Updated
Updated · Phoronix · Apr 24
Linux 7.1 introduces major networking improvements including hardware queue leasing and IPv6 changes
Updated
Updated · Phoronix · Apr 24

Linux 7.1 introduces major networking improvements including hardware queue leasing and IPv6 changes

5 articles · Updated · Phoronix · Apr 24
  • Linux 7.1 now requires IPv6 as a kernel built-in, retires UDP-Lite, and adds support for new Realtek, Synopsys, AMD, Mediatek, and Qualcomm network hardware.
  • Key enhancements include zero-copy operations for containers, improved power management for AMD XGBE, and NPU offload support in Mediatek MT76 drivers, boosting performance and hardware compatibility.
  • These updates reflect Linux’s expanding role across embedded, desktop, and supercomputer environments, aiming to optimize networking performance and broaden hardware support for diverse deployments.
Can new zero-copy features finally let Linux networking outperform dedicated DPDK?
As Wi-Fi 7 arrives, is the kernel ready for 10GbE in every home?
Is AI-assisted development making the Linux kernel better or just more complex?
With UDP-Lite retired for a performance boost, what legacy code is next?
Does mandating built-in IPv6 create new attack surfaces for legacy systems?
How does direct hardware queue access for containers impact multi-tenant security?