Linux Kernel 2.4.6 Released 202
If the prospect of fireworks wasn't enough to make you happy today, there's a new Linux kernel in town. (Note: be patient; some of the mirrors aren't yet updated.) sheol writes of the new 2.4.6 release: "Yep, it's out there. Run, jump, dance in the streets. Drink and be merry. Prepare yourself for a full kernel recompile." Reader dschl says: "Looks like fixes to the Reiserfs bugs in 2.4.5 are included." Here's the changelog as well.
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
NOTICE OF REVOCATION OF INDEPENDENCE
To the citizens of the United States of America, In the light of your failure to elect a President of the USA and thus to govern yourselves, we hereby give notice of the revocation of your independence, effective today.
Her Sovereign Majesty Queen Elizabeth II will resume monarchial duties over all states, commonwealths and other territories. Except Utah, which she does not fancy. Your new prime minister (The rt. hon. Tony Blair, MP for the 97.85% of you who have until now been unaware that there is a world outside your borders) will appoint a minister for America without the need for further elections. Congress and the Senate will be disbanded. A questionnaire will be circulated next year to determine whether any of you noticed.
To aid in the transition to a British Crown Dependency, the following rules are introduced with immediate effect:
1. You should look up "revocation" in the Oxford English Dictionary. Then look up "aluminium". Check the pronunciation guide. You will be amazed at just how wrongly you have been pronouncing it. Generally, you should raise your vocabulary to acceptable levels. Look up "vocabulary". Using the same twenty seven words interspersed with filler noises such as "like" and "you know" is an unacceptable and inefficient form of communication. Look up "interspersed".
2. There is no such thing as "US English". We will let Microsoft know on your behalf.
3. You should learn to distinguish the English and Australian accents. It really isn't that hard.
4. Hollywood will be required occasionally to cast English actors as the good guys.
5. You should relearn your original national anthem, "God Save The Queen", but only after fully carrying out task 1. We would not want you to get confused and give up half way through.
6. You should stop playing American "football". There is only one kind of football. What you refer to as American "football" is not a very good game. The 2.15% of you who are aware that there is a world outside your borders may have noticed that no one else plays "American" football. You will no longer be allowed to play it, and should instead play proper football.
Initially, it would be best if you played with the girls. It is a difficult game. Those of you brave enough will, in time, be allowed to play rugby (which is similar to American "football", but does not involve stopping for a rest every twenty seconds or wearing full kevlar body armour like nancies). We are hoping to get together at least a US rugby sevens side by 2005.
7. You should declare war on Quebec and France, using nuclear weapons if they give you any merde. The 97.85% of you who were not aware that there is a world outside your borders should count yourselves lucky. The Russians have never been the bad guys. "Merde" is French for "shit".
8. July 4th is no longer a public holiday. November 8th will be a new national holiday, but only in England. It will be called "Indecisive Day".
9. All American cars are hereby banned. They are crap and it is for your own good. When we show you German cars, you will understand what we mean.
10. Please tell us who killed JFK. It's been driving us crazy.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
November 8, 2000
To the Subjects of Her Majesty, the Queen of England,
In the light of your failure to prevent us from kicking you out in the 18th century and doing as we damn well please, we hereby notify you that you can keep it down over there before we take notice.
Sure, historically America really doesn't pay much attention to the rest of the world. But when someone does catch our eye, we tend to carpet bomb them to a pre-industrial state. It may not be right, or fair, but it is a trend. I suggest you keep it in mind.
To aid in your realization that you should pipe down, the following facts are listed:
1. American English is distinct from British English. Our aluminum is a lovely silver color, and we do not 'armour' our tanks, thank you.
2. When you can tell the difference between an Alabama and Louisiana accent, I'll pay attention to the difference between a Londoner's and a Yorkshireman's accents.
3. Rather than "God save the Queen"; you should learn "The Battle Hymn of the Republic". After all, if it weren't for American soldiers you'd speak German today, twice over. And if it weren't for American bread, butter, etc., you would have been starving while we saved your little old island from the Hun.
4. If I were to throw an American football block on a football player, he'd be out ofthe game and I'd be ejected. If I were to throw a real tackle on a rugby player, he'd be maimed. The pads in American football are to keep you from being crippled or killed. Just because rugby players tear their ears in a group hug called a 'scrum'doesn't make them tough. You want tough? You put YOUR arms in theair while a 322 pound (46 stone) man slams into you at a dead sprint and still catch the ball. That's tough.
5. If you can't settle the French's hash, find someone else. After all, they have lost to everyone *but* the British this century.
6. The irony of a Brit complaining about American cars is too much. I've driven British cars and they're like a Hyundai, but poorly made. When someone else comes up with an idea as good as the muscle car, we'll think about it.
To sum it all up, we really aren't interested in your opinion.
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
1) Virtual desktops
2) Multiple workspaces
3) Decent window manager: icewm.
4) Looks great, unlike Windows' ugliness.
5) Decent terminal emulators
Re:great (Score:1)
Re:international (crypto) kernel problems (Score:1)
I thought that patch-int-2.4.3.1 was breaking before 2.4.5 for me, so I'm surprised you were OK with that version.
The only problem I've had is that something's changed in the toplevel Makefile and patch rejects some of the changes to that file. Check in Makefile.rej. Notably, 'crypto' has to be added to the end of the SUBDIRS variable and CRYPTO has to be defined as well. Just pull those lines out of the reject file. It's pretty simple.
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
*not* run Linux? What's the point of that? ;)
What's the point of having a computer environment that you own, yet don't have complete control of?
Anyway, to give this post at least some substance I'll describe my comfy little computer setup:
Ok, it's not 31337, but it keeps me happy and lets me play around with all sorts of fun things. Yes, even the SparcStation runs Linux :) Debian [GNU/]Linux to be exact. Makes everything nice and uniform. Just use apt-get everywhere!
Oh, and it's all in my bedroom here. So I guess I get extra geek points for that...
Still no AMD AGP Drivers for 761 chipset (Score:1)
Re:Reasons to upgrade? (Score:1)
Re:Troubles (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Except for my DECstation 5000/33
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
With a sense of humor like yours, it's understandable that someone would mistake it for Whiney Europeanese.
The wheel is turning but the hamster is dead.
The New Kid Is Available From Norway Mirrors ! (Score:1)
As usual, the Norway mirrors are carrying the new kernel.
2.4.6 is NOW on ftp://ftp.no.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.4/
Come and get it !
Re:Does Disc IO Still Block Pthreads? (Score:1)
Unless people start to integrate the new Next Generation Posix Threading Project [ibm.com] and, unless they hacked around *all* the blocking system calls .. well at least the slow ones that can return EINTR.. the entire process will block.
Reading the manual from the 1.0.0 src rpm, it looks like they wrapped read(2)/write(2) among others, but send*(2)/recv*(2) (off the top of my head) aren't wrapped yet. It is on their TODO list to get this integrated with glibc at some future point. Hopefully those issues will be worked out by then.
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
Well, Guy Fawkes Day isn't quite the same thing, but there are a lot of people out there who celebrate it as if they should work to make it an Independence Day by following through on Fawkes' failed plan...
(For the non-Brits, Guy Fawkes plotted to blow up the houses of Parliament with a keg of gunpowder, only to get turned in by one of his co-conspirators. On November the fifth every year, Guy Fawkes is burned in effigy.)
Remember, remember, the Fifth of November,
The gunpowder treason and plot.
I know of no reason why the gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot.
-- Bryan Feir
Re:2.4.6 dies horribly (Score:1)
Re:2.4.6 dies horribly (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
My second machine has Linux and FreeBSD
at the moment, and will probably gain
BeOS, OpenBSD, Solaris and Plan9 sooner
or later.
I guess define "use". (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
~jawad
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Oh, believe me, you're paying for it all right
2.2.x ? (Score:1)
I haven't because I don't want to bother upgrading my whole installation.... or worry about any potential conflicts
Re:National Holidays (Score:1)
Here in Brazil we never celebrated it. St. Patrick is almost unknown here. As a largely catholic country, we do celebrate other saints, like St. John, St. Peter... But I never saw any St. Patrick celebration.
Re:Save bandwidth... use patches. (Score:1)
--
mysql> DELETE FROM world.human_race WHERE iq < 100;
Re:Poor RAID performance in 2.4.5? (Score:1)
If the performance and scalability were better on 2.2 than 2.4 then there may be a bug or missing feature in 2.4 that should be looked into.
If the performance is comperable for 2.2 and 2.4 then the problem is most likely a bottleneck in your hardware (like the IDE bus contention mentioned by another poster).
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
But seriously, with the charged nature of things, isnt a question like this loaded and bound to evolve into a religious war ? So most folk here use linux, but then others pick FreeBSD or OpenBSD or NetBSD. To each his own, eh ?
Re:reiserfs problems??? (Score:1)
-pre9:
- Chris Mason: reiserfs PF_MEMALLOC handling
-pre4:
- Chris Mason: ReiserFS pre-allocation locking bugfix
-pre3:
- Chris Mason: reiserfs mark_journal_new and bh leak fix
- Neil Brown: knfsd updates, including ability to export ReiserFS filesys
Also, there is a patch available for 2.4.5 at the Namesys website [namesys.com], where they stated on June 21:. bz2) to indicate explicitly that it also contains umount-fix patch.
Quota and KNFSD patch for 2.4.5 is renamed ( linux-2.4.5-reiserfs-quota+knfsd+umount-fix.patch
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
Cinco de Mayo vs. Mexican Independance Day (Score:1)
May 5, 1862: Forces from France, England, Spain and a large rival Mexican army (But mostly France) were defeated near Mexico City; after attempting to re-occupy Mexico.
Poor RAID performance in 2.4.5? (Score:1)
Anyone else noticed this, or is it just me?
hda and hdc of course, with hdparm -A1c1d1k1m16u1X66
hdparm -t
PII-300, top is not showing greater than 30% CPU usage from hdparm or dd during the tests so CPU is not the problem (and it was flying under 2.2). I have tried plenty of chunk sizes up to 128k.
Hopefully 2.4.6 will fix it, but the md updates in (pre5?) did not.
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
The day (in 1653) that Oliver Cromwell cleared the "Rump" (the then corrupt parliment that was essentially still loyal to the defeated monarchy) and replaced it with the "Parliament of Puritan saints" (which proved equally innept). Although it was finnaly a failed overthrough of the monarchy (the monarchy was returned to power in about 1660, two years after his death).
Anyone got a Brittish independance day suggestion?
"I'll take the red pill, no, blue. AAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH........"
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
1) Virtual desktops
2) Multiple workspaces
3) Decent window manager: icewm.
4) Looks great, unlike Windows' ugliness.
5) Decent terminal emulators
1) I find them a pain in the arse, therefore they're a subjective "benefit"
2) Isn't that the same as 1) ?
3) Subjective
4) Very subjective
5) You haven't used many Windows terminal emulators have you
My point: Everything's subjective. Some think Windows is "ugly". I personally like it.
Xx Stuii!
Re:2.2.x ? (Score:1)
My desktop computer has a Geforce2 and I was pretty sure that the older drivers from nVidia only had kernel modules for 2.2.x so I played it safe, but now I'm just too lazy.
Re:Download time (Score:1)
Enjoy
Re:Time to start the 3.0 pool! (Score:1)
Re:Fireworks? (Score:1)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Re:small patch, but has more USB (Score:1)
Mike Roberto
- GAIM: MicroBerto
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:1)
Re:Poor RAID performance in 2.4.5? (Score:1)
I couldnt even get someone to admit there is a problem.
They all say they are getting linear performance increases, i used to be able to get 80& performance increas with 2 drives, but adding any more drives (i had 4 way raid 0) made no difference to performance.
Another mirror (Score:2)
ftp://ftp.stenstad.net/mirrors/linux-2.4.6.tar.
http://ftp.stenstad.net/mirrors/linux-2.4.6.tar
Re:2.4.6.... (Score:2)
so many more people work on Linux than he does.
Praise the men and women who did their work to make Linux what it is today.
small patch, but has more USB (Score:2)
I'll be updating my desktop later today (is it tomorrow now? I don't know)
My servers will sit tight at 2.4.5 though, there's really no reason to upgrade.
-davidu
Re:2.4.6 with XFS soon... (Score:2)
I upgraded to this "beta" version after I had minor FS corruption using the kernel supplied by SGI's Red hat installer. Happened after only about 2 days of uptime.
System has an Abit VP6 MB (some kind of VIA chipset) and a SCSI drive.
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No wild sex on the streets... (Score:2)
Thank you that you took Caution and haven't asked for wild sex in the streets. You know, geeks and sex? This could have caused serious depression on the readership of slashdot...
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:2)
I consider my Commodore 64s some of my principal computers. I haven't yet seen Linux running on those, just some "lightweight" UNIXes [sourceforge.net]...
I also use Win98SE for games, sound and digital video editing and such for which Linux is not yet the best solution. Aside of that, it's all Linux.
Re:Not that hard (Score:2)
--
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:2)
When Microsoft stops being evil, I'll consider their products on their merits. Until then, I'll treat it like a fish _should_ treat a baited hook because that's exactly what it is.
Re:Time to start the 3.0 pool! (Score:2)
I've asked this question once on lkml. It seems 3.0 will come when usermode applications have to be relinked (eg. not likely anytime soon).
kernel traffic link [zork.net].
Re:Troubles (Score:2)
As a Sys Admin who is in a group that runs alot of 6 way 4 gig systems, Linux 2.4.x sucks.
Yes, it has all the cool stuff we want; support for alot of devices, better SMP, and larger memory handling, however, its just not stable under high load.
I just hope that the Linux Kernel people can get their stuff together and make a stable kernel.
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Re:Fireworks? (Score:2)
--
Re:Fireworks? (Score:2)
Excuse me, you pretentious asshole - I live in America and am very aware of British holidays that we don't celebrate like Boxing Day and May Day. I am very aware of when the Magna Carta was signed (June 15th, 1215 at Runnymede).
Other free countries have their days of independance - July 14th for France, September 16th for Mexico (although I'll admit I had to look that one up), and July 4th for the United States of America.
Get over yourself - either you would prefer that the Slashdot crew censor themselves of all human comments (which would turn this into a stock rumor site), or you want to impress your own set of values and references upon the site. Either is a bloody narrow-minded point of view. There is a reason it's called the World Wide Web, and I'm not going to bitch if the Register mentions a British holiday in a story.
--
Evan
Available in Freenet, too (Score:2)
If you're running a Freenet [sf.net] node, you can grab the kernel source using the following key:
freenet:SSK@sUOkGXJDjktWahCNZmvg0sDkEKgQAgE/foldr. org/linux-2.4.6.tar.bz2 [localhost]
Re:reiserfs problems??? (Score:2)
There were problems with exporting a reiserfs partition over NFS, which was quite annoying... this may have been fixed in 2.4.5, though. If so, I'm not quite sure what the problems fixed in 2.4.6 are, but probably other wierd interactions that most people don't encounter.
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Me! (Score:2)
We have Windows (98 / 2k depending) on the desktop, AIX and Solaris on our number crunchers, HP-UX on the cluster, and an Alpha on Dec Unix in reserve (Old alpha, not that fast). There's an SGI Indy doing print serving and visulisation software in the corner. Oh, and UNICOS is what we use on the CSAR.
We do scienfic computing (Solid state physics), and reliabiltiy is important - particularly when your talking runtimes over around a month. PC hardware doesn't cut it, until you get into the range where UNIX boxes are similar prices. Hence the range of Unixs, and very little linux.
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Re:Sonypi and Motioneye patches for Sony Vaios... (Score:2)
Re:ummm (Score:2)
-------
Caimlas
Dammit, Janet... (Score:2)
(Yes, I checked for a newer version first, as I downloaded the 2.4.[45] patches a while back. This probably would've happened around 2200 PDT, and it was ftp.us.kernel.org that I checked.)
Re:Fireworks? (Score:2)
Maybe that's the real difference between "humor" and "humour."
Re:2.2.x ? (Score:2)
Re:2.2.x ? (Score:2)
I tried it on all the machines i have but on some (some p1 desktops and laptops) i had to revert to 2.2 because 2.4 crashed WAY too much and too often. (ranging from system freezes to scads of oopses an panics). The problem is that 2.4 uses the hardware at 110% potential but if the hardware is flakey (as those pentiums were) - it will bomb.
So: stay with 2.2 on "Production"-grade machines and on machines whose hardware you don't trust 100%
--
Sonypi and Motioneye patches for Sony Vaios... (Score:2)
*sobs*
Ah well, I'll just have to patch it myself again then, as us Vaio users aren't important enough for Linus (even though he has a C1 himself...)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:2)
Re:Does Disc IO Still Block Pthreads? (Score:2)
Well, I thought threads were implemented as Light Weight Processes (this is why Java and other programs such as realplayer show up in the process table more than once) so I don't see how this is possible.
Re:Time to start the 3.0 pool! (Score:2)
Cryptnotic
ReiserFS bugs in 2.4.5? (Score:2)
---
DOOR!!
Re:Fireworks? (Score:2)
Not a bad guess though. Much better than the man on "The Weakest Link" who thought Canada used to be part of Spain, and declared independance in 1812 :)
Re:2.4.6 dies horribly (Score:2)
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:2)
A fair question, if slightly off-topic-- I use Red Hat Linux 7.1 in a dual-boot config with Windows 2000 Server. On my server system (dual Pentium III 800's, with 1.25GB PC133) I run Windows 2000 Server exclusivly. I usually find myself more in Windows than in Linux, but I use Linux to develop apps/etc.
So -pre9 became -final, yes? (Score:2)
Or is the ChangeLog not yet complete? (Say, ChangeLog-pre1?)
Time to start the 3.0 pool! (Score:2)
By that point, Linux will be powering all our flying cars, I bet!
Re:National Holidays (Score:2)
Moderators: Yes, this is WAY offtopic from the new linux kernel. Do your bussiness. My +1 Bonus will protect me at first, but I know I'm in the wrong and can only last so long.
___
Re:Troubles (Score:2)
I guess this just adds to the cannon fodder
Re:Drink and be merry! (Score:2)
thanks Todd (barman at my local, and flatmate too... lifes good
buuuuuuuuuuurp...
It's fine! Probs gone. (Score:2)
Nice that these problems seem to be away now with 2.4.6.
Also I noticed the presence of an option for the MIDI-part of my via82cxx onboard-soundcard.
Havent't tried it yet though...
Download time (Score:2)
Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:2)
Fireworks? (Score:3)
2.4.6.... (Score:3)
Who do we appreciate?
Re:2.4.6.... (Score:3)
Why do people have the attitude that there isn't enough thanks to go around?
Re:2.4.6 dies horribly (Score:3)
Re:Poor RAID performance in 2.4.5? (Score:3)
___
Re:Reasons to upgrade? (Score:3)
The page_launder changes were backed out and then Linus wrote his own fix for the problem. So, no.
Re:great (Score:3)
Drink and be merry! (Score:3)
Re:Fireworks? (Score:3)
Apparently the Americans are celebrating some kind of holiday. Even though it only applies to them, they seem to want to ram it down everyone else's throats.
Maybe I'm biased, though, being British ;)
Mind you, there is a certain poetry to the release of the latest Linux kernel on a day people celebrate Freedom.
Re:reiserfs problems??? (Score:3)
Slackware 8.0 - which ships with 2.4.5 - comes with a small patch to fix that particular problem.
Re:Why Bother? (Score:3)
Re:2.2.x ? (Score:4)
The change from 2.2.x to 2.4.x is surprisingly painless (much less painful than any "user-level" major change, like back when the day when going from libc5 to glibc2 practically needed reinstallation of the whole dist). No recompilation or reinstallation of stuff was necessary.
Personally, the only thing that needed special attention was the firewall thing, and even that wasn't top priority (because the kernel has an ipchains comparibility mode). Ultimately, the conversion of my firewall script from ipchains to iptables was rather easy.
Re:Troubles (Score:4)
Well, not exactly wrong :)
The bigger problem is finding out what exactly is wrong. The only information available so far has been reverse engineered (AFAIK) and posted on the 3rd party site viahardware.com [viahardware.com]. So far all the information we have is "before BIOS update X" and "after BIOS update X" snapshots of the system setup.
It's pretty easy to figure out real quick which systems are broken. It's tougher to figure out what is broken, and what the right fix is.
Reasons to upgrade? (Score:4)
No doubt I am biased, but I disagree.
There are noteworthy VM fixes, buffer I/O deadlock fixes, and vfs fixes.
Plus the usual raft of driver fixes and merges from Alan Cox's tree. See Alan Cox's changelog as a supplement to the official changelog from Linus. Linus compresses many changes from Alan into a single word in the changelog, "merges."
Re:Does Disc IO Still Block Pthreads? (Score:4)
LWP's are Solaris-specific. Linux threads are implemented as processes which share memory, filehandles, etc.
Linux threads can't block other threads since there is no difference to a process. And offcource, a process can't block all other processes ;-)
You may want to switch to another pthreads implementation. Quite a few (at least three) implementations exist and you're probably using the all-userspace implementation. This one simulates threads in userspace and doesn't use native threads.
AFAIK the later glibc 2.x implementations use native threads.
Re:Troubles (Score:4)
Troubles (Score:4)
Does Disc IO Still Block Pthreads? (Score:4)
I believe that despite what the documentation says, any thread (at least under pthreads) that performs disc IO may block the entire process and prevent other threads from running. This is a problem the Flash high-performance web server had to get around by using multiple processes just for disc IO. Can anyone tell me categorically that this bug has been fixed or give me some idea of when it will be fixed?
Save bandwidth... use patches. (Score:5)
Use the kernel patches and patch your kernel source as described in the Kernel HOWTO.
This will save you precious time, bandwidth and will cause less load on the servers.
Re:Who *doesn't * use Linux here? :) (Score:5)
People seem to think they have to choose between the two operating systems. I used them both at the same time. They both have advantages and disadvantages. Windows is a well rounded, stable workstation OS, Linux is a stable, powerful server OS.
In reverse, I would consider them both to be useless. Why sacrifice one set of advantages? Use them both!
xx Stuii!