nvidia has proprietary drivers they can choose not to buy their hardware. To buy their hardware and then be upset about it makes no sense.

                  Same for the kernel developers, they either want proprietary drivers to work with Linux or not. If they don’t they can give Nvidia the finger outright instead of pussyfooting around – but Nvidia is not the only one with proprietary drivers and I think we all know how quickly Linux would go the way of the dodo if it didn’t support proprietary stuff.

                  This whole topic has always been rife with posturing, entitlement and hypocrisy. People love to enjoy all the benefits from Nvidia hardware while bitching about the drivers. You can’t force a company to use open source. Take it or leave it.

                  It also a red herring. People love to point to AMD as a counter-example, but are AMD drivers so much better? They’re open source but you can’t write AMD’s drivers for them, and AMD’s people are slow to release them and to fix bugs so at the end of the day it’s the exact same thing as far as I am concerned as a user.

          • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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            1 year ago

            Life’s too short to do ML on a CPU. In some cases literally. You can’t do any reasonable ML without a GPU. And you need drivers for that.

      • You999@sh.itjust.works
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        The Linux community is literally Nvidia’s biggest market. The current Linux market share in data centers is currently estimated to be 77%.

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          And how many of those plans use GPU rendering?

          Come on…

          There’s obviously use cases for Nvidia on Linux but Linux desktop gamers aren’t even a blip on the radar. The reason Nvidia bothers to release free Linux drivers is for public beta testing not for the revenue.

          • Aki@lemmy.world
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            Well, gaming as a whole is likely just a blip to Nvidia nowadays. It doesn’t make them money anymore like it used to, data center is where most of the money flows in. It’s just that we’ll buy anything Nvidia sells so we’re basically guinea pigs for their public beta testing.

            • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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              It’s honestly amazing to me that some Linux gamers don’t understand how lucky we are and can act so… entitled I guess is the word? We live in a golden age of gaming on Linux but that age is entirely dependent on the whims of several companies. Nvidia can discontinue their free Linux driver at any time with almost zero impact to them but extremely heavy disruption to the Linux desktop, which is 80% Nvidia. Microsoft can decide to force all game developers to develop for their new API going forward and sub-sum PC gaming into their console operation, relegating Linux forever to retro boxes. Valve can turn to the dark side and sell out to any of the vultures circling it.

              • msage@programming.dev
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                How in the hell is being a customer mistaken for entitled?

                “Corps can fuck you over” - but they always do, and always will.

                Fortunately they also ‘suck’ at development, since even Xbox is nowadays using same CPU architecture as desktops, so good luck locking that in. And it’s not even like we don’t emulate every other architecture that’s popular enough.

                Also dunno why you left out AMD, they are doing a much better things for Linux than Nvidia.

                Valve is the main one, and god knows what will happen once Gaben quits, though Valve always hated MS and tried to remove their dependency of then for years for their own benefit. But let’s not pretend Nvidia or Microsoft can just decide to remove Linux gaming at whim, as that’s just not true.

              • Aki@lemmy.world
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                Yeah as if Nvidia never benefited a lot from open-source. So Vulkan isn’t open-source, who knows? Maybe go back to the days of fragmentation, kill portability.

                You’re acting as if Nvidia, Microsoft, and Valve are related. Good luck to Microsoft making a new proprietary API besides DirectX, an already proprietary API. It would only show they haven’t learned anything from UWP. And Valve has always contributed to open-source because they don’t want to depend on Windows. You don’t recognize Steam Deck and SteamOS 3? You haven’t been here long enough to recognize LunarG.

                If Nvidia decides to be hostile or selfish, nobody cares? Can’t we be wary of being exploited by companies?

                Just say when you’re shilling, don’t spread misinformation with your own made up scenarios.

      • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        All ml, ai, hpc is done on Linux. They are getting a lot of money because of the hype.

        They need Linux drivers. No way hpc can be done on windows. But it can be done on amd

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          They don’t have to offer Linux drivers for free to the general public though. Ask yourself why they do that.

          • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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            The problem is not mine. Is theirs. They want to use functionality written by others with certain requirements (i.e. that using that code requires disclosing the source code).

            If they are not happy with that, that’s fine. They shouldn’t use those functionalities.

            Problem is that they depends on Linux kernel for their biggest business (data centers). If they don’t support linux, market will shift to amd. As ML user, I am absolutely fine. I can use amd for our gpu cluster. I absolutely cannot use a non linux OS.

            That’s their problem, not linux maintainers’ problem

      • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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        With GPUs being used for AI stuff and all sane people using Linux for servers, no, Linux market isn’t small at all for Nvidia.

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        That’s all I see happening too. The Nvidia Linux drivers will just get worse and not solve anything.

        It’s already a huge pain in the ass to use the proprietary drivers, the open source ones barely work as is.

      • uis@lemmy.world
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        The Linux market is too small for nVidia to care

        I’ll fix it for you: “The Linux gaming market”

        Linux AI market is their bread, butter and red caviar. Shim itself is enough proof they care.

  • Carlos Solís@communities.azkware.net
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    And that’s why I’m happy to see that the lock on modifying the Nvidia BIOS for their old graphics cards has finally been decrypted. That means that Nouveau will have a much easier route to make their open-source drivers work properly on the 10xx and 20xx cards, so we don’t have to rely on the tainted crumbs that Nvidia offered here. (Then again, I eventually moved to a 6600 specifically to no longer have to deal with this kind of shenanigans)

    • ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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      Man, that would be so nice. I forgot actually for a while that I was using Nouveau after I switched cause nvidia-dkms wouldn’t let me boot (1050ti). The only thing that reminds me is game performance. Wayland is great though.

  • AceFour@lemmy.world
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    Perfect timing buying an AMD card yesterday to replace my old NVidia. Installed today, works like a champ. Issue resolved

    • jack@sh.itjust.works
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      I’ve had a mixed experience with my newer AMD card, and that’s being charitable.

      • Psy-Q@feddit.ch
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        1 year ago

        What were some of the positives and negatives? Me personally, I have an RDNA2 card and got bitten by the gamma being too dark on hardware cursors (now resolved) and memory clock stuck at 1 GHz with some refresh rates (workaround is not to use refresh above ~144 Hz).

        • jack@sh.itjust.works
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          I have an RDNA3 card (upgraded from a 1080) and am running a multi-boot triple-head setup with mixed refresh rates (60, 144).

          Pros: most things work and work well. Installation of the physical card went without a hitch and it was relatively simple to install the drivers. No issues with web video, streaming, video encoding, or standard use.

          Cons: mesa, amdgpu, and Windows drivers are all lacking significant features - I am still unable to reliably control fan curves/speeds, clock speeds, etc. FreeSync is unusable as well. I have also been experiencing regular crashes on certain games (BG3, Apex Legends, etc.) and support has been nonexistent, despite similar complaints from other users. When the card does crash, it usually results in a ring timeout and an accompanied total session crash. AMD does not seem to be responsive to these issues in either their official forum or any other space where people are lodging complaints.

          The hardware seems fine; the drivers are the main issue. If I had to do it over again, I’d hold my nose and buy NVIDIA.

          EDIT: regarding the cursor issue, I’ve had to switch to a software cursor on Linux. The hardware cursor wasn’t showing up at all.

          Regarding game-specific issues, it seems a lot of problems stem from either a greedy low power mode or DirectX issues. I’ve had to set udev rules to alleviate some of my issues, but it hasn’t solved everything.

          EDIT 2: For anyone who comes across this post, it seems like the vast majority of the crashes on linux have been resolved as of kernel 6.7. Still lacking fine-grained control over fans/clocks, but stability seems much improved.

          • Molecular0079@lemmy.world
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            The ring issues are killing me right now on my Radeon 680M. This isn’t brought up enough when people talk about using AMD on Linux.

            Odd, Freesync should work for you though? What’s the issue you’re experiencing?

            • Cornelius@lemmy.ml
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              Agreed, AMD is not perfect, it’s still an arguably better experience than Nvidia, but it’s still not great at times

              • Molecular0079@lemmy.world
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                I don’t really see the better experience to be honest. Sure, AMD is a lot better on laptops, but on desktops I still prefer Nvidia. DLSS, raytracing, Optix, CUDA are all killer features that I need that AMD doesn’t really have an answer for. Sure Wayland is great, but it doesn’t outweigh the disadvantages of not having those technologies.

                Meanwhile both my AMD GPUs (Vega 64 and Radeon 680M) have been crash happy with gfx timeouts and ring0 errors.

            • jack@sh.itjust.works
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              It was inconsistently causing gamma flickering with certain fullscreen applications. I haven’t seen it since disabling it on my monitor.

              • juipeltje@lemmy.world
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                Are you using wayland by any chance? Freesync was also causing flickering when i was trying out wayland recently, so i guess i’ll be staying on xorg lol.

        • hschen@sopuli.xyz
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          I had an rx480 that worked fantasic until a firmware update made it start freezing my pc in games after suspend, solution was to rollback that package to an older one or never use suspend. I currently have a 6650xt and that just crashes whenever it wants to sometimes, works fine for a few months then decides to freeze my whole pc, playing bg3 atm it froze on me like 3 times already

          • Psy-Q@feddit.ch
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            Ah, I just upgraded from RX580 to 6600XT and haven’t had any freezes so far. On RX580 I sometimes had games that managed to freeze the system complete with random pixel noise and VRAM fragments shown on screen for seconds before it rebooted, but that was a long time back and only on bleeding-edge Mesa and Proton Experimental so my own fault.

            Mesa 22 and 23 have been great so far. Maybe the firmware got more stable as well (I’m on Debian). I’d definitely recommend an RDNA2 card over any Nvidia today despite some of these hiccups.

            The GTX 1070 in my other machine has given me more headaches (kernel modules not compatible with newer kernels, random Vulkan issues resulting in broken shaders showing nonsense like sparkles or black areas, etc.).

            • hschen@sopuli.xyz
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              My rx 480 worked way better in terms of not crashing, it did have graphical glitches in games but i guessed thats down to using Wine. Im also using Arch so maybe that in combination with the 6650 is making it more unstable, i gotta revert to using LTS kernel every few months to stop my system crashing randomly

            • hschen@sopuli.xyz
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              I dont have the error message atm unfortunately cause to have more disk space i set my system to delete the logs quite often (ill probably revert this now as ive got way more space), but the one part i do have is this “GCVM_L2_PROTECTION_FAULT_STATUS” , thats 95% of the times the error that shows up whenever my pc freezes

              I looked it up and theres a bunch of mesa bugtracker issues listing the same error but honestly gpu driver stuff is so complex who knows whats really going on. baldurs gate 3 has crashed my whole system 3 times in 20-30 hours played, but except for that this past month ive also started getting blackscreens waking up from suspend sometimes on the non LTS kernel, luckily LTS fixes that for now, but not baldurs gate. The past year i’ve had this gpu theres been like 5 times where an update made the amd drivers unstable and ive had to change back to the LTS kernel to resolve it, maybe thats cause im using arch and stuff is more bleeding edge, but i havent had this many issues on my rx 480

          • jack@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I’ve had over twenty crashes in BG3 at this point. Crashing soeems to be more prevalent in certain areas of the game - Grymforge, especially.

            • hschen@sopuli.xyz
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              Is your entire system crashing?, for me i have to do a hard reboot once it happens. if it gets too bad i can always play the game in a windows VM as im playing with a friend and crashing all the time would be annoying

              • jack@sh.itjust.works
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                On Linux it’s usually just X that completely crashes and I get kicked back to login, but I’ve had more than one hard crash.

                Windows will usually just crash to desktop and close any hardware-accelerated applications. Have also had the odd hard crash here.

        • shmanio@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          So the cursor really was darker! It seemed that way after switching to a new laptop, but I wasn’t sure.

      • Cornelius@lemmy.ml
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        There’s been some oddball nasty issues with Mesa recently. SteamVR causing the driver to crash (and the display just won’t come back :/) H265 encoding causing driver crashing, just weird stuff. Simple things like Wayland work great, but if you have even a slightly unique workload you may run into major issues

        • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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          I’ve had lost of issues with SteamVR too but not with anything else. I suspect those issues are actually SteamVR’s fault tho because it’s pretty buggy on Linux in general.

          • Cornelius@lemmy.ml
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            Nah, straight up driver crashes are on Mesa’s side, not SteamVR’s. No userland software should be able to permanently bring down your driver.

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    1 year ago

    a) Good for them

    b) How long before NVIDIA throws up their hands at the whole thing and does their own Linux distro + pushes all their cloud AI customers to use it? (it doesn’t seem like they’re ever going to be shamed / coerced into actually open-sourcing their driver)

    • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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      Would having their own distro even help? It seems like working around this would require forking from Linux at a lower level, and even that would only circumvent technical (rather than copyright) barriers.

      • planish@sh.itjust.works
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        They can probably just drop some kernel packages in their driver PPAs or whatever. You don’t need to fork the whole distro to customize the kernel. But it will still be a huge pain.

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        They can beef of linux support of freebsd a little and do some other help to the desktop experience there. Freebsd has always been more pragmatic, and for most uses of an os you can’t tell a real world difference. (pkg instead of apt, and other such differences are minor)

        • deong@lemmy.world
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          The userland differences are not too great, but I would assume a kernel module as significant as a modern GPU driver is pretty deeply tied to Linux’s kernel internals.

          • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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            Nvidia maintains a driver for FreeBSD already, same version as Linux and everything. IIRC the closed-source portion is “unified” and they just build the interface for whatever OS.

            The “Linux support” piece is on the application side.

    • Laser@feddit.de
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      There’s an interesting discussion about the whole topic on the Phoronix forums about this. Some people claim that removing them and Nvidia’s current behavior is a DMCA violation:

      1. The kernel includes IP only licensed under GPLv2.
      2. While a module linked against the kernel isn’t necessarily a derived work which in turn would need to be licensed GPLv2 as well, there are specific interfaces that are meant for internal use and by their very nature would make your work derived if using them. These are the interfaces marked EXPORT_GPL_ONLY.
      3. Using these interfaces with a module not licensed GPLv2, you taint the kernel and violate the licensing.
      4. Removing the check, you aren’t necessarily yet violating GPLv2, but you’re removing a technical protection measure which is a violation of the DMCA.

      It also raises the question why you’d remove checks that only prevent a possible GPLv2 violation if you’re not violating GPLv2 anyways as Nvidia claims.

      • poweruser@lemmy.sdf.org
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        you aren’t necessarily yet violating GPLv2, but you’re removing a technical protection measure which is a violation of the DMCA.

        Isn’t overcoming a technical limit a violation itself? That’s what made DeCSS illegal. They didn’t have to prove anyone was actually copying DVDs with it, just that DeCSS could allow you to copy a DVD

        • yum13241@lemm.ee
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          Yes, even if it’s a dialog box with only a “No” button, despite how easy it would be to get it to return a different value.

          DISCLAIMER: IANAL, this is not legal advice.

    • Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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      B) can’t happen because of gpl. Even if it could, not many customers will move to an nvidia distro. ML people need good distros and good drivers.

      If a hypothetical nvidia distro would speed up training by 10% but cause drop of productivity of humans of as small as 5%, no many will “buy” it. We can throw more hardware, people are the bottleneck nowadays

    • jack@sh.itjust.works
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      They already provide custom images for their Jetson modules, I think more NVIDIA distros are likely to happen one way or another.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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      Yeah they’d do that with a card that looks like it’s from 2003 with those classic dual DVI ports. Stole it right out of some kid’s Quake 3 box. Try that with a 4090.

  • skymtf@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    What ever happened to the source code nvidia did release. Was it released in such a way to where it is not helpful?

      • Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml
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        couldnt they do the thing where one team analyzes the leaked code and documents functions.

        and a nother, clean room team, creates independent fresh code to achieve the same results as the original?

        I mean, clean room activity like that has a strong precedent, going back to EA vs Sega at least. where EA stole a sega genesis dev kit, had one team document the functions, had another team independently create code to execute those functions,and made their own dev kid and put out non-approved sega carts (which is why the EA sega carts were taller and had the yellow plastic tag)

        Sega sued and EA won due the clean room engineering and sega and EA came to some kind of sweetheart deal/comrpromise/settlement.

      • WorseDoughnut 🍩@lemdro.id
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        I don’t think they meant the hacked and released source code, I think they meant the kernel modules that Nvidia actually opensourced in may of '22

          • monobot@lemmy.ml
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            You are correct, it while it was technically driver for kernel, meaning it is using kernel driver api, it was not driver for graphic card. Just a bit different way to load binary blob.

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      That’s only for never generation cards, from 20xx series upwards I think.
      But there’s still the proprietary driver for everything before that, including 1080 and such.

    • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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      I belive the NVK work is where that headed. The released code wasn’t up to snuff for true kernel intergration on it own, but offered a lot of insights for devs working on the problem.

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    Lousy criminals. NVIDIA, I mean. If I wrote code like that, I’d be dragged in front of a judge and made to answer for breaking the DMCA. But if you’re a big, rich company, the government won’t touch you.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The Linux 6.6 modules infrastructure is changing to better protect against the illicit behavior of NVIDIA’s proprietary kernel driver.

    Most notable with the modules update is a change that better builds up the defenses against NVIDIA’s proprietary kernel driver from using GPL-only symbols.

    Given that symbol_get was only ever intended for tightly cooperating modules using very internal symbols it is logical to restrict it to being used on EXPORY_SYMBOL_GPL and prevent nvidia from costly DMCA circumvention of access controls lawsuits.

    Luis Chamberlain further added in today’s pull request: "Christoph Hellwig’s symbol_get() fix to Nvidia’s efforts to circumvent the protection he put in place in year 2020 to prevent proprietary modules from using GPL only symbols, and also ensuring proprietary modules which export symbols grandfather their taint.

    The circumvention tactic used by Nvidia was to use symbol_get() to purposely swift through proprietary module symbols and completley bypass our traditional EXPORT_SYMBOL*() annotations and community agreed upon restrictions."

    Back in 2020 when the original defense was added, NVIDIA recommended avoiding the Linux 5.9 for the time being.


    The original article contains 476 words, the summary contains 174 words. Saved 63%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • Madex@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    So what does that mean for me on Arch, how will it affect me?

    ELI5?

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      I don’t use arch but I would guess you should avoid kernel 6.6 if you are using an nvidia card until we get more info about that.

  • uis@lemmy.world
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    It seems they just fixed symbol_get() so GPL-only symbols are avaliable to GPL driver

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    1 year ago

    Phoronix thinks I’m using ad blocker. In fact I’m not. I don’t have any kind of adblocker on my network… *sigh*

        • ffhein@lemmy.world
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          I believe the standard amount of blocking in Firefox is:

          • Social media trackers
          • Cross-site cookies in all windows
          • Tracking content in Private Windows
          • Cryptominers
          • Fingerprinters

          Since the line between “ads” and “tracking everything people do on the internet” has been pretty blurred, perhaps the anti-adblock checker triggers on any of those.

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    Can someone ELI5 what this is about? Why does Nvidia wants to access parts if the Linux kernel and why are linux kernel maintainers against it? Wouldn’t it be good if Nvidia uses more open-source stuff?

    • SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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      Open source software is given with specific licenses. The Linux kernel is made of many smaller open-source components that each can have their own license. Some of the licenses used disallow the partial or full usage of the licensed software or components in proprietary settings, or in general given usage for specific cases only (in this case, the Nvidia driver using components they are not licensed to use.).

  • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    I get why the Linux folks are doing this, but I don’t expect that it will make them popular with anyone who actually uses Nvidia drivers on Linux (which is a lot of people). I’m sure that my employer will choose up-to-date Nvidia drivers over up-to-date versions of the kernel, at least in the short term. In the long term it probably won’t be an issue since Nvidia will figure something out, but if it did become an issue then ultimately Nvidia driver support is non-negotiable for the company where I work.

    (No one cares what a small tech company does, but the big guys need Nvidia too so it should be possible to piggyback on whatever they do.)

    • withabeard@lemmy.world
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      don’t expect that it will make them popular with anyone who actually uses Nvidia drivers on Linux

      The group to be annoyed at are Nvidia. Plain and simple.

      • deong@lemmy.world
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        For most people, principle takes a backseat to pragmatics. If your livelihood is training ML models on thousands of nVidia cards or whatever, you care less about who to be mad at and more about not laying off your staff and shutting the doors. You can’t replace nVidia. You can replace the latest kernel.

        • withabeard@lemmy.world
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          If your livelihood depends on a company breaking the law, you’ve got other issues.

          Nvidia could choose to follow the law, their customers could choose to support them in that.

          Part of the reason you can’t replace Nvidia, is because they get ahead by breaking the law. This makes it harder to compete with them.

          Now you’re stuck with only Nvidia, and welcome to monopoly hell. A bit exaggerated I know, but it’s his it happens.

          • deong@lemmy.world
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            If your livelihood depends on a company breaking the law, you’ve got other issues.

            That’s a pretty naive view of the world. If I buy 50,000 Android devices to support my company’s field sales operation, I’m not going to collect them all and put them in a trash compactor just because Oracle decides to pick a copyright fight with Google. If you work for any large-ish company, your employer is probably engaged in dozens of active lawsuits right now. That’s just how the world works.

            • withabeard@lemmy.world
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              That’s just how the world works.

              And that’s kind of the discussion here.

              Some people are annoyed at the Linux Devs because “fuck it, everyone breaks the law and it doesn’t matter”. Some people are annoyed at Nvidia because they’d like to uphold or social contracts.

              In don’t think it’s naive to want to live in a world and support a society that supports the law. I do think we have bigger issues that people are happy with this behaviour and are actively defending it.

              • deong@lemmy.world
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                I’m not saying you shouldn’t want companies to obey the laws. I’m specifically responding to the idea of “if your business relies on companies breaking the law, you have bigger problems”. The idea that you’ll dramatically tear apart and rebuild your supply chain literally every week as one company or another is sued for something that doesn’t concern you is what’s naive. Even just looking at patents, every company that writes software is a time bomb, because there are hundreds of thousands of bullshit patents that cover extremely broad and obvious ideas. This can’t be your problem, or you’ll never actually get around to doing the thing your company does.

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        From my closed-source corporate perspective, Nvidia is trying to improve performance and the Linux kernel maintainers are trying to stop them. I don’t see why I would be annoyed at Nvidia in these circumstances.

        • odium@programming.dev
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          From a legal perspective, nvidia has been illegally bypassing a software license by exploiting a loophole. Linux devs fixed the loophole.

          I don’t see why I would be annoyed at Linux devs in these circumstances.

          • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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            I did say that I get why the Linux folks are doing this. The problem is that Nvidia drivers that obey these restrictions and as a result have significantly worse performance than Nvidia drivers on other operating systems aren’t the solution either. Anyone who does serious GPU computing will still have to switch away from Linux.

            (IMO Nvidia would be insane to open-source their drivers. Like sue-corporate-officers-for-breach-of-duty level insane. So they can’t do more than what they’re already doing: coming up with workarounds.)

            • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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              AMD’s doing pretty well with their open source drivers, I suppose its up to nvidia if they want to offer a worse product simply so they can keep as much profits as possible.

              But leveraging other peoples work via open source code, to improve their product - then still not donating nor contributing back to the source? Not only illegal but scummy as hell.

              We may not be as offended as the kernel devs, but theyre the ones whos work is being stolen, so I wouldn’t be so quick to tell them what to do

                • BURN@lemmy.world
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                  No idea why you’re getting downvoted. Outside of the increasingly small desktop gpu market AMD is completely irrelevant in professional GPU use. They’re not even remotely close to being a competitor

              • Ulu-Mulu-no-die@lemm.ee
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                Is it possible that by revealing their drivers they would also reveal something about their industry designs?

                I mean, just building the hardware and letting the community do all the work on drivers for free would be better, if they don’t do it there must be a valid reason I think.

                • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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                  I mean, they make money of selling the hardware from what I understand. Maybe I’m misunderstanding, and that’s the problem. Maybe they make money off the driver’s too.

                • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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                  Their drivers were already leaked, any secrets they were trying to hide are out in the wild, so that point is moot.

              • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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                Of course I can’t know for sure because the driver is closed-source, but I’d bet that a lot of what makes Nvidia hardware work fast is actually in the driver rather than the hardware itself. Plus, a proprietary driver lets them lock people in to buying their hardware. The company where I work doesn’t use Nvidia software because it buys Nvidia GPUs. It buys Nvidia GPUs because it uses Nvidia software.

                • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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                  I don’t believe that even for a second. Software doesn’t make hardware run faster. It can certainly slow it down. But it doesn’t make it run better.

                • MazonnaCara89@lemmy.ml
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                  Oh yes sure, the software make nvidia gpu better, something that probably most of the hundred if not thousand of contributor to the mesa driver and in the list we have amd, intel, collabora, redhat, nouveau, google, valve and many others didn’t see, they were the only one in the entire silicon valley to find this secret sauce to make gpus better with software.

        • Nucelar@kbin.social
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          You can always make your own kernel and enforce whatever stupid laws you want on it then.

        • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          From a corporate perspective you should be VERY worried about this, GPL is infectious, so if NVIDIA drivers are using GPL only parts of the kernel they become GPL, and because NVIDIA doesn’t offer GPL only endpoint the license applies to everything, meaning that if your company is using the NVIDIA driver in any way shape or form anything you produce becomes GPL as well. NVIDIA has enough lawyers to delay the enforcing of this, which is why they’ll never get sued, does YOUR company has enough lawyers to keep FSF at bay? If not you should be very annoyed at NVIDIA for not providing a license term for their GPL driver (and legally their driver IS GPL if it uses those endpoints).

          And here’s the thing, for a home user not updating the kernel is good enough, for a company it’s not because this is a bug fix, not new implementation, NVIDIA is already in breach of license.

        • withabeard@lemmy.world
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          Nvidia could choose to improve performance using non-illegal tactics.

          They haven’t.

          I’m happy to live in a society wherev we support those upholding the law.

    • Ulu-Mulu-no-die@lemm.ee
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      I think end users wouldn’t care either, they probably wouldn’t even understand what’s actually happening, they’ll only notice performance degrading (if this is the case) and blame Linux for it.

      That’s not to say this shouldn’t be done, I just wish there was better control on license violations and those doing it on purpose, like Nvidia in this case, would be seriously punished to make them think twice next time.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      I use Nvidia drivers on Linux and fully support it. You know what else is non-negotiable? Linux support for Nvidia. Huge chunk of their money comes from people using their GPUs on Linux for machine learning. And while they can use older kernels for now (because they’re still supported), they won’t be able to forever. And corporates will want a supported OS with their Nvidia card.

      • Laser@feddit.de
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        And while they can use older kernels for now (because they’re still supported), they won’t be able to forever.

        It might even happen that the change gets back ported upstream; that would mean that every supported kernel has the changes in place, regardless of version.

  • librechad@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Just installed the nvidia-driver for my 2080 SUPER and my system isn’t starting now. I’m using Debian 12.1 and after installing the driver, it crashes after entering in my password for my encrypted drive.

    I will load up a Live USB and see if I can fix the issue. Any help would be appreciated!