Realistic illustration of Linus Torvalds announcing Linux kernel 6.19 release, featuring Intel/AMD hardware, GPU, storage, and performance upgrade icons.
Realistic illustration of Linus Torvalds announcing Linux kernel 6.19 release, featuring Intel/AMD hardware, GPU, storage, and performance upgrade icons.
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Linux kernel 6.19 released: end of 6.x series with major Intel/AMD/Arm hardware, GPU, storage, networking, and cloud upgrades

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Linus Torvalds announced the stable release of Linux kernel 6.19 on February 9, 2026, following an eight-week development cycle with a one-week delay. Marking the end of the 6.x series—like 3.x to 4.0 and 5.x to 6.0—this non-LTS version (6.18 LTS until December 2027) brings extensive enhancements for Intel/AMD/Arm hardware, older GPUs, file systems, peripherals, HDR graphics, networking, virtualization, and cloud environments. Torvalds timed it with a major U.S. sporting event, joking, "6.19 is out as expected -- just as the US prepares to come to a complete standstill later today, watching the latest batch of televised commercials," and noted the next kernel will be 7.0 as he's "running out of fingers and toes."

The release proceeded without major surprises in the final development week, immediately opening the merge window for 7.0. Torvalds confirmed: "No big surprises anywhere last week, so 6.19 is out as expected."

Hardware Support

Intel: Initial Linear Address Space Separation (LASS) isolates kernel/user memory against side-channel attacks like Meltdown/Spectre; reworked Trust Domain Extensions (TDX) for KVM; audio for Nova Lake; improved NUMA for Xeon 6 (Granite Rapids, Clearwater Forest) with Sub-NUMA Clustering 3.

AMD: Up to 4096 vCPUs in VMs via x2AVIC; up to 74% faster AES-GCM on Zen 3; Smart Data Cache Injection for EPYC 9005 'Turin'; Steam Deck APU temperature monitoring.

Arm: Memory System Resource Partitioning and Monitoring (MPAM) for cache/memory control on high-end systems.

GPUs and Graphics

AMD Radeon HD 7000 to RX 300 series (including GCN 1.0/1.1 like HD 7970, R9 280/290X) now default to AMDGPU driver with RADV Vulkan, delivering 30-40% performance gains in OpenGL/Vulkan (e.g., DXVK/Proton). New DRM Color Pipeline enables hardware-accelerated HDR, reducing GPU load/power on laptops/handhelds (needs GNOME/KDE updates).

Storage and File Systems

Ext4: Larger block sizes (>4KB), optimized POSIX ACL checks and online defragmentation with folios (up to 50% faster reads/writes, modest real-world), per-CPU disk caching. NTFS3: Pre-1970 timestamps via signed 64-bit. F2FS: Improved sysfs/debugfs and garbage collection.

Networking and System Calls

Redesigned transmit-path locking boosts throughput up to 4x in heavy workloads (e.g., AI clusters). New listns() syscall enumerates Linux namespaces for container tools.

Cloud and Virtualization

Live Update Orchestrator (LUO) enables 'warm' kernel updates without VM downtime via Kexec handover. Encrypted PCIe for secure device-VM communications in multi-tenant clouds. AMD extended x2AVIC for more vCPUs.

Peripherals and Devices

ASUS Armoury Crate for ROG Ally (VRAM/power); Lenovo IdeaPad USB-C charging; Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 mouse, G13 keypad; sensors for Alienware, TUXEDO, Lenovo laptops, ASUS boards.

Other Enhancements

Kernel continuity plan for repo outages; 'Blue Screen' panic screens on Intel/AMD GPUs; Rust I2C abstractions. Rolling distros like Arch, Fedora Rawhide adopt soon; Ubuntu 26.04 LTS (April 2026) with 7.0.

ሰዎች ምን እያሉ ነው

Reactions on X to the Linux kernel 6.19 release are largely positive, with users and tech accounts praising improvements to older AMD GPUs (up to 40% faster), ext4 performance, HDR support, networking, and hardware compatibility. Enthusiasm surrounds the end of the 6.x series and Linus Torvalds' announcement of kernel 7.0 next. Linux news outlets share feature highlights, while some users note benefits for AI infrastructure, gaming devices, and security. Minimal negative or skeptical views observed.

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

Linus Torvalds in a tech office, monitors displaying Linux kernel 7.0 announcement with code, Tux penguin, and hardware icons.
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Linus Torvalds signals Linux kernel 7.0 release is imminent

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

Linus Torvalds has announced that the Linux kernel will jump to version 7.0 after the 6.x series concludes, marking a cosmetic but symbolic milestone for the open-source project. The decision follows established versioning practices to keep minor numbers manageable, with no major technical overhaul tied to the change. Ongoing developments include expanded Rust integration and hardware support enhancements.

Developers have released Linux kernel 7.0, featuring improvements for Intel and AMD hardware, enhanced storage handling, and the removal of the experimental label from Rust support. Linus Torvalds announced the update, which is not a long-term support version. The release includes preparations for upcoming CPUs and GPUs, alongside self-healing filesystem capabilities.

በAI የተዘገበ

Following Linus Torvalds' recent announcement, Linux kernel 7.0 has been released on February 28, 2026, adding support for AMD Zen 6 processors and Intel Nova Lake alongside file system and graphics enhancements for improved efficiency.

The third release candidate for Linux kernel 7.0 is out, following rc1 and rc2. It features major Intel and AMD x86 CPU changes, plus a fix for battery reporting on the Apple Magic Trackpad 2.

በAI የተዘገበ

Arch Linux has issued its February installation ISO, incorporating package updates from January 2026. This monthly snapshot includes a newer kernel, system libraries, and security enhancements for fresh installations. Users can now download it from official mirrors to set up the latest version of the rolling-release distribution.

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የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
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