le9-patch
linux-tkg
le9-patch | linux-tkg | |
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18 | 147 | |
184 | 1,210 | |
- | 6.4% | |
1.8 | 9.1 | |
12 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Shell | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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le9-patch
- le9-patch prevents system freezes on low-end systems
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zram: swappiness, vfs_cache_pressure, page-cluster, dirty_ratio and dirty_background_ratio settings for gaming machines with HDD and low RAM?
Also, are you using a stock kernel? Try using this patchset https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch and more specifically set this
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Does Linux’s memory management suck?
This kernel patch work really well: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch/
- le9 / google mglru patch in pop os kernel
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The case of the programs that were launched with impossible command line options
Oh that’s a known problem. There are many patch sets floating around that fix it by triggering the OOM killer when the system is thrashing: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch
I’ve never ran into this specific problem back when I was daily driving desktop Linux, but I did run into 1000 similar ones that needed bandaid solutions. It’s death of a thousand cuts: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28490753
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Help me out here, why does Windows 10 handle my low memory situation better than Linux (so far)? How do I fix it?
I actually do use the Zen kernel already. If you are already using the zen kernel , make sure to use the latest one which has le9 patches , imho this patch can Improve user experience in tight memory situations. Check this https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch, saw many people praise this , but ymmv. Best of luck
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Moving Google Toward the Mainline
- Limit the amount of thrashing or protect some pages from being reclaimed. This has been proposed by Google first and several other people since then, but AFAIK it has never been implemented in the mainline kernel.
Regarding the latter solution, there is a patchset called le9-patch[1] that is included in some alternative Linux kernels and it should be relatively safe to use.
[1]: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch
- Is there a way to make EndeavourOS [XCFE] faster in a laptop with 2GB ram?
- I don't understand RAM resource management on Linux
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nohang: A sophisticated low memory handler for Linux
Patch i was talking about le9-patch. it's only a proof of concept with very rough edges, but consider it isn't written by an experienced kernel developer with deep knowledge of memory subsystem.
linux-tkg
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Been thinking of switching to linux but I am a noob
Generally, Arch is the better platform for getting various kernel versions, but there's always stuff like Xanmod which is easy to do in any distro. Worst case, could always use linux-tkg script to build your own kernel - with that kind of hardware it shouldn't take long for the kernel to be built.
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Until RedHat Stops Violating the GPL, Fedora Should Stop Being Recommended on Here
kernel patched with cherry-picked zen patches (also used in TKG kernel on Arch https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg/blob/master/linux-tkg-patches/6.1/0003-glitched-base.patch) kernel patched with OpenRGB (https://gitlab.com/CalcProgrammer1/OpenRGB/-/wikis/OpenRGB-Kernel-Patch) kernel patched to enable amdgpu for pre-polaris cards by default instead of radeon kernel patched with steam deck support kernel patched with microsoft surface support (https://github.com/linux-surface/linux-surface/tree/master/patches/6.1) kernel patched with asus-linux patches for better asus laptop compatibility. (https://gitlab.com/asus-linux) kernel patched with simpledrm fix/workaround for nvidia (see: https://gitlab.com/cki-project/kernel-ark/-/merge_requests/1788 ) kernel patched with ACS override IOMMU patch for better vfio iommu group control (https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/add-acs-overrides.patch?h=linux-vfio) kernel patched with Lenovo Legion Linux support (https://github.com/johnfanv2/LenovoLegionLinux) kernel patched with customizable USB polling rate support (https://github.com/KarsMulder/Linux-Pollrate-Patch + https://github.com/GloriousEggroll/Linux-Pollrate-Patch) kernel configured with ashmem, binder, and android support for Waydroid QSG_RENDER_LOOP=”basic” set for nvidia cards — fixes nouveau Wayland freezes. The nvidia proprietary driver sets this anyway after installation. This fixes the issue of KDE Wayland often times freezing on first login before nvidia proprietary drivers are installed. latest mesa release version provided for AMD/Intel desktop/GL drivers, mesa-git vulkan drivers provided for latest vulkan fixes/updates, built and updated regularly (every few weeks to a month on average) glibc patched with clone3 disabled (fixes CEF compatibility in applications using outdated CEF such as Discord, Steam beta) glibc patched with broken commits reverted to allow EasyAntiCheat to work for Rogue Company dnf max parallel downloads increased to 6 gst-editing-services disabled — causes WINE to hang when creating new prefixes lspci symlink from /usr/sbin/lspci to /usr/bin/lspci for Dying Light: https://www.gamingonlinux.com/forum/topic/2766/post_id=17381 ‘nobara-controller-config’ package provided for easy installation of xone and xpadneo drivers and firmware. gnome variable refresh rate patches added for mutter: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1154 gnome mutter check-alive-timeout increased from 5 seconds to 30 seconds. This is the amount of time gnome waits before trying to determine if an application is not responding. At 5 seconds it almost immediately triggers for league of legends (and some other applications) if those applications are still in the loading phase. We feel 30 seconds is a much more reasonable wait time. gnome mutter patched with x11 fractional scaling: https://salsa.debian.org/gnome-team/mutter/-/raw/ubuntu/master/debian/patches/ubuntu/x11-Add-support-for-fractional-scaling-using-Randr.patch gnome mutter wayland and x11 fractional scaling enabled by default: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/HiDPI#Fractional_scaling gnome shell patched with https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/2358 to allow gnome-extension-manager to auto-update without needing gnome-extension-app installed. (They both function the same but gnome-extension-manager allows management of extensions without a browser). gamescope version regularly updated goverlay version regularly updated mangohud version regularly updated vkbasalt version regularly updated vm.max_map_count = 16777216 set by default for Star Citizen xwayland patched with fix for locked fps on some systems: https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/home:hwsnemo:xwayland/xwayland/xwayland-vsync.diff?expand=1 supergfxctl and gnome extension + kde plasmoid enabled for laptops. Vendor agnostic and works with any combination of intel/amd/nvidia gpus.
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What is the best Linux Kernel for gaming?
Technically, it would be https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg compiled specifically for you CPU and with tickless and a bunch of other patches, but the different isn't significant
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Error 2124 when trying to interact with super-block (show-super, set-option)
Kernel: Gentoo-sources (6.1.28) with these patches for bcachefs (applied through Gentoo user patches, no other patches installed)
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Distro Hop best way?
New kernel is available, just not straight from Manjaro. Plus lots of options and patches https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg
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Wine-tkg or Linux-tkg in Ubuntu Studio?
Is it possible for Ubuntu Studio to have the kernel upgraded -it is at 5.15 atm? The kernel from the Frogging Family: https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg And how do I install wine-tkg 😅 I cant seems to figure it out. https://github.com/Frogging-Family/wine-tkg-git
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Current state of Tumbleweed with Nvidia graphic cards? (updates/bricked system)
I use Nvidia (GTX 1080) and Tumbleweed just fine. No issues. But also I use a custom Kernel, based-on TKG currently and HEAVILY customized (https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg). I also use SLRC (https://susepaste.org/89529032) SUSE Local Repository Creator, to download and keep all the repos I use for SUSE, including Tumbleweed.
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TW good for gaming?
Also, I use a custom Kernel (at the moment TKG - https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg), supports SUSE. But there's also pre-built Liquorix Kernel for SUSE Tumbleweed in the OBS: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/home:hwsnemo:kernels /kernel-liquorix
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Can't run any games on GE Proton (Zorin OS Lite)
You can compile by yourself, TKG is the easiest for me: https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg
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Would MicroOS be appropriate for me? Or better to go with tumbleweed
I have no issues with Nvidia drivers on Tumbleweed. But also you can use a custom Kernel (TKG -- https://github.com/Frogging-Family/linux-tkg -- for instance) and use offline repos (with this script: https://susepaste.org/89529032 -- not mine but clean) to download SUSE repos that you need. Re run the script to update. Quick, easy and you're not bombarded with updates; update when you want. Works beaut with Tumbleweed.
What are some alternatives?
nohang - A sophisticated low memory handler for Linux
zen-kernel - Zen Patched Kernel Sources
earlyoom - earlyoom - Early OOM Daemon for Linux
linux - XanMod: Linux kernel source code tree
oomd - A userspace out-of-memory killer
nvidia-all - Nvidia driver latest to 396 series AIO installer
ZenStates-Linux - Dynamically edit AMD Ryzen processor P-States
modprobed-db - Keeps track of EVERY kernel module that has ever been probed. Useful for those of us who make localmodconfig :)
prelockd - Lock executables and shared libraries in memory to improve system responsiveness under low-memory conditions
community-patches - A place to find patches that are maintained by the community before myself
darling - Darwin/macOS emulation layer for Linux
anbox-modules - Anbox kernel modules