While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register
- Former Nouveau driver lead joins NVIDIA and sent a massive patch set
- SteamOS 3.5.18 Preview released for Steam Deck
- Team Fortress 2 64bit support released, plus Vulkan for Linux via DXVK
- Free Stars: Children of Infinity coming to Linux after smashing Kickstarter goals
- Pick up some classics in the Good Old Games sale at GOG
- > See more over 30 days here
-
Atari revives Infogrames and acquires Totally Reliable …
- Sslaxx -
Valve makes paid 'Advanced Access' a clear feature on S…
- Kirby -
Fedora Linux 40 is officially out now
- Dorrit -
Minecraft v1.20.5 the Armored Paws drop update is live …
- Purple Library Guy -
Valve makes paid 'Advanced Access' a clear feature on S…
- Avehicle7887 - > See more comments
Latest Forum Posts
View PC info
______________
Just a reminder, I made this guide a while back which can be useful for some.
View PC info
Luckily, llvm developers provided these repositories with fresh nightly packages: http://apt.llvm.org
For Debian testing I used one for unstable, and it worked well. For instance, for building Mesa you can install:
llvm-7-dev
libclang-7-dev
Debian packages commonly give snapshot versions simple numbers like 7, while release versions use 6.0 and the like.
After you build Mesa and place it in your custom directory, it's also a good idea to extract .so files from the current libllvm-<ver> snapshot package and place it in the same directory. This way your bundle will be consistent until your next Mesa building.
View PC info
So far I'm using
--enable-llvm-shared-libs=no
I guess soon I'll need to switch to Meson anyway. Debian will need to catch up.
View PC info
View PC info
I already explained reasons why I don't want to install custom Mesa from repos - it replaces the default one. Of course I could go ahead and make my own Debian packages for custom installation, that don't interfere with default Mesa, but that's an extra step. May be I'll do that at some point.
View PC info
View PC info
View PC info
View PC info
View PC info
That can also depend on how destabilizing new libdrm is. I.e. if new libdrm is stable enough, it might be OK replace it globally. But it would be better to figure out how to do it in the same Mesa above is used, i.e. isolated usage.
I usually do that on mesa RC releases.
check it out.
https://build.opensuse.org/project/show/home:alvarex:branches:home:khnazile:video
you need llvm8 and some other packages from home:khnazile.