Sony Adds PS3 Support to Linux Kernel 181
mu22le writes "A few Sony patches to the Linux kernel have just been merged in the mainline tree, to be included in the 2.6.20 release. The patches add 'core platform support for the PS3 game console and other devices using the PS3 hypervisor.'" From the Linux Devices article: "Linux gained generic support for the Cell processor, on which the PS3 is based, with the 2.6.13 release in June of 2005. The new Sony-contributed patches to the 2.6.20 kernel appear to add machine-specific support for technology such as the PS3's memory architecture, DMA (direct memory access) model, and SMP (symmetric multiprocessing) model. A Yellow Dog Linux (YDL) distribution has been available for the PS3 since October, thanks to a development deal between Sony and YDL publisher TerraSoft. However, YDL so far has not been bundled with early PS3 shipments, despite earlier indications from Sony Entertainment's CEO, Ken Kuturagi."
At the moment (Score:5, Interesting)
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You did know that the official PS2 Linux sit is still up and running, they didn't abandon support, they just sold all the kits.
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Re:At the moment (Score:5, Informative)
Seems like a nice rollout, but I don't like the hard drive allocation. It'd be nice if you could just install the OS's side by side and let them share media across. I hope you can do that.
Thanks for digging this up (Score:4, Informative)
What remains is a computer with a very interesting CPU, but rather limited RAM and no 3D hardware acceleration. For most everyday use cases, a generic PC should do better.
Re:Thanks for digging this up (Score:4, Interesting)
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It's not a question of fully using the hardware but a question of having any hardware to use at all. Which other platform allows independent game developers to develop and distribute games designed for use with a large (25" and up) screen and two to four controllers? HTPC?
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Just the Xbox 360 [microsoft.com].
Or, you know, any PC. It's not like you can't get TV-out. You can connect as many controllers as you like, too. You could use a mac. etc etc.
XNA Creators Club costs $500 over console life (Score:2)
Just the Xbox 360.
Running homebrew produced in XNA Game Studio on an Xbox 360 game console requires an active XNA Creators Club membership for each console. This costs $100 per year for the developer and, worse, $100 per year for each user. This is $500 over the life of the console, the same price as a PLAYSTATION 3 game console (once Sony ramps up production).
Or, you know, any PC. It's not like you can't get TV-out.
What percent of PCs have TV output, and what percent of those TV outputs are actually used? What kind of Free, free, or shareware game would drive demand for a
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Well, Xbox Live Arcade and Nintendo Virtual Console, for two...
What is the point (Score:5, Interesting)
Does it do anything that you couldn't do with a much less expensive PC that you can install Linux on? I just don't get it
Re:What is the point (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What is the point (Score:5, Funny)
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Not a PS3 per se.... [theregister.co.uk]
/me would dearly love to get his hands on a cell system, if anyone from IBM is in the house.... :)
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Yep (Score:2)
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Yes, and not necessarily, respectively. The SPUs in the PS3 anyway (IIRC this may be changed for other revs of the design, which would definitely be nice for scientific computing) are all single-precision. You must do double-precision (most scientific work) in software+single, which takes a performance hit of one order of magnitude. Fortunately, however, the Cell is blind
Re:What is the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus it can play games and bluray media.
In a way I agree with you though, if I wound up buying one itd probably be after the cost goes down a bit..
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Plus it can play games and bluray media.
In a way I agree with you though, if I wound up buying one itd probably be after the cost goes down a bit..
But can it burn CDs/DVDs?
Can you install any OS besides linux on it?
Does it have a PS/2 Keybord/mouse port or a printer port?
These may not seem like big things, but they're just to demonstrate that you're probably going to spend more money on a PS3 and (as a PC) it will function on a much worse level.
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Did it become 1998 again when I wasn't looking?
Here in the futuristic year of 2006, we use USB to attach keyboards, mouses, and printers to our computers.
Re:What is the point (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What is the point (Score:5, Funny)
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If your PS2 port breaks, you're fucked (no keyboard). If your USB port breaks, you've got another one.
The cpu usage is a non-issue. It may be "wasteful" but seriously, there's far more serious problems to solve than cutting down your keyboard's utilisation down from 0.01% of a single cpu - you can cut that time down by 99% and its still no real gain.
I'm all for optimisation, but seriously...
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Well, If "you've got another USB port in the case your other port breaks", then you could buy a USB keyboard in the (unlikely, IMHO) case your PS2 port broke, and attach the keyboard.
Waste (Score:2)
Besides, you can also use a bluetooth keyboard/mouse with it as well (assuming those drivers work, have not heard if they do or not).
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Ah, so you do like to use USB, which was first released in Jan of 1996. PS/2 ports, on the other hand, have been around since the PS/2 computer was introduced--circa 1987 or so.
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No but you can backup to any USB, bluetooth or wifi device be it a hard drive or CD/DVD/Bluray burner. can't see HD-DVD supported but it is feasable.
At the moment no, but I think we will see a BSD port, however I cannot see this happening with any proprietary OS. Still Microsoft and Apple may allow this, after all you do have to pay them for this proposed port, but I would not hold my breath.
No but you can use a USB or even bluetooth keyboard and mouse or a printer. In fact having a wireless keyboard/mouse
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You can go back and forth, but the bottom line is that some of the core PS3 funtionality should have some value to you if you want to get your money's worth out of it. If you don't care about BluRay or games, then you're 100% correct, you should look elseware for your next Linux box. But if you really want to play Motor Storm, getting a "free" Linux box with the deal could be a nice bonus.
TW
Burner, keyboard, mouse, printer (Score:5, Insightful)
The PLAYSTATION 3 game console running Linux might be able to use an optical disc recorder connected to one of its USB 2.0 ports.
Any operating system vendor is welcome to make a boot loader module for PS3 Other OS Installer [playstation.com]. But in general, only Free operating systems are going to be worth anybody's time.
The keyboard and mouse used with the PlayStation 2 game console (PS2) were a standard USB keyboard and a standard USB mouse. Yes, these devices also work with PS3 consoles.
Sony left off a dedicated printer port probably because it saw that Nintendo's Game Boy Printer was a flop. But you can still attach any USB or network printer that has a CUPS driver.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PS/2_connector [wikipedia.org]
is not
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_2 [wikipedia.org]
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The PS3 on the other hand is fully capable of opening a Word document and printing it out and other supposedly PC only things.
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What "high end" media PC has 256MB of shared memory? Low-end non-media PCs have 512MB of RAM (shared with the video card) these days. Even the Xbox 360 has 512MB of shared memory. A high-end media PC is more likely to have 1GB+ of system RAM and a video card with its own dedicated RAM. Multi-purpose machines need more RAM. Game consoles don't need as much because they have control over what they do with the RAM (few or no other processes running, access
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main RAM isn't shared.
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Thats a really good point. Sony supporting PS3 could push nvidia to develop drivers for it which might wind up benefiting even us non-ps3 linux users.
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Of course, unless those drivers are Free Software nobody (including Yellow Dog or even Sony itself) will be allowed to distribute them with the kernel. You'd have to install Linux first and then go download the drivers from nVidia.
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Good luck getting it into Debian, of course, but also I reckon Gentoo is fairly immune as you would be leeching the drivers from a package repository/nVidia's homepage anyway.
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No, the GPL license of the kernel prohibits it. To do it, you'd have to have permission from nvidia and all the kernel developers.
Remember a while back when some people got cease-and-desisted for making a live CD with the nvidia drivers included? Unless I'm mistaken, that letter came from a kernel dev, not nvidia.
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IANAL, but I've read about this a lot and I think I understand it well.
The software in question is divided into three parts: the Linux kernel itself, the open-source stub written by nvidia, and the binary nvidia driver. The first is licensed under the GPL, and the other two are licensed under the nvidia software license [nvidia.com]. However, there is one part of that license that only applies to the stub, not the binary:
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Can't take full advantage. (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, at least as of a while ago, Linux didn't take advantage of all the SPUs within Cell; I'd hope that the Sony kernel modules mentioned in this article solve that problem, but I'm not sure.
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But can it play those games while you're using it as a "Cell Based server"? Dual-boot seems cool... until you want to run a server.
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SCEfoo is supporting Linux because they want to.
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A lot of music software developers are excited about the DSP power in the Cell chip, since on paper it wipes the floor
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Better question: can you do what the PS3 does for less than the $500 it costs? No.
You get a BDRom drive, high-end gaming system, HDMI capable output, 3.2GHz processor + SPUs, memory and a hard drive with USB ports and bluetooth support.
Tell me you can build one of those for $500. It also has to play really good 3D games, for which the video card will cost more than half of that price.
Rootkit (Score:5, Funny)
We are winning. (Score:5, Funny)
Win Win scenario (Score:5, Interesting)
Imagine. Play this right, let the bugs settle out for a few months and then start passing out ready to go DVDs on gaming mag covers. Sell a ready to rock kit with a preloaded memory key, DVD, keyboard and mouse. Instantly a PS3 is a gaming rig, BlueRay player AND a fully functional PC, ready for web browsing, OO.o, etc. Given just a small push and penetration could easilly hit 50% of an installed base likely to number in the tens of millions within two to three years.
For Sony the upside is realizing the sales pitch that a PS3 is more than a console, being able to make the pitch that a PS3 purchase for the kids is ALSO a PC purchase. Plus if it kills a few PC sales why should Sony care? Their desktop PC division is all but dead (laptops are of course another story, they make some cool lappies) and every Windows PC sale is money in their enemy's hand.
For us penguinheads we have to grit our teeth a bit at the idea of Sony succeeding but they ARE doing it the right way in this case so we have to be ready to give em props. Just imagine millions of DESKTOP LINUX installs. Millions! If PS3 ends up selling well and that penetration percentage goes much over 50% Linux could be the #2 desktop OS, pushing Apple to #3. Talk about irony, if Apple abandoned PPC for Intel and a PPC platform ended up defeating them. Balmer wouldn't be the only Steve hurling furniture.
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Yes, a box with only 256MB of general-purpose RAM is IDEAL for web browsing, Open Office, etc.....
Given just a small push and penetration could easilly hit 50% of an installed base likely to number in the tens of millions within two to three years.
I don't know which claim is more unlikely... that PS3 Linux would be of interest to anywhere near 50% of PS3 owners, or that Sony will be able to sell tens
Re:Win Win scenario (Score:5, Interesting)
And why not? What do most people use a PC for?
1. Internet: Web, IM, etc. PS3 running Linux can do that. Especially once the installed base gets big enough to ensure things like a current Flash and other needed bits are ported in a timely manner.
2. Games. Everyone always rips linux gaming with wiseass cracks like, yea, assuming you think Tux Racer is state of the art, etc. Duh, reboot and it is a Playstation 3 again, bet that can satisfy most people's gamer cravings. Remember, this is oficially supported Linux, no modchips and no worries about being locked out of playing games.
3. Basic productivity. OO.o can do that. Running a hog like OO.o in 256M will be a bit of bother but not insurmountable if you are only doing a bit of that stuff and on small home size documents.
4. Multimedia. The thing already supports direct YUV video modes in all of the HD, ED and SD resolutions under Linux. A Media player setup is a no brainer even if you have to download the packages from Europe. MythTV's frontend will love running on one.
Given that can't you see smart parents buying the kids a PS3 instead of an Xbox360 and a PC? Or that many owners will take advantage of the ability to have a spare PC when they aren't gaming?
> or that Sony will be able to sell tens of millions of PS3s in the next couple of years
Do you think it will still be $599 by next xmas? And that the supply issues with blue lasers will still limit supply of consoles? Ok.
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2. Already in the PS3 OS.
3. Yes, you'd need Linux for this one.
4. Already in the PS3 OS.
The point is, no where near 50% of the people buying a PS3 are going to care about Linux. Most of the stuff they would want to use a full OS for can be done directly from the PS3 without installing Linux. With advancements being made in web apps to provide basic productivity, and a built-in web browser, there's suddenly no need for a 'Other OS' on the PS3, and so no one but hardcore geeks
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Yes. What console in the last five years had a price drop in its first year? The only reason they'd drop the price is if it was an utter failure, but they're already losing too much money per unit. Just like the XBox 360, the price isn't coming down anytime soon.
And as far as "millions" of people wanting a box they can use as a PC... 1) It doesn't run windows, therefore no one will want it. 2) Most people already don't use 90% of the features of the devices th
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The question is not how PS3 Linux could fill in the computer needs but rather why would 50% of the PS3 owners feel a sudden need to run Linux / solve their computer problem on the PS3.
Especially since
- They bought a gaming machine, or maybe a Media player.
- Probably the vast majority of user buying a PS3 already have a computer. ( and probably running Windows )
- Those who d
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PS3 as a PC? It would piss off gamers (Score:2)
So that's the danger of Sony and Linux on the PS3. They
Re:PS3 as a server farm (Score:2)
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You answered "Internet, games, basic productivity, and multimedia" and I agree with you. However, most people already HAVE a PC with which they do those things, which doesn't give them much motivation to go out and buy a PS3 in order to keep doing them.
Yes, Linux on a new PS3 may even be a better computing experience than XP on a three-year-old Dell -- but it doesn't matter. Unless there's a compelling reason to switch, people will stick with what they're fami
Re:Win Win scenario (Score:4, Insightful)
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Depends on the WM (Score:3, Insightful)
Hasn't anyone ever run a slimmed down WM like TWM?
With a smaller screen and simpler uses, you don't need a fancy WM that takes up a great deal of memory - and Mozilla should run just fine in that little memory with most of the OS and WM not hogging memory.
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Yea, Blackbox and its ilk.
No, if I had now a computer with 256 MB of RAM (I have a 64 MB one I use as a server, though), I probably wouldn't use Mozilla on it (nor Firefox) alongside TWM. Why would I go to the trouble of avoiding "heavy" libraries (GTK) if I was going to install a feature-laden browser on it? Worse, the broser is going to require them, or their own separate attempt (yes, I use Epiphany on
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Personally, I've been running Linux on a PS2 for over 4 years. The 32MB is a limitation yes, but not as much as you might think and the PS3 has 8x as much. It'll be enough for general uses.
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Yes, a box with only 256MB of general-purpose RAM is IDEAL for web browsing, Open Office, etc.....
Whats your point?
My wifes box is loaded with 196M RAM. She uses KDE 3, Xmms, OpenOffice 2, and Mozilla (SeaMonkey, with the java plugin loaded), and it still hasn't hit the swap partition after 90 days.
Enjoy,
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It sure seems like a good thing, but we still need to be cautious -- I fully expect Sony to try to slip some DRM or closed-source "extensions" or something in with it sooner or later.
Re:Win Win scenario (Score:5, Insightful)
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Let me add some more checkboxes:
[_] Fix the partitioning scheme (let me partition it however I want, not just 50/10 or 10/50)
[_] Blu-ray support
Problem is, Blu-ray support won't be where I want it, which is, of course, the ability to write completely open source software that can play Blu-ray media. People mention the PS3 as a MythTV box. What they're missing is that Sony will never let us just rip a Blu-ray disc into MythTV -- and that's ignor
Now all it needs is Wireless support... (Score:5, Informative)
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How about writing a review and posting here to slashdot for the rest of us who don't? Give us the scoop on Video, Sound, network etc.
We expect it by Saturday
Thanks.
Enjoy,
Who needs video? (Score:4, Insightful)
Next, this machine will work just fine for checking email, typing documents, spreadsheets, presentations, browsing the web, downloading porn or whatever else you use a PC for. The only downside I see is the lack of storage space. Let's hope it takes external USB drives.
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You are correct, but who wants a crappy celeron when they could have two PS3's? Of course, with the second PS3, I need another HDTV. That means another cable box for the bedroom... You see where I'm going with this?
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The first thing I will do when I get one is to have it take over the function of my current Linux box and run my web page off of it.
So what happens to your web page when you want to play GTA4 or FFXVIII? Or were you planning to play nothing but nethack, Tux Racer, and sokoban?
Once you get past the geek factor, there's really no point in using a PS3 as a server when you could use a cheap PC with a fanless CPU instead. If your web page really NEEDS that space-heater Athlon XP, then it probably uses enough bandwidth to a hosting facility too. Plus, you could put in more than 256M RAM, which Apache would appreciate much more than a Ce
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http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/2006
That is probably worse than your space-heater Athlon XP.
PS3 is not so bad (Score:5, Insightful)
If Sony had released the high-end system at $500 (low end at $400), and hadn't made so many stupid blunders (no resolution scaling, lack of an online plan, limited availability), I think that the PS3 would be creaming the 360 right now.
There's nothing wrong with the PS3 that software patches and price cuts can't help. Unfortunately, as soon as Sony actually gets availability (early next year?), you can bet that MS will be ready with a $300 die-shrunk, cooler, and quieter Premium 360.
hopefully (Score:5, Funny)
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The fourth console? (Score:2)
Quoted for truth. Either that, or they could target the emerging fourth console known as home theater PC.
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