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Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/108/performance/2068')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/108/performance/2068 | 30 |
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/108/performance/2068 b/results/classifier/108/performance/2068 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..81835873 --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/108/performance/2068 @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +performance: 0.984 +graphic: 0.947 +device: 0.756 +boot: 0.655 +semantic: 0.581 +other: 0.535 +permissions: 0.496 +debug: 0.440 +socket: 0.418 +PID: 0.398 +vnc: 0.275 +files: 0.194 +KVM: 0.181 +network: 0.144 + +Regression: 8.1.3 -> 8.2.0 breaks virtio vga driver +Description of problem: +I have a number of emulated arch linuxes using the same x11/kde configuration. After updating from 8.1.3 to 8.2.0, they all broke in the following way: +- screen tearing/artifacts seen from bios up until sddm +- sddm is possibly affected +- kde/x11 has so many artifacts that its unusable. if i attempt to write in a console window, i can only see parts of what ive written if i attempt to gently resize the bottom of the window. clicking the menu item will only render the menu 1/6 times and only partly. however if I click where I remember the shutdown button to be, the system shuts down immediately, so thi seems to be purely a graphics issue. +- starting with -vga qxl fixes all issues. +Steps to reproduce: +1. make new qemu, install arch/kde +2. boot said qemu with -vga virtio option +3. observe issue from the moment it boots +Additional information: +Using nVidia card and drivers on host. + +Removing x86-video-vesa on the guest system seemed to significant improve performance. There are still many artifacts but its almost usable with this driver removed. |