Ex windows user here. I really like my Linux installation, but I don’t know where the drivers are at, or if I should worry about it.

It feels great to have one less thing to worry about (I use an AMD GPU), but GPU drivers in Windows seem to have their own release cycle, fixing game compatibility and bugs, while in Linux it also feels like we have to wait for a next kernel release to get that fix.

Or maybe it’s mesa? I don’t really understand that.

TL;DR: where are the open source drivers at? Mesa or the kernel? And also, is the release cycle the same or close to Windows counterpart? Or it just doesn’t matter?

  • nottheengineer@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Refer to the other comment for where it is. The release cycle depends on your distro. If you use arch, you’ll always get the latest stuff as it releases. That’s the thing that makes arch a good choice for gaming.

    Other distros are generally more delayed or only release major versions that don’t break anything.

    For nvidia this means you have specialized distros created for the sole purpose of having a working nvidia driver that come in different versions because even the ‘stable’ versions aren’t very stable. With AMD, you basically don’t need to worry.

    • Perroboc@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Ok, I think I get it. But let’s say that AMD releases a windows driver with a fix for a new game. How much should I wait for that same fix to arrive in arch? Will it arrive as a new kernel? As a new mesa version? Or something else?

    • this_is_router@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      The second part is bonkers. Most distro ship with the non free Nvidia driver and work well with it. Shit starts hitting the fan if you try to use the setup from nvidias website, which is not a problem of any distro but a user error

      My Tipp: don’t use niche distros: arch, debian, fedora, mint…all of them work well with the non free Nvidia kernel module. For fedora you have to add an additional repository if I remember correctly but that’s it