


On your own PC this will of course in most cases be a different type.Įntering " i5-2520M" in this Intel search option resulted in a list of drivers, including a few for the graphics card. This is needed as this integrated graphics card uses the processor for the graphics display, which makes the driver depend on the processor type. For our HP laptop this was an " Intel Code i5-2520M". That name can also be found in the Device Manager (see the image above), under Processors. The trick was to look for the name of the laptop's processor. The download page on the Intel website also offers an option to "Search for a download" by entering a " Product name or keyword". See this pull for the full list of this week's Intel GT patches.The Windows Device manager shows the Display adapter and it's new driver.įinally, after seeking expert advise, we found what we needed to do: Then the regular bunch of smaller tweaks, restructuring and cleanups not to forget documentation, sparse and selftest improvements." Improvements to error capture on GuC, corrections to workarounds power domains across Gen11/Gen12 with subject to runtime PM. Fix for potential OOB access on SSEU max_subslices array. Stolen memory probing fix and a missing register whitelisting for Gen12.

"There is an important performance monitoring fix (#6333), more resiliency to pcode load delay and avoiding caching problems on LLC systems for ring buffers. Intel Linux engineer Joonas Lahtinen summed up this week's drm-intel-gt-next pull as: Much of Intel's open-source Linux graphics focus recently has been on readying their Meteor Lake graphics support as well as preparing for their new "Xe" kernel driver that has yet to be mainlined. Nothing too incredibly exciting for end-users this week, but there still is a few more weeks for more DRM feature code to be readied for DRM-Next to make it for Linux 6.4. This week's Intel GT changes include a number of fixes, avoiding use of stolen memory or BAR for ring buffers on LLC platforms, continued enablement around Intel Meteor Lake (MTL) graphics, various DG2/Alchemist tweaks, and other routine work. This week another batch of "drm-intel-gt-next" material was submitted. Last week following the Linux 6.3-rc1 release Intel engineers already began sending new Intel i915 driver feature code to DRM-Next for queuing until the Linux 6.4 merge window in early May.
