Linux 2.3.48 Released 222
Turambar let us know that Linux 2.3.48 is out. If you know where to get it, go for it. If you
don't know, you probably shouldn't poke at it. Gotta be getting close to the release by now, right? I gotta say I'm really looking forward to the integrated PCMCIA getting released and hopefully put into woody.
Comment removed (Score:5)
Re:Isn't it great? (Score:1)
does any1 know ?
2.4 (Score:1)
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:1)
Many of us don't have the time or inclination to read through all of FreshMeat every day to find the one package in 100 that affects us, and are very thankful for the ultra-important software getting announced here. Chill out, 'kay?
Question about the feature freeze (Score:3)
Those are important features, but is there any danger that this feature freeze could be eroding?
Thanks,
Ben
Re: (Score:1)
news? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:3)
He's not saying "Leave it on Freshmeat". Like me, he's saying "Give it its own section." That way, we can have nice slashboxes and/or filter the stories out if we want to. Where's the harm in that?
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Re:Until... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:1)
Some people are going to dislike EVERYTHING that's posted on the front page. Your complaint is about this, another's complaint is about Gnome, another's complaint is about Microsoft, etc, etc...
There is NOT going to be a way to suit everyone. It's time people just realized this. Give it up. No matter what you like, somebody else has to dislike it. And the same thing goes for your dislikes. No matter how much you dislike something, somebody is going to be happy that it was posted, on the front page no less.
Anyway, I just think that it's time for people to realize that this is not their site, and that they really ought to just give this a rest. I hear Technocrat [technocrat.net] is much more discerning in its stories. Maybe you'll like it better over there.
Again, not a flame. Just one man's (slightly twisted) opinion. Realize that there are things you can't control, and learn to accept them instead of whining about them like a 5 year old who didn't get the latest Pikachu.
Later,
-issue9mm-
Re:2.4 (Score:3)
Re:Until... (Score:2)
Give it a section for itself. That way, we can have pretty slashboxes for them, and no one can complain that they have no place here, because they can filter them out.
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Is Freshmeat not... (Score:1)
In which case, Slashdot may be ideal. Software section?
Re:Isn't it great? (Score:1)
It's frozen, so there's no way they would use a development kernel
in potato. However, by the time woody has matured, I'm guessing
2.4 will be ready, so there's no reason why they wouldn't include it
in woody.
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:1)
That's why he just suggested that they be filterable-- Put them in a "Kernel Updates" section instead of the generic "Linux" section. There are some things you can't control, this isn't one of them.
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:2)
And you know what? That was a flame. There's no need to make a thread personal. Now who's acting like a 5 year old?
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Freshmeat sucks. (Score:1)
So I stopped reading it, and I can't say that I'm upset that
Re:Amen! (Score:1)
And I really resent that fact that so many people feel like anyone who doesn't like *everything* about Slashdot should leave. What's wrong with voicing an opinion about how it could be improved?
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Re:Until... (Score:1)
software releases.
What icon would represent a special at a butcher shop? USDA "choice" stamp? a pork chop?
Re: (Score:1)
Holy shit, 75% of comments are trolls! (Score:2)
Raid 0.90 status? (Score:2)
-- Chris Chabot
"I dont suffer from insanity, i enjoy every minute of it!"
Cutting Edge Linux (Score:2)
EraseMe
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:2)
Rob has NEVER tried to keep his email address hidden from us. Never. If you have what you feel a valid complaint, dammit, do something about it instead of just crying. At very least, maybe you'll get to hear Rob's explanation for NOT having done so already.
Anyway, in regards to my previous post, I apologize. I should probably apologize for this one in advance, but I've never been all that great at tact, so I'll leave it be.
I'll shut up now before I piss someone else off.
Re:Question about the feature freeze (Score:2)
devfs is the only thing that did change existing code a lot - but the patch has been around (and stable) forever.
Re:Freshmeat sucks. (Score:1)
Perhaps Freshmeat would benefit from a few /.isms - particularly the ability to filter some categories of notice.
So I stopped reading it, and I can't say that I'm upset that /. posts this kind of stuff.
Me neither. But the sooner it gets it's own section so people can disable it and stop whinging, the better.
Re:2.4 (Score:2)
Re:2.4 (Score:1)
Does size matter? (Score:1)
Isn't it *a bit* too big yet? You know, I'm at home now and the only connection I got here is 33.6. Takes a while for it to fall down here...
Please, any kind soul split it into modules so different alt. cpu sections and drivers for some rare h/w are separate from "core kernel"?
Thank you!
Re:Until... (Score:1)
Vegetarians Unite! Protest Butcher shop icon! Demand Slaughterhouse imagery to increase awareness of animal cruelty! RaRaRa!! =)
Okay, I'm having a silly day....
.48?? (Score:1)
Jordan
Idiot Moderator -- how is "woody" offtopic? (Score:1)
CmdrTaco himself brought it up.
Do you mean to tell me there actually was a topic in the
little brain-fart CmdrTaco felt so compelled to share?
------------------------------------------
"The Internet interprets censorship
as damage, and routes around it."
Re:Isn't it great? (Score:1)
Do you want a stable distro that took a bit longer than planned to finish,
or an unstable one that you can have every so-often, and then have to apply
15 patches/month?
This is why I use debian, it's stable, tested.
(Plus, apt-get is just plain cool
Note: not intended as a flame. Nor am I saying that
Debian's packaging system is "leet"-er than say, rpm.
New Kernel! (Score:1)
what a wonderful world!
Re:Until... (Score:1)
The posting is fine the way it is. I think that people are upset because they think slashdot is encroaching on freshmeat domain. But sometimes new software is news also.
A different section would actually be more like encroaching on freshmeat domain. If slashdot and freshmeat merged then a different section would be appropriate.
If people don't like it posted here they can simply ignore it like I do with articles that I don't find interesting.
Personally I very much like to get kernel updates posted here because I don't follow the unstable releases as closely as I'd like to. This allows me to listen in and get some ideas about what features are in there and how stable the kernel is becoming.
my 2c anyway.
-P
Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:5)
1) Slashdot != Freshmeat (I'll go along with this one)
2) Slashdot should not post any of the same stories as Freshmeat.
OK, now number 2 lost me. I don't see what the reasoning is that makes #2 follow from #1. Let me use this argument in some more examples.
Slashdot != StarWars.com, so no stories about star wars movies should be here.
Slashdot != Suse != RedHat != Debian, so no stories about these should be on slashdot either.
Slashdot != GoHip.com, so no information that is at GoHip.com should be on Slashdot. Since GoHip.com has a license agreement that tells what their "browser enhancement" does, it should not be on Slashdot.
So, do you people think that slashdot should only contain news about things that aren't on any other website? Most of the news posted here has a link to some other site, so most of the news could be found somewhere else on the internet.
Personally, I look at Slashdot as a repository for news. It gives me one place to look instead of having to go to 100 different pages to find interesting stories. I just don't get why you people are so upset about this. I don't like every little story that pops up on here, but I don't have to read every one of them either.
I think a lot of the problem is in the assumption that all Slashdot readers are also Freshmeat readers. I haven't heard anyome come right out and say this, but it is the impression that I get.
OK, I'm finished now.
--
Re:Does size matter? (Score:1)
Scott
Freshmeat slashbox (Score:1)
Where is 2.4 ? (Score:1)
Some of it is already stable... (Score:4)
DevFS, for example, has been stable for ages and Richard has dutifully been releasing updated patches against current kernels. It was just a matter of convincing Linus that it was the `Right Thing'.
The softnet stuff is, in my mind, too radical a change for a feature freeze, but if it's really as good as people say then it might be worth it. I'm sure it will push the stable release back a month or so.
The most exciting new feature for me is the Logical Volume Manager included in 2.3.47. I've spent a lot of time administering AIX systems and the LVM is a Godsend for the harried system administrator. I don't know yet what the Linux LVM can do, but on AIX you can expand volumes while the system is running. I've heard that on HP you can shrink volumes as well. Even if the Linux LVM doesn't have all the bells and whistles, you can bet they will appear quickly now that the feature is in the mainstream kernel.
It looks like 2.4 will be a really nice release all-around. Not a lot of radical changes, but lots of performance improvements and useful little things.
Re:Amen! (Score:1)
Possibly a good idea would be to put all software/kernel/etc releases/updates/etc under a common topic so that those who don't think they belong here on slashdot don't have to see them (ie can turn them off in their user prefs.
Just a thought.
Mike
Re:Question about the feature freeze (Score:2)
It stands for Device File System. It seeks to make the naming of devices more like the naming of files, so that users no longer need to create a link to the device.
Apparently this feature has been in new kernels since kernel .46.
There is some concern that it creates unneccesary overhead. However, users and authors of device drivers don't need to utilize or even know about this feature if they don't want to.
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:1)
--We are among you...
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:2)
it's a point release, if it were a major thing, then I don't
see how or why there would be a problem.
If it's intended for the developers, they don't need it here,
they're developers.. they generally know about this stuff
(before slashdot/freshmeat does).
But then the idea of a software section on slashdot is very cool,
just as long as it doesn't end up as freshmeat did..
I would still want to hear about major 'stuff' on the main page though
Re: (Score:1)
Idiot Anonymous Coward: Now _you're_ Offtopic (Score:1)
> If you do not like Slashdot don't visit
> Slashdot...
Possibly.
Or, possibly, if CmdrTaco ignores the legitimate complaints of his readers -- he will lose them.
> Clue... CmdrTaco wasn't making a Bevis and
> Butthead comment and short attention span
> brainfart posts like that ARE off topic..
Agreed.
So why did CmdrTaco post it, then?
------------------------------------------
"The Internet interprets censorship
as damage, and routes around it."
Re:Where is 2.4 ? (Score:1)
People know the end product is going to suck, so why don't they just release it already?
Plus, Linux releases are released closer to the date it was intended than MS does, (as far as I know), and it actually shows that they were working out the bugs. (ie, it's stable).
Re:Interesting? How? (Score:1)
Heaven forbid they *revolve* the stories and just show the 10 most recent....
They do, crackhead. If more stories are posted in a day than are meant to fit on the front page, they go over in the "Older Stuff" Slashbox. Duh.
The rest of your post was fine, though. Stock watching indeed.
I am the Lord.
Re:Some of it is already stable... (Score:1)
Sure you can. HP LVM can resize volumes if they are unmounted. You just have to remember that the volume and the volume container are two seperate entities, and you can easily truncate a volume and corrupt the data inside if you resize things out of sequence.
Re:Until... (Score:1)
Yeah. Me too. I love this sort of stuff! But what happened to the Kernel 2.3.47 announcement? We haven't had a new kernel release article for over a week goddammit!
Re:Freshmeat sucks. (Score:1)
*I* like Freshmeat, and Slashdot. I don't think it's necessary to rebuild or replace either.
PCMCIA Intergration, not what you think (Score:2)
First, you still need the userland tools: cardmgr, cardctl etc...
These do not ship with the kernel. Thus you still need to get the card services package from pcmcia.sourceforge.org
Second, for 2.3.x kernels you need get the devel snapshots of the cs package. (found on the pcmcia-cs page)
Once you have that, everything you be working nicely.
I was also a bit confused by 'PCMCIA in the Kernel', but a bit of playing showed what it really ment.
see ya
Re:Is Freshmeat not... (Score:1)
Re:2.4 (Score:1)
---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine [nmsu.edu].
Re:Cutting Edge Linux (Score:2)
Notes: I'm not dead, just slow.
---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine [nmsu.edu].
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:1)
Everything is Microsoft's fault, they're the distruntled readers, who want a section for Linux.
So this is how all the sections came to be? Big corporations hiring people to post on slashdot, about how there should be another section for subject X?
Never would have guessed
Not that I'd put it past Microsoft...
Re:Where is 2.4 ? (Score:1)
APM and PCMCIA (Score:2)
Performance improvements not quite done! (Score:2)
Re:What about non-Linux users. (Score:1)
Re:Question about the feature freeze (Score:3)
The feature-freeze effectively means that Linus won't accept anything completely new and unproven into the kernel (unless it's a new platform or just a driver for something; these do not harm the stability of the rest of the system in any major way), not that no new features will go in. And sometimes even new code HAS to go in; to solve unexpected problems and to add support that simply can't wait. The name is a bit deceiving, I must admit. But DevFS and the crypto-patches have both been tested extensively for a long time by others. The journaled file systems will probably not make their ways into the kernel; mainly because they don't work together with the RAID-system in a nice way. Fixing this is a question for the v2.5 development series.
Oh, this release introduced another platform, for those of you that are interested; Mips64. It's time to bring forth your long forgotten SGI Origin...
If you want a horizon to judge anything with, wait for the code-freeze. It should be a signal that a new kernel is upcoming within the month.
Oh, and those of you who wondered: the talk that v2.4 was supposed to be released at the same time as Win2K is simply bs; Linus hasn't said anything such at all. He's smarter than that. What Linus has said, is that he'll release v2.4 when he consider it to be finished and ready to be released, not a day sooner.
Re:Come on (Score:1)
xfstt? (Score:1)
Re:2.4 (Score:1)
Define "new" (Score:1)
New kernels are coming out weekly/biweekly, so where is the news in that?
True, hardcore nerds already got the new kernels before it is announced at
Bjarne, who wonders when small changes to CVS's starts to be announced at
Compile fails (Score:1)
I'm sorry to interrupt your troll fest, and I guess I'll be moderated down for not mentioning grits or statues, but ..
The compile of 2.3.48 fails with ac97_codec.c:103: warning: `mixer_defaults' defined but not used
I patched it up from 2.3.46. Any idea what if could be? I don't want to bother the l-k list if it's a trivial problem.
Linux 2.2 Service Pack 14 (Score:1)
When a certain Redmond, WA-based company releases a patch (bugfix, Service Pack, whatever), this shows how buggy their product is.
Open Source, closed minds. We are Slashdot.
Whoups! (Score:2)
I pasted the wrong line. It failed with
In file included from ac97_codec.c:31:n ux/ac97_codec.h:135: parse error before `u16'
/home/nico/src/linux/include/li
... and dozens of lines of error.
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:1)
Gergo
Re:Raid 0.90 status? (Score:3)
Linear and RAID-0 should compile and work (I've only tried RAID-0 myself, on 2.3.47). There was a little hazzle with autodetection/boot support, but other than that, it worked.
The other RAID levels should be on their way.
Oh, and the HOWTO should be on it's way into the LDP now.
Re:Come on (Score:1)
Re:Linux 2.2 Service Pack 14 (Score:1)
Re:Some of it is already stable... (Score:1)
Software announcements (Score:1)
Description of devfs (Score:1)
Re:Some of it is already stable... (Score:1)
Yes but will it include support for large files (> 2 GB) on 32 bit machines? I've asked this before but have yet to get an absolutely definitive response :(
PCMCIA? (Score:1)
Re:So FSCKing what? (Score:1)
Does this annoy anyone else? (Score:1)
I'd say it was a very Microsoft-esque phrase, except that would probably get me instant "flamebait" moderation
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:1)
--
Re:Freshmeat whiners, let me see if I get this (Score:1)
Anyway, my point is that it is ok if we see announcements like 'kernel 2.2.xx is out', or 'gnome 1.2 is out', but 2.3.xx can cause trouble.
Maybe it's 20 revisions to 2.2? (Score:1)
News from the Linux frontlines (Score:5)
Posted by CmdrTaco on Sunday February 27, @10:36AM
from the rob-sucks-tarballs dept
Linus Torvalds, creator of Linux, accidentally hit his keyboard with his elbow today. We have yet to receive confirmation that the resulting code will be be included in the next development kernel, but we can never be too sure. Here is the code in full:
This won't compile under GCC, so we can only assume the code is pretty experimental. Look for the tarballs to be released this evening.
Torvalds comments, "What? Oh, yeah, I accidentally hit my keyboard with my elbow when I reached to get my tea. What? Is it part of the new kernel? You're kidding, right?"
We'll update the article as soon as we get more information. The Linux world hasn't been in such frenzied anticipation since the release of kernel 2.3.48.9.2.7.42, which was about ten minutes ago.
Interview: Alan Cox farted
Posted by Hemos on Sunday February 27, @10:34AM
from the whats-that-smell dept
Linux guru and hacker-extrodinaire Alan Cox farted earlier today. What do you think this says about the future of Linux development? Alan's ass will respond to the highest moderated posts later this week.
ESR and JonKatz to participate in "Zealot Deathmatch"
Posted by Roblimo on Sunday February 27, @10:33AM
from the die-bitch-die dept
Open source proponent Eric S. Raymond and Slashdot nutcase JonKatz are reportedly organizing a "Zealot Arena Deathmatch" to raise money for the Apache Software Foundation. The fight is expected to be a tough one, because while Katz is genuinely insane, ESR has the power of girly, elfish looks. A spokesman from Apache says that, "while we don't encourage violence, we'll do anything for money."
VA Linux aquired by Klingons, Rob bows down to new alien masters
Posted by emmett on Sunday February 27, @10:32AM
from the star-shit-enterprise dept
VA Linux Systems, owner of Andover.net, owner of Slashdot.org, owner of Rob's ass, was officially aquired by the Klingon Empire earlier this morning. The Klingons, who have recently taken over Kellogs, GM, and Disney, are looking forward to absorbing more major corporations in the near future. The US Government is discussing investigating the Klingons for holding a monopoly over "every aspect of our lives", to which the Klingons responded, "Puny human scum! I will crush you like a bug and feast upon your steaming entrails." Finally, some competition for Microsoft!
Red Hat and VA stock at all time high!
Posted by CmdrTaco on Sunday February 27, @10:31AM
from the i-am-so-rich dept
Dude, have you heard the market reports today? I am so fucking rich! If this keeps up, I'll be able to stop doing this Slashdot crap! Hell yeah!
I am the Lord.
USB really sucks ... (Score:1)
That's all I know.
offtopic? (Score:1)
Re:Holy shit, 75% of comments are trolls! (Score:1)
When I first got usb support working in 2.3.41 I had to update my motherboard bios so that it would assign an irq to usb (worked in winbloze without). To get 2.3.47 to compile I had to change a line near the end of mtrr.c from ifdev to ifdef.
Other then these two small things I have had absolutely no other problems. My usb mouse/keyboard are both working great and I even have the usb mouse mixed with the ps/2 mouse so either can control things simultaneously and wheels on both work.
-idealego
Re:LOL! A Posters' Liberation Army has evolved... (Score:1)
No, I cannot.
Neither can you.
Neither can a Posters' Liberation Army.
You see, the solution to Slashdot's moderation and troll problems is both, at once, simple and impossible: prevent illiterate, ignorant trolls from posting articles -- i.e. CmdrTaco, Jon Katz, Hemos, etc.
They set the tone.
That tone, in addition to being ignorant and illiterate, is adolescent. It therefore attracts and encourages the same.
The ridiculously baroque moderation system in place here is absurd. It is only necessary because the posters most in need of moderation are the ones posting articles."
Well you are entirely wrong. You CAN do something about it. Dont read Slashdot. If it gets yer panties in such a bundle pal, why the hell do you continue to make the kind of postings you say you dislike, ie ignorant, illiterate, and adolescent. Stop wasting my time with your idiotic postings.
Re:offtopic? (Score:1)
Re:Compile fails (Score:2)
7 minutes to boot, with a full fs check: 46gb used (Score:5)
Among the other partitians, I have a 23, 16, and 20gb partitians. (on seperate drives). I have about 75gb of disk space total, with 46gb of that currently in use (723484 files/directories). My trick is twofold:
First, the default inode allocation is a bit insane.. Inodes are 128 bytes each and there's one inode for every 4kb of diskspace. So for every 10gb of disk, the default format uses 320mb of inodes, capable of storing over 2.5 million files! And e2fsck has to scan each and every byte in each and every one of these inodes. So why not drop that to 1/4, or one inode for every 16kb? Then for every 10gb of diskspace e2fsck only has to scan 625,000 inodes or 80mb worth. Can you say 4 times faster?
Some might claim that they could run out of inodes with an allocation that small? Unless the server has lots of small files (mail, news, proxy), its highly unlikely that you'll have even 500,000 files on the whole thing. You can get this info very quickly by using 'tune2fs -l
If you're like me and you notice that you're using only 1/8 or even 1/15 the total number of inodes, and you don't the file charactaristics [number of files, directories, average size,
In my case, I've got a total of 4.2 million inodes, with only 700k used, had I formatted normally, I would have had around 19 million. (multiply by 128 bytes/inode to see how much storage they need, and how many hundreds of megabytes e2fsck would need to scan.) I also tuned my partitians seperately. Based on how they were currently being used and on the risk of that changing radically. (For instance,
Ok.. That's trick #1.. The second trick is the default blocksize. Changing this speeds up every filesystem operation, from allocation to fsck to reading to writing to unlinking. This trick does waste more diskspace.
Normally, ext2fs allocates storage in 1kb blocks. But changing that to 2kb has many advantages. First, a file requires only half the number of drive transactions, which will improve speed. Second, since all allocations are now done in 2kb sizes, I can allocate (and remove) twice as fast. Finally, due to the subtletly in I, II, III blocks that form the allocation BTREE, (These are diskblocks which point to diskblocks that point to diskblocks containing data.) Having twice the size of allocation means that the btree has twice the fanout AND each leaf holds twice the data. I'm not sure how much impact this factor has on speed.
For those of you who don't know how ext2fs inodes are layed out.. They're actually curious.. The inode itself points to the first 12 blocks of the file directly (normally the first 12*1024). Then it points to an I block that contains pointers to the next blocks in the file. (normally, the next 1024/4 = 256 blocks, or 256kb). Then there's the II block, which contains pointers to I blocks. Finally, there's the III block that contains pointers to II blocks. You don't need an IIII block because with only an III block, you can handle files up to about 16tb, which is larger than the maximum possible filesystem size.
Now, the reason to get into this big long explanation is to make a fascinating point about diskspace usage.. If you have a blocksize of 1kb, then files less than 12kb in size don't require any I blocks. While if you have a blocksize of 2kb, files less than 24kb in size don't require any I blocks.
So, if your filesystem has files between 12kb and 24kb in size, if you compare the disk usage between a filesystem of 1kb blocksize and 2kb blocksize, The worst you could do is waste an extra kilobyte in the last block, but that wasted diskblock is made up for the fact that you don't have an I block.
And that's the worst you could do. In fact if you have luck, you can actually come out pretty far ahead! Formatting with a blocksize of 2kb may actually waste LESS space AND require fewer seeks!
Now combine this with the tidbit that the average file tends to be around 13kb. If the majority of the files on the partitian are between 12 and 24kb in size, you can't lose with this!
As files get bigger than 24kb, the relative size of wasted space in the last block becomes much less relevant, (for files around 24kb, the maximum percentage of wasted space is 2kb/24kb ~~ 8%. For 128kb, its 2kb/128kb ~~ 1.6%) So a 2kb blocksize has a decreasing affect on wasted space, while at the same time increasing the bandwidth and speed of handling large files. So at files >24kb in size, you start winning, for files >1mb, you start winning a whole lot.
If the partitian is only intended for very large files, (Ones where any wasted space in the last block is irrelevant with respect to the total size.), then a 4kb blocksize makes perfect sense. I don't suggest this idea too strongly because its not as applicable as a 2kb blocksize.
Those are just a few characteristics of ext2fs with regard to blocksize. There's no magic bullet for speeding up ext2fs, but depending on how the filesystem is used, you can frequently speed it up. Look at your drive, the average file size, and the filesize distribution. ``find
For my personal system, the overhead of increasing the blocksize to 2kb is around 3-7%, 3% in most places and 7% where there tend to be many small files (/home/http).
Closing remarks:
If you use both tricks together, they almost cancel themselves out. The overhead of having 1 inode for every 4kb is 128b/4kb, or about 3%, if you format with 16kb/inode, the overhead drops to
And if you actually need millions of 4kb files, well, unjourneled ext2fs is not the filesystem I would reccomend.
So, a quick summary. My system takes 7 minutes to boot. It has 723484 used inodes, out of a total of 4.2 million inodes. I have 46gb of drivespace used, out of a total of 75gb. A boot with a full filesystem check takes 7 minutes and requires reading about 500mb worth of inodes. A boot without a full fsck takes one minute (about 20 seconds of that just mounting).
Had I formatted it normally, I would have saved 500-1500mb (1-3%) of drivespace, had 18 million inodes. Fsck times would probably take 4x-8x as long and requrie reading about 2.3gb worth of inodes.
I considered the trade well worth it for me, and I suspect that it would be well-worth it to many other people. (Excluding those who's boxes have multi-year uptimes.
[PS: I may turn this into a mini-faq.]
Re:Where is 2.4 ? (Score:2)
If you are a paying customer and don't get what you have been promised, you can complain. If you get free software and don't get what you have been promised, you can volunteer.
Where is 2.4pre -Linus didn't go home since Feb 2? (Score:2)
Look in the middle of the page. He said he would release 2.4 pre as soon as he got home. I guess he didn't go home yet
Actually I would rather see more development than an unstable release, but it would be good to get a new approximate time for the 2.4pre from linus. Maybe March, April, RSN.. etc
Re:Some of it is already stable... (Score:2)
Yes! The support has been there for a couple of months now.
Re:Does this annoy anyone else? (Score:2)
you're 'starting' somewhere, that somewhere should
not be with development kernels. Besides that,
there are plenty of references to kernel.org here
and elsewhere, so it's not like anyone is actually
hiding anything, Rob was just quipping and making
a change of phrasing. (He usually says something
like 'you can get it from the usual places' with
usual places being a link to somewhere, or
whatever.) So... chill. Or read linux.com instead.
--Parity
Re:7 minutes to boot, with a full fs check: 46gb u (Score:2)
And maybe.. The thing is that I REALLY don't want to have drive corruption. I don't mind it it blows up a drive, I've got my data duplicated between drives.. What will destroy me is if I get corruption. I'll use ext2 until about 3 months after a newer filesystem becomes the 'standard' in redhat or debian or some other major distribution.
Re:Linux 2.2 Service Pack 14 (Score:2)
Microsoft probably do a new internal build of their current OS-in-development every day with loads of broken features. You don't get to see this unless you are a Microsoft employee.
The difference in the Open Source model is that everyone gets to see these incremental releases. You are free to test them out, improve them or make constructive criticism if you have the skills and inclination to do so. There will undoubtably be bugs, as there are in every single large software prooject during development.
Nobody in their right minds would use a patched development release to run a production system and expect it to run flawlessly. Hence the "development kernel" numbering system. But lots of people are interested in these releases, either because they are actively interested in making them better or just like having the latest and greatest features to hack around with.
It's much more sensible to compare NT service packs to stable kernel releases, but even then the analogy isn't perfect.