Development [r26] arter97 kernel for OnePlus 9 series

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Dashwood Foxe

Senior Member
Dec 23, 2014
170
64
Install the TPD disabler module as there are two things that contribute to the throttle. The kernel and the framework. While the kernel will ignore throttle flags, there is still some degree of cpu speed control done at the OS level. The TPD disabler disables both kernel and framework throttling.

I get a consistent 110-114 on speedometer.
 

Abhinav2005

Senior Member
Oct 19, 2017
113
36
19
Ranchi
Thank you for the kernel arter. It performs beautifully, battery life is great and performance is smooth.

I don't see much difference in the scrolling acceleration if any, I don't know if I'm doing anything wrong or if other people are having placebo but I've never had issues with it as this is my first OP phone so I'm not used to it as other people. Also the speedometer on chrome is still in mid 70s, same as it was on blu_spark. I don't care about this either tho, it feels snappy to me.

View attachment 5435359
How did you get soo good idle drain? Mine is somewhere around 2 - 2.5%/hour in this kernel. Also how did you manage to get high deep sleep %? Mine never goes above 80% even after using naptime. Pleae tell me🥺🥺
 

DashDashCZ

Senior Member
Oct 19, 2014
140
63
Czech Republic
OnePlus 9 Pro
How did you get soo good idle drain? Mine is somewhere around 2 - 2.5%/hour in this kernel. Also how did you manage to get high deep sleep %? Mine never goes above 80% even after using naptime. Pleae tell me🥺🥺
Tbh I have no idea. I don't use always on display + these stats are after 2 nights so that might be why the average is so low. I also don't use many social networks and those I use I put to optimize battery setting. No tik tok, Instagram or such trash :D
 

tathagatab

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2014
483
211
Kolkata
OnePlus 9 Pro
OnePlus 12
How did you get soo good idle drain? Mine is somewhere around 2 - 2.5%/hour in this kernel. Also how did you manage to get high deep sleep %? Mine never goes above 80% even after using naptime. Pleae tell me🥺🥺
My idle drain on this kernel also hovers around 0.7%. The one uncommon thing I do is keep social media and other background-active apps frozen via Icebox, and fire them up only when required. The free version lets you freeze up to ten apps.
 

l_mike

Senior Member
Jan 6, 2013
295
152
Huawei Watch 2
Xiaomi Mi Pad 4
How did you get soo good idle drain? Mine is somewhere around 2 - 2.5%/hour in this kernel. Also how did you manage to get high deep sleep %? Mine never goes above 80% even after using naptime. Pleae tell me🥺🥺
Also there is a difference if you put your phone asleep and don't touch it overnight and on the opposite you unlock it every ten minutes. Deep sleep and idle drain differ then.
 
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Kickazz080

Member
May 10, 2014
29
6
Hey beautiful people! To the guys that have been using this for a bit now, does it fix the horrible overheating issue in any way? Or is there a way to just disable the stupid safety setting when overheating whilst gaming for example? Im sure the 888 can handle much more before throttling and reverting to 60 Hz and low brightness...
 

Bepi Mosto

Member
Feb 26, 2014
17
2
Google Nexus 5
OnePlus 3
Best op9 kernel I've tried so far. The only thing bothering me is some serious lag on Chrome while watching YouTube in PiP mode. Other apps run flawlessly.

Could this be due to some issue with all the throttling stuff?
This has nothing to do with my Magisk modules as I've already tried disabling them.
 

GreaterLesser

Senior Member
Best op9 kernel I've tried so far. The only thing bothering me is some serious lag on Chrome while watching YouTube in PiP mode. Other apps run flawlessly.

Could this be due to some issue with all the throttling stuff?
This has nothing to do with my Magisk modules as I've already tried disabling them.
I have this same issue - I think it's a refresh rate issue as a lot of YouTube videos run at 30 or 60 fps or Hz even in PiP mode. I think the hiccup is the display trying to adjust to the 30 or 60 fps PiP video while trying to also stay a high enough refresh rate for whatever else you're doing and it causes this lag. I only ever see this issue is when watching a video in PiP mode (on any kernel, even stock) so I'd assume it has to do with the dynamic refresh rate of the screen, not the kernel.

(I ofc could be wrong but this is just what I've noticed from my usage)
 
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Bepi Mosto

Member
Feb 26, 2014
17
2
Google Nexus 5
OnePlus 3
I have this same issue - I think it's a refresh rate issue as a lot of YouTube videos run at 30 or 60 fps or Hz even in PiP mode. I think the hiccup is the display trying to adjust to the 30 or 60 fps PiP video while trying to also stay a high enough refresh rate for whatever else you're doing and it causes this lag. I only ever see this issue is when watching a video in PiP mode (on any kernel, even stock) so I'd assume it has to do with the dynamic refresh rate of the screen, not the kernel.

(I ofc could be wrong but this is just what I've noticed from my usage)
Well, that didn't happen to me with either stock or Omega
 

isiynen

Member
Nov 1, 2010
11
8
Nexus 7 (2013)
LG V30
I just installed this on my t-mobile version yesterday night. Every time I reboot I get a pop up error saying "New SIM Card Detected" with a prompt to reboot. When I click reboot, the phone continues to the launcher and works mostly OK. This is just an inconvenience, but has anyone found a fix that doesn't involve wiping and starting over?
 

deathps

Member
Oct 25, 2010
9
4
39
Kraków
Hello I sincerely wanted to report one block, namely after entering the game Probably dablju Cassino yy crashed my phone terribly, I had to restart it.
And it happened. I know, maybe an hour after uploading your kernel.
So I greet and wish you a successful work.
 

l_mike

Senior Member
Jan 6, 2013
295
152
Huawei Watch 2
Xiaomi Mi Pad 4
24 hours on battery. Wifi, bt (smartwatch always connected), dual sim, location on. GPS for about 1h with screen on (dimmed). Mostly on wifi browsing web and social media. Casual gaming and youtubing.
Much better than stock.
 

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    arter97-xda.png



    arter97 kernel for OnePlus 9 series running OxygenOS

    /* Features */

    Supports OnePlus 9 series
    Fully rebased kernel without unnecessary OnePlus code
    Latest CAF msm-5.4 kernel fully merged
    Latest Linux v5.4 subversion merged
    Latest Google’s security fix merged
    BBR as the default TCP network congestion control
    Features the latest WireGuard
    Modules support disabled for lighter kernel
    Latest Wi-Fi drivers from Qualcomm with customized config
    Built with Clang 13 and ThinLTO
    Power optimizations
    Memory management optimizations
    Latest SELinux subsystem backported from mainline
    Latest f2fs backported from mainline
    Latest BFQ I/O scheduler backported from mainline
    mmap/mremap backported from mainline for a major performance boost
    Touchscreen optimizations for lower latency
    Uses LRNG for better performance

    /* Details */

    - Fully rebased kernel without unnecessary OnePlus code -



    This kernel is not based on the stock OxygenOS kernel source provided by OnePlus. Instead, it’s based on the latest and greatest Qualcomm has to offer. Only the necessary parts from the OnePlus kernel have been cherry-picked, such as OnePlus 9 specific device drivers.

    This effectively kills all kernel modifications/optimizations from OnePlus, including the infamous app throttler.
    Due to the completely different base, this kernel will behave drastically different from other kernels, in both good and bad ways.


    - Power optimizations -


    This kernel makes some conscious decisions for reducing power consumption.

    First, the stock OnePlus configuration forces display-related processes to use the big cores exclusively.
    This configuration brings a huge power regression since it makes every frame dispatch to wake up and use the power-hungry cores.

    This kernel resets this profile to use the configuration Google recommends, which is to use the LITTLE cores exclusively instead. (Reverted in r2 as it seems like that little cores aren't enough to drive 120 Hz fluidly.)
    This kernel allows these processes to use little and middle cores (0-6), depending on the load.

    Second, this kernel disables wakelocks upon Wi-Fi’s RX unicast packet transmissions. qcom_rx_wakelock is one of the major culprits to increased idle power consumption. Although its total wakelock time is quite low, it's catched very frequently and prevents the system from entering suspend repeatedly.

    As dropping unicast or local ARP packets doesn’t pose practical issues on Android, this kernel disables qcom_rx_wakelock.

    Third, this kernel reduces the duration of the Bluetooth ISR wakelock from 2 seconds to 100ms. This was done from an observation that the average userspace response time from ISR is less than 10ms.
    My kernels have been doing this for years and no Bluetooth-related issues were reported.

    Fourth, the vibrator driver used in this kernel no longer controls the cpuidle driver. The stock kernel disables the cpuidle whenever the vibrator is used. This kernel disables it as the vibrator is not that sensitive to deadline misses.

    There are other small improvements throughout the kernel tree as well.


    - Memory management optimizations -


    This kernel marks the first Linux v5.4 based Android kernel to have MGLRU backported.

    MGLRU is a big deal in everything Linux related, especially for Android.
    Esper have a great article on what is MGLRU in a nutshell: https://blog.esper.io/android-dessert-bites-22-linux-memory-management-38419756/

    TL;DR:
    According to Google’s fleetwide profiling, multi-generational LRU yields an “overall 40% decrease in kswapd [the kernel daemon that manages virtual memory] CPU usage,” an “85% decrease in the number of low-memory kills at the 75th percentile,” and an “18% decrease in app launch times at the 50th percentile.”

    This kernel also disables LMKD and uses an in-kernel solution called SimpleLMK, made by kerneltoast. You can track how often SimpleLMK kicks in by monitoring:
    Code:
    /sys/module/lowmemorykiller/parameters/lmk_count

    This kernel also changes a lot related to swap and zram.

    The swap-related code has been backported from Linux v5.9 (link1, link2) to efficiently support fast swap device and allow swappiness over 100. This kernel currently sets swappiness to 160 on < 6GB of RAM, 120 on 8GB and 90 on 12GB.

    zram has been also backported from mainline Linux and further tweaked to use block device writeback. This is equivalent to the recent “RAM Plus” feature that companies have been marketing that uses the internal storage to extend RAM.

    This kernel uses zram writeback to offload idle pages (i.e., really, really unused RAM) to the internal storage. As it's extremely slow to bring pages back from UFS, writeback code works quite conservatively. It'll start to writeback pages that haven't been used for a day or two. It makes use of the hidden 2GB “last_parti” partition from the UFS storage.

    Along with zram writeback,
    this kernel also enables deduplication with xxHash. Each page stored in zram is checked for deduplication to further save memory. With these 2 features combined, RAM reaching 1GB is additionally saved, but your mileage may vary.

    zram writeback is temporarily disabled to avoid lags on long uptime with r20.

    The post boot script used in the stock ROM is also overridden and it sets the readahead to 128KB. As I/O workload under Android is mostly random, high readahead doesn’t help and only increases memory thrashing.

    This kernel also incorporates a lot of patches to reduce/optimize memory allocations used throughout the entire kernel.

    mmap/mremap code was also backported from Linux v5.10 to optimize ART (see here for more info).


    - Latest subsystems -


    This kernel backports the SELinux subsystem from mainline Linux. This includes caching improvements that drastically reduces time spent on lookups. 10K lines of code has been changed.

    This kernel also backports f2fs (Flash-Friendly File System) from mainline Linux. This includes bug fixes and performance improvements such as shorter discard latency, more optimized GC logic for Android, and checkpoint merging.

    BFQ I/O scheduler has also been backported from mainline Linux for better I/O performance.


    - LRNG -


    This kernel ditches the traditional RNG driver from the Linux kernel in favor of LRNG. See here and here for more info.

    A rudimentary throughput benchmark shows an improvement of 10.5% (keep in mind that this is only one aspect of an RNG metric).


    - Battery charging management -


    - Battery charging code has been backported from OxygenOS 12. There are numerous fixes there.

    - A case where the charger negotiation doesn't go smoothly, the stock kernel will have the charging current limited for prolonged time instead of retrying. This kernel retries AICL right after re-negotiation, so the charging speed will be fixed for this particular case.

    - Users can now unlock 27W (9V 3A) charging through USB-PD. From my testing, the battery charges 2% per minute.
    Most decent USB-PD chargers should be capable of 27W (including all PD chargers that I personally own), but do note that this is dangerous if you connect to a non-27W capable charger (i.e., 3A unsupported on the 9V voltage profile) when this is enabled.
    Write 0 to /sys/modules/oplus_chg/parameters/limit_pd enable this new behavior.

    - OnePlus lowers the temperature limit when the screen is on for cooler user experience. Users can now also change this behavior and allow the device to get a little hotter by forcing the kernel to behave the same during screen-on and screen-off.
    This is not dangerous but it'll obviously mean the device will be hotter when you use it and charge it simultaneously.
    Write 1 to /sys/modules/oplus_chg/parameters/ignore_screen_state to do this.

    - This build now disables surface temperature monitoring in the charging code for non-SuperWarp chargings. This mechanism is a separate one from what's described above, and I've personally ran into multiple charging annoyances due to this, resulting in a super slow 3W charging when I need to charge urgently.
    OnePlus have set the threshold too low, resulting in real charging issues in practice. This behavior is somewhat lifted with OxygenOS 12, and my kernel takes it further and removes it entirely for non-SuperWarp charges as other perfectly fine safety mechanisms exist.

    See the commit for more details:


    /* Notice */

    OxygenOS 12 is unsupported.
    Non-OxygenOS custom ROMs are supported, but your mileage may vary wildly. Most notably, gesture orientations on some ROMs may be inverted.
    Custom ROMs that uses OxygenOS 12 kernel, including LineageOS 19.1, are not supported.

    This kernel touches vendor_boot and dtbo partitions, meaning you'd need to restore said partitions whenever you're switching to another kernel or stock.
    Please make a back-up of these partitions. The installer doesn’t do this automatically for you. Installing the stock ROM with a full OTA restores said partitions as well.

    /* Disclaimer */

    Your warranty is now void.
    I am not responsible for bricked devices, dead SD cards,
    thermonuclear war, or you getting fired because the alarm app failed. Please
    do some research if you have any concerns about features included in this kernel
    before flashing it! YOU are choosing to make these modifications, and if
    you point the finger at me for messing up your device, I will laugh at you. Hard. A lot.

    /* Thanks to */

    Vishalcj17
    kristofpetho
    kdrag0n
    kerneltoast (SultanXDA)

    /* Instructions */

    1. Read the above. Please.
    2. Flash the zip file from FK Kernel Manager. Any other installation methods are untested.

    /* Downloads and links */

    arter97.com
    Kernel source
    Telegram chat link
    19
    A major new testing release is up.

    Changes made in this round is big enough that I've decided to name it r20.

    While the build has been stable for me, I'm marking this an alpha as a lot changed.

    r20a1 marks the first Linux v5.4 based kernel to have MGLRU backported.

    MGLRU is a big deal in everything Linux related, especially for Android.
    Esper have a great article on what is MGLRU in a nutshell: https://blog.esper.io/android-dessert-bites-22-linux-memory-management-38419756/

    TL;DR:
    According to Google’s fleetwide profiling, multi-generational LRU yields an “overall 40% decrease in kswapd [the kernel daemon that manages virtual memory] CPU usage,” an “85% decrease in the number of low-memory kills at the 75th percentile,” and an “18% decrease in app launch times at the 50th percentile.”

    Personally, I've noticed a sharp decrease in swap usage and improvements in general performance.

    Besides MGLRU, there are other numerous patches that are worth noting.

    I've brought back updated arm64 routines that were once tried in a beta release but removed later due to random kernel panics (mostly notable from Netflix). The mainline Linux kernel have gotten new updates since then, so r20a1 includes that.
    Also, some memory patches made by Sultan are also picked, and I've confirmed that those also help improving responsiveness.

    With all these memory stuffs going on, I've also changed swap/zram's parameters. You'll notice a difference in how many apps you can keep open, etc.

    The excessive RMNET_DFC wakelock that annoyed some users are now also gone by incorporating a fix from Snapdragon 8 Gen 1.

    All in all, this is indeed a pretty big release.
    I'm expecting mixed feedback, so please let me know how the new kernel behaves.

    /* Full changelog */

    Backported MGLRU
    Fixed full system crash on some custom ROMs (by LibXZR)
    Added a few memory patches to improve responsiveness (by Sultan)
    Tuned swap/zram configurations
    Backported updated arm64 memory functions for better performance
    Fixed excessive RMNET_DFC wakelock
    Fixed OnePlus charging code to handle worker failure
    Backported more BFQ commits from mainline
    Backported mm/mremap fix from mainline
    Latest WireGuard merged
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-19400-LAHAINA.QSSI13.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.190 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.28K
    2022-04-05 security patch merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v5.18 merged
    Now built with the latest Clang 14.0.5
    Device-tree updated to LA.UM.9.14.r1-19300-LAHAINA.QSSI13.0
    18
    /* Changelog */

    r27

    Simple LMK fix merged (lesser app kills)
    Built with LLVM 16.0.3 compiler
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-13100-MANNAR.QSSI13.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.242 merged
    f2fs fixes merged from Linux v6.4
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.32U

    r26
    Switched to LLVM 16 compiler
    Merged a few GPU improvement patches from Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 kernel
    Removed unnecessary overhead from kmap_atomic() for better performance
    Fixed a kernel panic from connecting USB peripherals
    Merged latest memory-management fixes
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-12900-MANNAR.QSSI13.0 merged
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-21300-LAHAINA.QSSI12.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.237 merged
    Latest exFAT from Linux v6.3 merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v6.3 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.32R
    2023-03-05 security patch merged

    r25
    Applied memory-management patches from kerneltoast to improve responsiveness (ported by Kaz205)
    Added a workaround to f2fs to perform GC better
    Merged latest memory-management fixes
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-12700-MANNAR.QSSI13.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.228 merged
    Latest exFAT from Linux v6.2 merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v6.2 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.31V
    2023-01-05 security patch merged

    r24
    Disabled DFS on AP mode to remove 60 seconds delay on hotspot activation
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-20800-LAHAINA.QSSI13.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.224 merged
    Latest exFAT from Linux v6.1 merged

    r23
    Reverted a commit that can cause CPU temperature monitoring issues
    Memory management fixes merged made from upstream
    Latest MGLRU patches merged (1669 lines changed)
    Battery percentage report fixed (from LineageOS)
    Battery charging code backported from OxygenOS 12
    Fixed a stock kernel bug where charging current is limited for a prolonged time
    27W (9V 3A) USB-PD charging unlocked (should be manually enabled)
    Added screen-state-aware charging toggle
    Surface temperature monitoring disabled for better charging
    Now built with the latest Clang 15.0.3
    Some patches merged from Amazon AWS Linux fork
    RTL8152/8153 drivers updated to v2.16.3
    Some patches merged from a downstream fork, made by buzzcut_s
    LA.UM.9.14.1.r1-07500-QCM6490.QSSI13.0 merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v6.1 merged
    Linux v5.4.222 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.31H
    Latest exFAT from Linux v6.0 merged
    2022-10-05 security patch merged
    Latest WireGuard merged

    r21
    Proactive compaction backported for better long-term performance
    Switched I/O scheduler from BFQ to Samsung's SSG for lower CPU overhead and better Android-specific optimizations
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.30E
    RTL8152/8153 drivers updated to v2.16.1
    Latest f2fs fixes from Linux v5.19 merged
    Some patches merged from a downstream fork, made by buzzcut_s
    Storage performance improved (fuse)
    HL/HMARK netfilter modules enabled for TTL modifications (hotspot)

    r20
    Backported MGLRU (a major change)
    Fixed full system crash on some custom ROMs (by LibXZR)
    Added a few memory patches to improve responsiveness (by kerneltoast)
    Fixed page allocation failures introduced from mainline
    SimpleLMK re-enabled after fixing soft random reboots
    Fixed excessive RMNET_DFC wakelock
    Fixed OnePlus charging code to handle worker failure
    Backported updated arm64 memory functions for better performance
    Disabled REFCOUNT_FULL to optimize performance over security
    Tuned swap/zram configurations
    Disabled zram writeback to avoid lags on long uptime
    Optimized pstore for better performance
    Added haptic level adjustment by flar2
    Reduced memory usage by matching CONFIG_CMA_AREAS to minimum required
    Re-enabled arm64 erratum that was previously disabled by mistake
    Fixed rare random reboots (zsmalloc patch by kerneltoast)
    Backported more BFQ commits from mainline
    Backported mm/mremap fix from mainline
    Now built with the latest Clang 14.0.7
    Device-tree updated to LA.UM.9.14.r1-19300-LAHAINA.QSSI13.0
    LA.UM.10.9.1.r1-02800-QCS610.0 merged
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-11000-MANNAR.0 merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v5.19 merged
    Linux v5.4.197 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.29W
    Latest exFAT from Linux v5.19 merged
    Latest LRNG v45 merged
    2022-06-05 security patch merged

    r12
    Fingerprint code merged with latest the LineageOS
    90 Hz timing removed for custom ROMs to avoid noticeable gamma shifts
    Now built with the latest Clang 13.0.3
    Linux v5.4.186 merged
    Latest exFAT from Linux v5.18 merged
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-19300-LAHAINA.QSSI13.0 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.27T

    r11
    Added support for non-OxygenOS, custom ROMs (screen-off gesture orientations may be inverted)
    Added a workaround to prevent soft random reboots due to memory management
    Fixed a fingerprint-related memory-leak from OnePlus display source code
    Merged a few f2fs patches to improve responsiveness
    Backported more BFQ commits from mainline
    Backported mm/mremap fix from mainline
    Latest WireGuard merged
    LA.UM.9.16.r2-03700-MANNAR.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.184 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.27S
    2022-03-05 security patch merged

    r10
    Bug-fix, stable release

    r8
    Fixed r7's memory optimizations
    Merged latest exFAT

    r7
    Fixed a SELinux memory leak that happened since r1a12 (thanks to @Kaz205 for reporting and testing)
    Merged some memory operation optimizations
    Further improved the workaround to fix unwanted doubles presses from the power button

    r5
    LA.UM.9.16.r2-03500-MANNAR.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.179 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.26Z
    2022-02-05 security patch merged
    Backported UNIX socket latency optimization from Linux v5.17

    r4
    Fixed lmkd not working, resulting in freezes
    Minor performance and power optimizations
    Linux v5.4.175 merged

    r3
    SimpleLMK disabled for now to fix random soft reboots
    Fixed random app crashes and freezes due to op_cgroup
    Bluetooth drivers re-worked to fix Bluetooth-related issues
    USB malfunctions fixed (dwc3)
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-18900-LAHAINA.0 merged
    LA.UM.10.9.1.r1-00800-QCS610.0 merged
    Linux v5.4.174 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.26T
    2022-01-05 security patch merged
    Latest WireGuard merged
    Latest f2fs from Linux v5.17 merged
    Latest LRNG v43 merged
    Read-write semaphore backported from Linux v5.16 to improve smoothness under heavy I/O
    Now built with the latest Clang 13.0.2
    Disabled SLUB per-CPU partial caches for better latency (by Sultan)

    r2
    Display-related processes are now allowed to use the middle cores as well for better smoothness
    Enabled more mremap() performance improvement that was missing from r1
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-18400-LAHAINA.0 merged
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-08100-MANNAR.0 merged
    LA.UM.10.9.1.r1-00300-QCS610.0 merged (contains a lot of new improvements including power optimizations)
    Linux v5.4.159 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.25M
    2021-11-06 security patch merged
    Watermark boosting disabled to fix aggressive app killings (by Sultan)
    Workaround added to fix unwanted doubles presses from the power button

    r1
    First stable release
    18
    r2 is up, and it's a big release.

    Changelog is quite self-explanatory.

    r2
    Display-related processes are now allowed to use the middle cores as well for better smoothness
    Enabled more mremap() performance improvement that was missing from r1
    LA.UM.9.14.r1-18400-LAHAINA.0 merged
    LA.UM.9.16.r1-08100-MANNAR.0 merged
    LA.UM.10.9.1.r1-00300-QCS610.0 merged (contains a lot of new improvements including power optimizations)
    Linux v5.4.159 merged
    Wi-Fi drivers updated to 2.0.8.25M
    2021-11-06 security patch merged
    Watermark boosting disabled to fix aggressive app killings (by Sultan)
    Workaround added to fix unwanted doubles presses from the power button
    16
    After using the kernel myself and daily driving for few days and monitoring how the kernel behaves, I now feel comfortable to mark it stable.

    r1 is released.

    The original post is re-written to feature what's special with this kernel.
    Please take your time and re-read the original post.