There has been a lot of noise and criticism around
Intel's new Sandybridge processors and Linux support, since the currently available Linux distributions do not support the new chips.
The current distro of Linux (Ubuntu 10.10) doesn't support
Sandybridge. According to Intel, the problem relies to the
architecture of the Linux OS itself. Nick Knupfer, Intel's PR
manager, said that releasing new drivers is not enough to make the
Sandybridge chips work on Linux.
"You see, the graphics subsystem in Linux is actually a complex web
of interdependencies and all the related components all have to be
updated for a new graphics hardware to work. The Linux software
components called 'Mesa', the kernel, 'libdrm', 'cairo', 'libva' and
'x86-video-intel' are all the parts that have to be updated and
released into the wild for this all to work. This isn't unusual, it
is just the way it is," he wrote at Intel's blog.
He added that Intel cannot solve the incompatibility issue by
releasing any drivers, in a manner companies such as Nvidia and AMD
do for their graphics products.
"It is true that in certain cases, you can update some parts of those
systems, but they rely on closed-sourced code maintained only by
those companies and not the Linux community - and updating a single
component can affect the rest of the system," he added.
Intel's executive added that users have to wait for the new
distribution of their flavour of Linux.
There is a conversation about this topic on the Real World Tech
Forums right now, and even Linus Torvalds himself - the man who had
initiated the development of the Linux kernel - is dishing out
advice. He describes how to compile the components yourself (as the
source code is available).
The new Linux distro release will be available in April 2011,
according to Linus. "Before that, you?ll have to find things like
daily builds or do your own". Linus says.