Linux Kernel 2.5.1 is Out 306
xise writes: "The next installment in the 2.5 Linux Kernel beta series, 2.5.1 is avaliable at the usual place Linux Kernel Archives. Remember to use the mirrors. You can read the changelog here."
"The only way for a reporter to look at a politician is down." -- H.L. Mencken
2.4? (Score:1)
Re:2.4? (Score:2)
Re:2.4? (Score:2, Interesting)
It irritates me that linux developers insist on adding new "features" to "stable" kernels, rather than keeping a running development kernel year round. Things like the vm change early in the 2.4 series, and some HUGE, server breaking kernel changes should not appear in a stable kernel.
Once new features are found, and coded, they should go immediately into the development kernel, and save the stable kernel for bug fixes, driver updates, and security enhancements.
Re:2.4? (Score:3, Informative)
The core kernel will remain stable, new drivers will be added where they have no effect on the rest of the kernel - so its the users choice if they want the new drivers or not.
One of these days the ACs will get a clue ....
Re:2.4? (Score:2)
The core kernel will remain stable, new drivers will be added where they have no effect on the rest of the kernel - so its the users choice if they want the new drivers or not.
Like the vm changes? That was just a driver change that anyone could swap in or out of the stable 2.4 kernel, eh?
Yes the anonymous cowards are a pain but sometimes they do make a good point.
Re:2.4? (Score:4, Informative)
The vm change was made because the original 2.4 vm was not performing adequately, and as far as I know the new vm has caused very few problems, but has much better performance. Would you prefer that we all wait 1-2 years before we can use the improved vm in a stable kernel? I'd personally rather sacrifice a few versions of the "stable" branch and get this important change in now. It would have been nice if this was caught before the 2.4 release, but as I said, the number of people running the unstable branch is tiny compared to the number running the stable. Linus has to make a kernel release sometime, he can't just sit and let the same few people test forever, and he sure as hell can't pay huge teams to test each kernel before release. If this is what you want, use the kernel that comes with your favorite distro. These have been tested in this fashion.
As far as the other "HUGE" changes, I'm not sure what you are referring to. Perhaps the addition of reiserfs and ext3fs? They were tested extensively in 2.3, not just added as an afterthought in 2.4.x. They simply were not ready until slightly after the rest of the kernel, and Linus didn't want to wait for them. Once again, should we have to wait years for journaling file systems when they were already very close to being ready? I see no problem with adding them, and if they scare you, just don't use them.
Sure, there have been "server breaking kernel changes", most particularly the umount bug in 2.4.15, but this was due to a relatively small change. These thing happen and no changes to Linus's kernel release practices will prevent them. No one is perfect, and whining about it will not change that fact.
Re:VM? (Score:1)
Re:2.4? (Score:2)
Re:2.4? (Offtopic) (Score:2, Interesting)
Value(Code clarity) >= Value(Memory for one cached page)
Re:2.4? (Offtopic) (Score:2)
Re:2.4? (Score:1)
Perhaps /. is a bad place for this. (Score:2, Interesting)
Any newbie who trys to install 2.5.1 is in for a learning experience (especially if they use SCSI).
Re:Perhaps /. is a bad place for this. (Score:2)
from the only-the-brave dept
It's obvious that only experienced kernel developers need apply.
Re:Perhaps /. is a bad place for this. (Score:2)
Re:Perhaps /. is a bad place for this. (Score:2)
If you read the changelog (see link in /. blurb) you'll see lots of entries from Jens Axboe related to "bio". That's the new block I/O layer which is being born. That in turn means a rewrite of certain portions of all the block drivers, including IDE, SCSI, RAID, floppy, etc.
Depending on your particular SCSI card, it may or may not work correctly, yet. I haven't been tracking the 2.5.1 prepatches - don't really have a system I can afford to trash - but I understand IDE and a few of the more popular SCSI cards were converted early on and probably work ok by now. But I don't trust that assumption enough to load 2.5.1 on my machine, which doesn't have quite a recent enough backup for my liking..
This is development! DO NOT DEPLOY (Score:2, Redundant)
You may want to just continue upgrading on the 2.4.x series and wait until 2.6.x is stable.
-
Re:This is development! DO NOT DEPLOY (Score:2)
> 2.5.x series and generally it is not
> recommended that you install it UNLESS you can
> program and debug kernel stuff
They shoulda stuck this warning to the 2.4.x kernels too.
Sure it's gotten better in 2.4.16, but man it was a rocky road up to that point. Way it seems to me, if there's so little effective difference between a "beta" kernel and a "stable" one, warning about status is kind of irrelevant.
Re:This is development! DO NOT DEPLOY (Score:1)
Re:This is development! DO NOT DEPLOY (Score:4, Informative)
Re:This is development! DO NOT DEPLOY (Score:2)
I agree with you ONLY IF you have a test box. I would not want to risk the data on my everyday use home box. If I had a test box, that is where this kernel would go.
This new-fangled Open Source thing only works if the end users hold up our end of the bargain. They release early and often, and we build and test it.
Even of open source users, we don't want them ALL to test stuff. Only those who are 1. Willing to take the risks of using dev. software and 2. Those that have the ability and DESIRE to return bug reports (and believe me when I say this is a more "elite" group than you might think). The trick of open source is that it ALLOWS people who are INTERESTED in the developement of a project to help. It does NOT mean that most people SHOULD. I would not want my girlfriend trying to recompile a kernel and then expect her to try to give a helpfull bug report to lkml. Even the testers of a new developement kernel should be very sophisticated users.
What are the new things they are working on? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:5, Informative)
It seens every top-kernel developer or company has a different aproach, so its not clear which will be the one being picked (prolly a combination of patches)
IBM has a patch to do a per-cpu que of tasks, allowing better scaling of the scheduler. This causes a lot of the task scheduler to be re-written
Alan has a in-between solution with 8 que's (no matter the amount of CPU's), and a small part scheduler rewrite.
Some other ppl have different aproaches to it all, cant remember their perspective on it (check LKM archives if ur interested).
However the main point (as pointed out by alan and linus) seems to be: 99% of the linux boxes out there run only 3 concurent running tasks, so the scheduler has to remain optimized for this situation (!). The current scheduler handles this situation very well. So any updates and fixes are prolly likely to be non-intrusive to the current scheduler
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:4, Interesting)
Interesting. But could this measurement be simplified to the point of being off base? A large percentage of these machines are webservers sitting idle so what do they care about scheduler optimizations? Same thoughts for single process number cruching ray tracing server farms. Shouldn't the focus be optimizing tasks that will benifit from being optimized? I know we have a few boxes that just run Java apps. I bet they would benifit from a new scheduler if the machine were a 4 way. So what are the bulk of these 99 out of 100 machines doing? They're not desktops.
Also, what prevents Kernel developers from optimizing the scheduler for a Kernel development workstation
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:2)
Remeber that very few desktop applications use all CPU slices (this would be very bad), but just respond on input, or play a mp3 or so (which is minimal cpu usage, it will be waiting for a timer event most of the time)
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:2)
Hmmmm...[So I know next to nothing about how the kernel does its work.]
With that qualification made in advance, I'll ask this question:
Is it that the code necessarily bleeds into too many routines? Is VM management similarly impractical to shove into a loadable kernel module?Apologies in advance if the question is too dumb.
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:2)
Most of the time I only have a quite small number of things happening. But during those times, the machine isn't busy anyway. But when I have several things happening at once, that's when the machine gets busy, so it needs the best scheduling.
Re:What are the new things they are working on? (Score:1)
Kernel 2.5.2pre1 is out (Score:2, Insightful)
I also don't see announcements of FreeBSD beta, only RELEASES. And it should stay that way.
FreeBSD probably has a more sensible policy here (Score:4, Insightful)
This is mainly because FreeBSD does not assign flashy version numbers to their betas, only to releases. For a current beta, grab the FreeBSD-current [freebsd.org] distribution, and you're up to date. If you don't know how to do that, then it's not for you anyway.
They don't advertize that, and I think it's a good idea not to do so, because it saves a lot of end users a lot of trouble. There's an extra section in the FreeBSD manual [freebsd.org] saying that the -current distribution is not "a fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on your block to have it", and that sums it up quite well. Better than assigning 5.0.7b1-BETA and waiting for end user complaints to pour in, anyway.
Re:FreeBSD probably has a more sensible policy her (Score:3, Informative)
BSD kernel development and Linux kernel development seem to be examples of two very different paradigms[1]
FreeBSD[2] kernel development, bug tracking and fixing appear to be very formal, resulting in a rather sedate evolution. Linux versions of the same thing, although every bit as centralised as BSD projects (or even more so, because Linus decides what goes into the release), appears to be much less formal--I can find no Linux equivalent of FreeBSD's bug tracking system. [freebsd.org]
The FreeBSD project does also appear to have more rigid project management. It's also much more of a single entity, too. Whereas the Linux kernel project is distinct from the distributions that use it, typically a BSD project includes management of everything from kernel development through package management to documentation, promotion and distribution of source media.
[1] Sorry for dumping the p-word on you without warning there, but I think it's merited in this case [G,D&R].
[2] Taking FreeBSD as an example of a BSD project.
Re:Kernel 2.5.2pre1 is out (Score:2)
New in 2.5.x? (Score:1)
Re:New in 2.5.x? (Score:3, Informative)
no roadmap, but some focus (Score:2)
That said, I've read that the stuff that Linus WANTS to put into the new kernel include features for NUMA machines and stuff to improve scheduling abilities for embedded systems. Both of those probably mean a higher focus on making things SMP safe, and possibly work on making the kernel more preemtible. One thing Linus has said he will make sure of is that performance on uniprocessors and small SMP's doesn't suffer much as a result of this.
Besides that, we can expect support for more devices, tons of bug-fixes, probably some more journalling filesystems, and all the other stuff that comes with Linux slowly maturing.
The mirrors (Score:5, Informative)
The proper site for mirrors of the Linux Kernel is here [kernel.org].
Here's a quick link [kernel.org] to those of you looking for US-based mirrors.
-dan
into unix and punk? check out unixpunx.org
Fixing the !*)@(# pagecache (Score:2)
Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
Re:Tulip cards - help! --Offtopic (Score:2)
meta name="MSSmartTagsPreventParsing" content="TRUE"
Is this true?
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2, Informative)
but I mean... Would it kill you to run 2.4.xx when 2.6 is out? I mean, bugfixes are still being applied to the 2.2 kernel...
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
Of course, it wouldn't hurt at all to just leave them as they are, but what I'm really hoping for is one thing: more effecient IO processing. On machines this old, even a marginal improvement makes a big difference. And on the budget I have to work with, disposal is not an option.
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
Well then you should just compile the kernel on another machine and copy it across
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
This would mean that your old tulip cards are only supported with tulip.o, and not anymore by de4x5.o.
Or I'm wrong, and the reference to "old driver" is a reference to Donald Becker's tulip.o driver, which isn't included in 2.4 or 2.5. I believe that came with the 2.2 kernel and only supports 2.4 since recently.
There are lots of different tulip cards. On 2.2.17 and earlier linksys cards had lots of troubles with the kernel drivers, and always came with their own drivers. For newbies that sucks.
I think it's a good thing to seperate some of the drivers.
Re:Tulip cards - help! (Score:2)
'tulip' as I'm sure you know supports quite an array of chips and cards - from the original DEC 21040 through the 10/100 2114x and several "imitation" chips. Not only that, but the other hardware on a tulip card can vary in minor but annoying ways.
What seems to be happening is that the kernel people (Jeff Garzik probably) are getting tired of supporting all those configurations in a single driver. Thus the older chips and configurations will go in one driver and the newer ones in another. The old driver will need very little maintenance since it won't have to support any new hardware in the future.
This is similar to what happened with the NE2000 driver - long ago it was split up into a legacy (ISA etc) driver and a PCI driver. See also the various NCR SCSI drivers.
Upshot is, you just need to pick the correct driver for your hardware. Then do whatever it is you need to do currently to set up your card correctly (media settings?).
-AC? (Score:1)
Re:-AC? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:-AC? (Score:2)
The -AC 2.4.X were a testing ground largely for his endeavors to merge as much as possible into the kernel above and beyond Linus' stable-er or more conservative (an approach which is subjective; some such as Alan see the new VM as avant guard) merging approach. I think that part of the aggressive merging going on in 2.4 with the -AC branch seeks to give RedHat the leg up on other distros with regard to the feature-laden-ness of the RedHat official kernel. For example, the RedHat 2.4.9 kernel release that is RPM-able (RPM KERNEL ARE EVIL
The maintenance of 2.4.X was handed off to Marcelo at 2.4.15 by Linus, according to "The Linux Portaloo" written by Cox sporadically, there was some confabulation regarding who would maintain 2.4. According to some recent posts, Alan fully intends on continuing his tireless and aggressive merges, but in the tie being he is, by my speculation, busy digesting the 2.5.X roadmap and rewriting SCSI drivers (:
As far as the 2.5 kernels go, try them out, complain to the right people, and make sure to love Linux as well should.
-Z
Re:-AC? (Score:2)
No. 2.4.15 was where Alan pushed most of his ready-for-primetime stuff to Linus, and that was the end of the -ac series for now. Alan pushes stuff straight to Marcelo now (see the changelogs), and presumably he doesn't have all that much queued up from -ac anymore.
bio? (Score:1)
Re:bio? --Nevermind (Score:1)
Re:bio? --Nevermind (Score:2)
Yup, a shiny new block device layer, supposed to scale better on big boxes. It required significant changes to all block drivers, meaning all the hardware drivers for IDE, SCSI, RAID, floppy, etc.
This is what makes 2.5.1 a "caution, do not try this at home" development kernel. The early kernels in 2.3 were pretty tame by comparison - the big breakage there (the Great Page Cache Migration) didn't happen until I think 2.3.7.
Argh(Argh()) (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Argh(Argh()) (Score:1)
Re:Argh(Argh()) (Score:2)
"There are x standard replies everytime blah" rant that gets posted every time a new kernel is released.
Re:Argh(Argh()) (Score:2)
Re:Argh(Argh()) (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Argh(Argh()) (Score:1)
Upgrading (Score:4, Funny)
I kind of got frustrated after trying to patch it for a while, and just let it eat stuff before I finally made myself fix it, but when I sent in the patch, he said it was too big and obfuscated (I'm not quite sure what he meant - BettyLuJane could read it fine if I held her head on for her), but now I have to try all over again? 2.1 or 2.2 I think I could get done before it starts eating the sofa again, but 2.5? It'd eat all the way through the safety systems on all my Acme stuff, and I don't want that to happen again.
I mean, 2.5 just sounds really big. Does it mean I have to use real names for my variables instead of just my favorite letters? Also, I don't think my toaster liked gcc. It said something about being incompatible with M$ PROPRIETARY ANTIMATTER-GENERATING TOASTER's. I still don't know where that came from, but it all went away when I rewrote the kernel in Visual Basic 2.0+.
Well, thank you for your time. If you have any suggestions (or if you want to send me a new toaster - I can't really afford a new one quite yet), my email is gheiste.strauss@mickeymouse.com.
P.S. If it does fix the antimatter problem, does that mean I don't have to worry about it destroying the city anymore? (these guys in suits wouldn't take me seriously when I told them I couldn't figure out what was going on, and they let me go after a couple of years, but I don't like them anymore - they aren't as polite as they used to be)
welp (Score:1)
Don't overdo the caution (Score:5, Funny)
Ok, this is a development kernel, so you shouldn't just jump in as if it were a stable release. But keep in mind that this is only 2.5.1, where 2.5.0 == 2.4.15, a stable kernel. Since it's only been one revision, it can't have destabilized that much.
A quick primer on kernel engineering might help. You know how the 2.4.x series solidified release by excruciating release? Well, the 2.5.x series is the same, only in reverse. It takes as much work to destabilize a kernel as it did to stabilize it, so don't expect crashes and corruption right away. In fact, just as a few 2.4.x releases were regressions, 2.5.1 might even be stabler than 2.5.0. That would be an accident, though, and the developers try to prevent it.
To the Slashdot editors: You can dispense only so much over-caution before the readers decide you're crying wolf. As a community, we need to save up our restraint for the real hour of need, when the siren song of exotic new features lures even the most stolid administrator from the doldrums of predictable stability, into the roiling churn of highly evolved breakage. I would recommend toning down the warnings for now, and becoming progressively more shrill as the kernel hits its maximal instability.
Re:Don't overdo the caution (Score:3, Informative)
Since it's only been one revision, it can't have destabilized that much.
2.5.1 introduces major changes to the block device layer, a rather crucial bit of code. Bugs in that code might well eat your data. In fact, it's a good idea to put the dangerous changes in early rather than in a late phase of development.
It takes as much work to destabilize a kernel as it did to stabilize it
Absolutely untrue, as any programmer knows. It takes a lot of hard work to make something stable, but it only takes a one-character change at the wrong place to destabilize the system for all users (cf. 2.4.15).
Flashing neon sign over parent: HUMOR (Score:2)
Please, restore my faith in humanity by reading it again and at least pretending to laugh if you still don't get it.
Re:Don't overdo the caution (Score:2)
I think you guys missed some of the point... (Score:3, Insightful)
And if you are one of those complaining... c'mon... grow up. Like it *really* killed you to read one extra headline.
Re:I think you guys missed some of the point... (Score:5, Funny)
You're new here aren't you, number
Re:I think you guys missed some of the point... (Score:2, Insightful)
One word: EBay. :-)
Re:I think you guys missed some of the point... (Score:2, Funny)
I vote for Jon Katz.
Worse than beta (Score:3, Informative)
Our company just started on the next release of our software, so I feel a bit "in tune" with where the kernel developers are at.
The beginning of a new release should be the place where you make all the hard choices and break things. Then you start putting the pieces together, and if you broke the right stuff for the right reasons, it will be better (but probably less stable) than before. Gradually, you add more and more features, but they don't tend to break things as badly. Finally, you stop adding features, and work on polish.
This is a development kernel, and things are broken because smart people decided to break them. Don't think it's beta. It's not.
Wait a second (Score:1)
NTFS r/w (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:5, Informative)
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
Oh, and I've been researching more since I posted and if anyone else is interested check here [sourceforge.net] for for Linux-NTFS tools. They have two tools: ntfsfix attempts to repair any damage done when mounting NTFS partitions as r/w (couldn't they just merge the two projects?), and mkntfs allows you to create NTFS partitions. Their not new, but others may be interested in them. I happened to be there doing unrealated research.
{offtopic}
Can anyone provide insight as to where file permissions are stored on the drive? Are they stored as part of the header of the file(?) or is there a central location that holds that information? I.E. - if user omega9 has rwx on file.txt, where are the actuall bits that describe "omega9" and "rwx" in relation to "file.txt"? This has been imposibbly hard info to find.
{/offtopic}
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
Well ... that depends on
a) how you define "journalling" - some people consider NTFS to be a "logging" filesystem instead ...
b) whether you count the fact that the Linux NTFS support doesn't actually journal the write data (which is what makes it so broken, I believe) ...
c) if point (b) is ok with you, whether you consider a filesystem to be supported before it actually exists. Because ext3 in non-journalling mode was supported ever since ext2 was merged, which was way before NTFS support. (:
Re:NTFS r/w (Score:2)
So when are... (Score:3, Interesting)
So the 64000 Euro question is... when are we getting ACL support? I've heard the IBM solution was good, but required a lot of kernel patches -- but that's what development kernels are all about!
Re:So when are... (Score:3, Funny)
You're probably going to have to offer more than $1.37 to get someone to hack that for you.
Re:I'm Bored (Score:1, Interesting)
Let's start a revolution: i for one am in favor of not hearing about uneventful kernel updates anymore... i know i can filter out the entire category if i want, but you never know, there might one day be important news about the kernel(grin).
Re:I'm Bored (Score:1)
Re:I'm Bored (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I'm Bored (Score:2)
Perhaps there should be a new "version" category for the more pointless new version announcements (although I wouldn't call this one exactly pointless. nothing major is new, but at least we know the new stuffs going here from now on) so people can filter articles like this instead of bitching about it every time
i agree (Score:1)
new proposal: a new topic category for versioning.
not like
[grin]
Re:I'm Bored (Score:2)
Yeah whatever. Maybe Slashdot should just start a fund to send all the crybabies some tissue paper to blow their nose when they're done bawling about all the extra bandwidth a kernel summary takes up.
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:1)
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:1)
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:2, Insightful)
If you wanna know where to find the FMs, www.linuxdoc.org [linuxdoc.org] is a good place to start.
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:5, Informative)
Sure is. The kernel sources will untar to different directories based on version (how 'bout that?), so no problem with overwriting your stable ".config".
Anyhoo, after building your new kernel, copy it to the same location as your current kernel, but with a different name. (on Redhat this is
Add a new section that looks like:
image =
root =
label = Linux251 (or whatever)
read-only
Save lilo.conf and run lilo. This will re-install lilo with the new settings. Of course, if you're not using lilo, then cheerfully disregard the above.
On reboot, you should be able to pick from both the old kernel and the new kernel.
As for where the FM is, check out the LILO mini-HOWTO (in
Have fun.
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:1)
I remember doing this exact same thing about 4 years ago with RedHat. The manual was pretty clear on how to do it. The fun thing about Linux was that there was so much you could do, and you could do some really neat stuff (like getting your ISA PNP devices to work! Yay, Soundblaster AWE 64 lives in Linux! Muahahahaa.. Er, sorry. Anyway, the point I am trying to make is that Linux was worthwhile if you bothered to do your homework. The people that are always waiting for a quick fix don't want to learn anything.
I mean, really, okay I guess this means that there are more people just *trying* Linux, which is cool. Its what most of us have been trying to tell our friends and family for years. Some of em are even to the point where they wanna fiddle with the kernel, maybe even compile thier own. Great! And lets face it, alot of us consider ourselves to be some level of Linux guru, so when your friends and family have some Linux-related task, its your job to take care of it, right?
Sorry if this is getting offtopic, but there are a lot of "trendy" folk starting to invade slashdot. They see these posts about the latest kernel, and they figure they gotta have it, even though they don't know why. ("It will be faster! Newer is always better!"). Ugh. Its really kinda like shooting yourself in the foot. While I like to follow the kernel development for mostly just interest's sake, I'm not so foolhardy to install a development-series kernel (though 2.4.x was moving in the right direction, the earlier releases were ugly monstrosities of a 2.2 kernel gone terribly wrong). But I digress..
On a bright note, I have an idea for the linux-distro people... The prefab kernels redhat, mandrake, suse, et al slap on thier CD's are junk! Lets just compile everything in, so it works for everybody! A good idea, but not so hot in practice. You can get a pretty good performance boost by rolling your own kernel, so why not include that as part of the installation process? Give the installer a choice between installing the stock kernel (faster install), or compiling a fresh kernel (slower install, but worth it, I think). The installer programs from RedHat and Mandrake (the only ones I've used recently) are pretty good at detecting hardware, so why not put that capability to good use by auto-configuring the kernel and compiling a custom one for that specific machine? Maybe its just me, but I have seemed to notice that the stock distro kernels are more prone to failure than a custom one. Why is it that a brand-new installation of Mandrake can crash and take down the whole machine?! WTF? Us Linux fans like to think linux is fairly powerful, stable, and customizable. Maybe we should really prove that to ourselves?
Re:didledididee...two kernels (Score:2)
It's one of my favorites.
Re:Why all the names? (Score:1)
It's probably less for the purpose of claiming credit than assigning blame.
But, if you have a problem with a specific area of the kernel, say a particular sound card driver, it usually helps to at least cc the author/maintainer of that chunk of code directly as well as posting to the list; just raises the probability of your bug report getting the eyes of somebody who can do something useful with it.
Re:Why all the names? (Score:1)
Well, if one of them changes broke something, you'd know who to contact and blame.
Re:Why all the names? (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't have a problem with people sticking their names in the Changelog - they've done this voluntarily and without pay, in their own time, when they could have been doing other stuff, don't you think they deserve just a little recognition? They've done a great job.
And it serves a purpose too as already pointed out - it allows you to see who was responsible for a change, so your type can be quick to blame them if feature X related to their change fails to work/crashes/panics/oopses/whatever
Re:just a question about the kernel management (Score:2)
Re:This doens't belong here!! (Score:2)
Did you read that third word in green at the top left of the page, right under "Slashdot"?
Yes, we're nerds, we care. If you aren't, go read a pop news site.
Re:This doens't belong here!! (Score:4, Funny)
You must have an awfully short memory.
Re:Whoa there, cowboy (michael)! (Score:2)
In that sense, this is a big deal. Of course, posting all the 2.3.x announcements would be excessive.
Re:Whoa there, cowboy (michael)! (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe only the milestone ones...
Well, to be fair, a ton of the kernel will be re-written by 2.5.2. From what I've been reading at LKML, the block IO layer will have been re-done, and then the new kbuild will start to be integrated (Optional on supported platforms at that point). That's actually some pretty big stuff.
--Josh
Re:Whoa there, cowboy (michael)! (Score:2)