this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2024
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No fix planned for Ryzen 3000 is a disappointment
That is indeed weird. I don't see a mention of summit and pinnacle ridge either, even though rome, castle peak and renoir are covered. Since this is fix is an AGESA upgrade, I'm inclined to believe it'll cover zen 2 on any platform.
I'll reach out for clarification. I have a Matisse X production system running and there's no way I'm leaving this be.
How it that conceivable?
Not that it changes anything, but it might be worth to voice our concerns
I found this thread on their forum:
https://community.amd.com/t5/processors/no-fix-for-new-sinkclose-exploit-on-3000-series-cpus/td-p/701290
Yeah it really is, but a bit of a nudge to find a decent price on a 5600x.
Ryzen 5000 series is also affected.
They're issuing a fix for the 5000 series but not the 3000 series. As a 3000 series owner and with Intel cumming in customer's eyes my next computer will be RISC-V Death to x86.
How is that fix being applied?
AGESA update applied via BIOS update. Effectively just a microcode patch. Pretty common, and since we're seeing Epyc CPUs from the same generation as Ryzen 3000/Zen 2 being patched, I feel like it's pretty lousy not to patch them as well.
Really not a fan of bios updates. The last time the progress bar got stuck for an eternity and I thought it bricked my motherboard. Too bad the 5600X3D isn't sold in Europe. I was contemplating upgrading to AMD from my 10400F, since the ram should be still compatible.
BIOS updates are the only way to receive critical stability and security patches. They can take a bit of time, but these days its generally pretty straight forward. Some manufacturers even allow you to check online right from the UEFI so you don't need to rely on an ancient USB drive.