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I bought M1 MacBook Air. It is the fastest computer I have, and I have been a
GNOME/GNU/Linux user for long time. It is obvious conclusion that I need
practical Linux desktop environment on Apple
Silicon.
Fortunately, Linux already works on Apple Silicon/M1. But how practical is it?
Thanks to the work of @agraf, @KhaosT, @imbushuo, and others, we have Virtualization.framework working on M1 Macs. These [changes][1] have been merged with QEMU v5.2.0 RC3 (will rebase once the final release is out) and integrated with UTM, a brand new QEMU frontend designed in SwiftUI for iOS 14 and macOS 11.
Definitely prevent stubborn devices from being bound by the host driver in PCI passthrough scenario
Deprecated
The method described in this gist has been deprecated/superceeded by kiler129/early-vfio-pci-isolate tool.
It is more robust, configurable, and doesn't hack around scripts that are sometimes overwritten by system updates. The tool uses similar methods to the ones described below, but extends the capabilities by e.g. easy NVMe passthrough by S/N.
The description below has been preserved for historical context. At the time of writing, the tool above has been tested for ~6 months across multiple systems.
I was talking to a coworker recently about general techniques that almost always form the core of any effort to write very fast, down-to-the-metal hot path code on the JVM, and they pointed out that there really isn't a particularly good place to go for this information. It occurred to me that, really, I had more or less picked up all of it by word of mouth and experience, and there just aren't any good reference sources on the topic. So… here's my word of mouth.
This is by no means a comprehensive gist. It's also important to understand that the techniques that I outline in here are not 100% absolute either. Performance on the JVM is an incredibly complicated subject, and while there are rules that almost always hold true, the "almost" remains very salient. Also, for many or even most applications, there will be other techniques that I'm not mentioning which will have a greater impact. JMH, Java Flight Recorder, and a good profiler are your very best friend! Mea
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