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The Final Windows Audio Driver For Steam Deck OLED Is Now Released - Steam Deck HQ
(steamdeckhq.com)
A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.
Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.
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On a more interesting topic, the SteamDeck platform drivers are still not merged into mainline Linux... :'(
Last news about it: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Steam-Deck-Platform-Driver-2024
Well, it is about code quality. And the same codebase should work on different hardware, which is not something that is required in downstream forks.
But it is sad to see that the driver was submitted in the past, is still actively developed and improved, but there doesn't seem to be plans of submitting them again.
Also I don't think that a platform driver is so complicated that it requires such a long time for mainlineing. It not a filesystem or VPN.
Nothing of this is a burden, it is just part of being a good contributor that reads and follows the rules. Contributing is pretty easy, when you have read and are following the guides. If you haven't already, you should give it a try.
I am pretty sure that this isn't the first contribution of Valve to the Linux kernel. It sounds more to me like "works for me, don't care about others" attitude. Which is not a good attitude to have when working in any collaborative project. (Not necessarily against the developers, could also be management.)
Well, I consume more open source software that I will ever produce, so I am in a dept to the community. If it means working a bit more to make my contribution useful to others and fit it into the bigger whole, I will gladly do so.
I would avoid reading too much into it. They and their developers are still contributing on other stuff. Also when working together, there will always be some friction, in any public collaborative project ever.
Luckily their work is still done in the open and I can use the driver on my Deck on OpenSUSE despite it not being in the kernel.
Will they upstream those drivers to the kernel?
Well, for that look at @cmhe@lemmy.world's link.