Linus Torvalds announced the release of the
Linux 3.2 kernel, featuring file-system enhancements such as support for
larger block sizes in Ext4, and faster scrubbing with Btrfs. Other
Linux 3.2 highlights are said to include process scheduler improvements,
better thin provisioning support in the Device Mapper, improved desktop
responsiveness for heavy write-backs, and new Wi-Fi and graphics
drivers.
The Linux 3.2 kernel arrived a few days late, according to Linux creator and overseer Linus Torvalds in his Jan. 4 announcement. That's a vast improvement over Linux 3.1,
however, which was released several weeks late in October due to an
earlier outbreak of malware attacks against the kernel's home at
Kernel.org.
Linux 3.1 offered enhancements to performance, virtualization, and
power management, as well as support for near field communication (NFC).
Linux 3.2, meanwhile, refocuses on a central concern of kernel
enhancements: the file-systems.
According to the official Linux 3.2 changelog on KernelNewbies.org,
one of the most prominent new features is the addition of large file
support on the mainstream Ext4 file system. Ext4 now supports block
sizes larger than 4KB and as big as 1MB.The still experimental Btrfs
file system, meanwhile, has been updated with faster scrubbing, more
detailed corruption messages, and manual inspection tools, says the
changelog. Btrfs is also said to have been upgraded with automatic
backup of critical filesystem metadata.
Process bandwidth control and "dirty throttling"
The kernel's process scheduler now offers a process bandwidth
controller that provides support for setting upper limits of CPU time.
In addition, desktop responsiveness has been improved for heavy data
write-back applications, using a technique called "I/O-less dirty
throttling," according to the changelog. In the area of memory handling,
"cross memory attach" enhancements have been added to allow read/write
to and from another process' address space.
In networking, the TCP stack now includes an algorithm that speeds the recovery of the connection after lost packets, says KernelNewbies.org.
In addition, the "perf top" profiling tool has added support for live
inspection of tasks and libraries, as well as the ability to view the
annotated assembly code.
The Linux 3.2 kernel's Device Mapper has added support for thin
provisioning of storage, providing for greater flexibility and
efficiency in provisioning storage capacity to multiple users. The
technology helps system administrators avoid over-provisioning storage
for users who do not need it, explains the changelog.
Hexagon support leads driver changes
The kernel now supports Qualcomm's Hexagon
digital signal processor (DSP), says the changelog. Other driver
improvements include support for the DRM/KMS driver for Intel GPUs
(graphics processing units). This will enable the more efficient and
Intel-specific RC6 graphics power-saving feature by default, according
to an analysis of the Linux 3.2 kernel in The H by Thorsten Leemhuis.
In addition, Leemhuis notes that the Nvidia Nouveau driver now uses
the acceleration functions that are available with the auto-generated
firmware on the Fermi graphic cores NVC1, NVC8, and NVCF.
Finally, Wi-Fi driver changes include the advancement of Broadcom's
Brcmsmac and Brcmfmac Brcm80211 drivers from the staging area into the
network subsystem. Also advancing to the subsystem is the Ath6kl Wi-Fi
driver for the Atheros' AR6003 chip, writes Leemhuis.
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