Linux 2.6.0 Expected In Mid-December 270
Ridgelift writes "CRN is reporting the release of Linux 2.6.0 in mid-December. 'Torvalds, Linux's lead developer and now an OSDL Fellow, and Linux kernel maintainer Andrew Morton this week released the test10 version of Linux 2.6 after a three-year development effort. A final test11 version is expected before they sign off on the production version next month.' Get ready for 'major scalability improvements, faster performance, enhanced support for embedded systems and, to a lesser extent,' a kernel that 'supplies desktop systems with better USB and FireWire support.'"
This isn't unexpected (Score:4, Interesting)
The prediction that akpm made about mid-December sounds about right as well -- 2.6.0-test10 could be 2.6.0 right now and I doub there'd be any showstoppers to block it.
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2, Funny)
What's taking so long anyway? I thought Linus's new grand master plan was quicker releases of major versions. 3 years seems like an eternity in the electronic world. In that time Windows has gone from 2000 to XP to 2003 for crying out loud! They're jumping all over the fscking version map and all we have to show for it is a lousy .2 subversion jump? 3
Would you prefer better or released quicker ? (Score:2, Insightful)
I prefer better, even it it takes a bit longer.
"All good things come to those who wait."
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2, Insightful)
In the past 9-10 years, windows has gone from 3.x to 95 and NT, to 2000, to 2003. In the same time, Linux has gone from 1.0 to (just about) 2.6
The biggest shift in windows-world was from 3.x to 9x / NT in 1995. Linux went from 1.2.x to 2.0 in 1996. Since then, we've had 2.2, 2.4, and 2.6, all of which have had improvements that would have qualified for major releases in windows.
Of course, Linux is a kernel, and windows is quite a bit heavier, so it's a case of tangerines and or
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Windows went:
1.x --> 2.x --> 3.x --> 95 --> 98 --> ME --> XP Home --> Longhorn
Windows NT (completely separate beast) went:
NT 3.x --> NT 4.x --> 2000 --> XP Pro --> Longhorn
The only major shift were from 3.x to 95 (GUI and mostly 32-bit), and from ME to XP (GUI and fully 32-bit).
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Perhaps my perception of a more continual process with Linux is because the source changes and discussion groups are public.
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, yeah, that was a leap alright! New splash screen and a different colour scheme. Whoop-de-do.
TWW
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Although I haven't REALLY got deeply in 2003 yet, what I have seen doesn't really impress the hell out of me; It might barely be better than XP.
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:4, Funny)
Come on, give a little bit of credit. Starting with XP, you can open .ZIP files without findng, downloading and installing a archiving software application. What other operating system can read compressed file archives right after install?
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
XP has been fairly stable, but that wasn't very impressive.
I'd rather they just shipped a freeware ZIP application then build something buggy into the OS.
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:3, Insightful)
There has been some tweaking of the kernel for market positioning and bug fixes, but no other major architectual overhauls. Everything else has been modifications to the window manger which is the equivilent to a new KDE or Gnome version. Let's not forget that M$ is impoverished comared to Linux. [businessweek.com]
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, while it's true that the 9x series are built on top of DOS, the same as 3.11, there were a significant number of changes to support 32-bit and things like pre-emptive rather than cooperative multitasking. Not quite as many changes as Microsoft would have us believe (it certainly wasn't the 100% new 16-bit-free operating system everyone expected based on what they were saying), but certainly a lot of changes under the hood.
Lastly, 3.x never had a Kernel, it was effectively a big graphical library and program launcher, and not much more.
That given, I'd revise your list to:
Besides, there's no reason to rewrite a Kernel from scratch if you get it right the first time. There don't seem to be that many fundamental problems with the Linux Kernel, so the continued process of tweaking and gradual improvement seems set to continue. Microsoft, on the other hand, had to write a new Kernel because 9x was such a horrendous mess and lacked quite a lot of modern features and elegance.
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:4, Informative)
There was an effort to write a completely new win32-based replacement for win31, cougar was the codename for the 32-bit DOS kernel, and panther was the win32 core, but panther was canned and cougar was merged into chicago (win95).
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Cougar and Panther? So Apple is still playing catch up to Microsoft?
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why we have distributions, which can up the minor and major numbers whenever they like, or call themselves whatever flashy names the marketing people come up with. For example, there's Red Hat Linux (was, at leat), Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Advanced Server (?) and so worth. A newbie is unlikely to know or care about the kernel version anyway...
On the other hand, calling things by version number is much clearer for anyone who wants to upgrade/modify their system. If you had Linux ME and Linux XP, wh
Re:This isn't unexpected (Score:2)
Well The Boss [dilbert.com] of course. Whatever kind of manager is there?
What the fuck? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What the fuck? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What the fuck? (Score:2)
Let this be a lesson to us all. Be sure to develop your filesystems on black paper.
Now you can have those 64 CPUs (Score:2, Funny)
That'd be nice.
Re:Now you can have those 64 CPUs (Score:3, Insightful)
In Violation of GPL (Score:2)
Re:In Violation of GPL (Score:2)
only... (Score:2)
Re:Now you can have those 64 CPUs (Score:2)
Re:That'd be nice (Score:2, Funny)
"HAHHAHHAA !!! Now, we're gonna drop a few nukes to Washington and skin alive a couple hundred hostages and smear salt to their wounds and feed babies to sharks and..."
"Excuse me, sir."
"What is it ?!? Can't you see I'm busy planning ?"
"Sir, according to the license of the new Linux kernel version, it cannot be legally used by terrorists."
Long silence.
In a tiny voice: "Um, maybe, maybe, just maybe, just this once, we could use it anyway ?"
"SIR ! YOU ARE NOT GOING TO COMMIT COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, ARE Y
Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:4, Interesting)
It will save you countless headaches if you read the files about module-init. I have been using the linux kernels since 2.0x but never had an upgrade break a system. It totally ruined my redhat 9 box doing that.
I upgraded to module-init and after that 2.4 wouldn't boot. grr.
Is there a way to have both installed so I could dual boot 2.4 and 2.6?
I switched back to my more upgrade friendly FreeBSD until 2.6 was more stabilized and more distro's supported it. My guess is Gentoo would be the first.
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Informative)
YES: Gentoo and Source Mage do it (Score:4, Informative)
Is there a way to have both installed so I could dual boot 2.4 and 2.6?
Gentoo GNU/Linux supports this, and I believe Source Mage does as well.
I run 2.6.0-test10 and 2.6.0-test9-mm5 on numerous Gentoo boxes with no problem, and occasionally switch back to 2.4.22 without difficulties.
I'm not sure how they do it exactly. A quick perusal of module-init-tools and modutils revealed that, for example, bot install
In any event, it is certainly possible have both installed and functional, and to seemlessly move between 2.4.x and 2.6.x kernels.
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:5, Informative)
Debian does it..... (Score:2, Funny)
Debian does it, Gentoo does it, even liti-gat-ed SCO does it. Lets do it, lets dual boot GNU/Linux.
The modutils and module-init tools packages co-exist nicely on my Sid box.
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:2)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Informative)
modutils-2.4.21-22.i386.rpm [usf.edu]
Re:redhat supplies rpms (Score:2)
I did this on Fedora powered laptop via apt-get and it went to 2.6 kernel as a boot option without s single problem. I ran some tests and performance improvement is 15-20%.
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:2, Informative)
As far as I know Linux 2.4 also needed module-init-tools.
Anyway, I have a USB device here which had problems with a bug in the uhci driver of 2.4, and there was a patch for it for 2.6.0-test2. I used that, and it worked fine. Later, I moved the device to a different computer, so I compiled a new kernel. By that time, -test9 had come out (which included the patch btw), so I used that.
I don't know why, but the other computer was completely unstable with that, crashing several times an hour. This was o
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Insightful)
And from this, and from running tests on it, you know if 2.6 is going to offer you anything.
There are
Re:Linux 2.6: I can only recommend it! (Score:3, Interesting)
I upgraded my laptop to 2.6.0-test4 back in September, after reading this article [slashdot.org].
The previous kernel (2.4.20, Slackware 9) worked, but had a couple of rough edges. The most serious (particularly on a laptop) was Compaq's weird ACPI implementation that 2.4.20 couldn't figure out. After I booted 2.6.0-test4, I was able to read off all the information I needed. Much easier to use in the field!
In the process of upgrading I did indeed break the 2.4 modutils. But since 2.6 works so well, I really don't care
good stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
Any ideas on how much akpm's patches end up becoming "mainstream"? After reading the changelogs (and using the patches), I think it'd be a good idea.
Re:good stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
Now take a look at this [lwn.net] under the "Andrew Morton" heading and notice how many of those patch headings ring a bell. Yessir, he has been kickin' arse and taking names.
Newsflash - Christmas Postponed.. (Score:5, Funny)
'We intercepted a number of letters from Linux users to Mr Claus, requesting that he bring them the new 2.6 Linux Kernel for Christmas, and given that at least 50% of them have been good, we believe he was going to supply the requested code' said Daryl McScrooge, head of SCO's 'Grabbit and Runne' division.
'Linux 2.6 was of course entirely written by ourselves and the tooth fairy and to protect our rights we have taken out an injunction preventing Father Christmas from delivering any presents this Christmas. We believe this is a fair and legal action. And anyway, I never did get that bike I asked for.'
Re:Newsflash - Christmas Postponed.. (Score:2)
It's hilarious [groklaw.net]
Re:Newsflash - Christmas Postponed.. (Score:3, Informative)
"Happy Capitalistic Compulsory Consumerism month!"
IDE support on Dell Latitude D600 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:IDE support on Dell Latitude D600 (Score:2)
I have a Dell Latitude C400 laptop. The only problem I had with the linux-2.6.0-testX kernels was that it broke mouse pad support. The workaround is to add the following boot-time kernel parameter: psmouse=noext
Re:IDE support on Dell Latitude D600 (Score:2)
Not to nitpick, but (Score:5, Insightful)
Simon
They seem to have som problems though... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They seem to have som problems though... (Score:2, Funny)
enjoy everything else, merry christmas!
Re:They seem to have som problems though... (Score:2)
Re:They seem to have som problems though... (Score:2)
No a heisenbug is a bug which disapears when you try to debug the code, and which shows up again as soon as you stop debuging. A heisenbug can be easy to reproduce without debuging. Of course hard to reproduce heinsenbugs also exists, and can be quite hard to track down. I was experiencing one with xterm on Solaris systems. Sometimes my xterm command executed during login didn't open an xterm. For months I tried running my xterm under truss (the Solaris equivalent of st
For further preformace. (Score:2)
Rus
The Best OS Ever! (Score:2, Interesting)
JFS still has some issues and no DRI on Radeon 7500. Hope that will be OK soon.
Re:The Best OS Ever! (Score:2)
Hey, that's interesting! I had issues with JFS hanging (well not hanging but endless looping) on fsck on one box. I though it was the HD at first but swapping it out wasn't an immediate option, so I switched the problem partition to XFS and haven't had problems since (yet). I use JFS on pretty much everything else so I'd like to see whatever this is fixed.
Re:The Best OS Ever! (Score:2)
My bet (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My bet (Score:3, Funny)
Red Hat builds (Score:4, Informative)
It's worth reminding RH/Fedora users that Arjan van de Ven maintains kernel RPMs [redhat.com] (including new module RPMs etc), and those with yum and apt can very easily test 2.6 using these files.
Read the readme.txt for full details.
Re:Red Hat builds (Score:2)
Hint: nothing happens if you install them anyways.
-Erwos
Re:Red Hat builds (Score:2)
Nothing = "Nothing bad - they work fine"
Must learn to preview!
-Erwos
2.6 Kernel issues - Is it really ready? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been wanting to run the 2.6 on my Debian-unstable box, but I've been scared off by some of the negative reports I've heard so far. Some of them I've seen on comments from this article [slashdot.org].
Most notably (for me) is devfs not being actively supported anymore [slashdot.org] (being shifted in favor of udev). That's sad, at least for me, because I've been using devfs since the early versions of the 2.4 kernel, it always worked well for me, and from what I've heard about udev so far, devfs seems like a more elegant and mature solution.
Then there are problems with USB devices, and others that, being narrowed down, comes down to problems on the APIC interface [slashdot.org]. From what I've heard so far, it doesn't look stable, so why ship it on linux 2.6?
There's also this problem with Kernel Preemption [kerneltrap.org]. I'm using it on my 2.4, and I don't want to go without it on 2.6. Of course I might just be lucky to no stumble on this problem, but the fact that it can trigger an oops on someone just scares the hell out of me.
Finally, there's a problem I've experienced myself, but didn't care to report at the time. It's quite old by now (I think it was around version 2.5.65~2.5.70). It has to do with software-raid. I've got a RAID-0 array with 3 SCSI Disks (6gb + 2x4gb = ~14Gb). The disks are old, I know, just like the controller (Adaptec AIC-7xxx). But they work just fine on the 2.4 kernel. So, at the time I decided to give 2.5 a try, just to find out that my array wasn't being detected/mounted. Googled around, found some similar reports and some possible workarounds, but none worked, so I switched back to the 2.4 kernel and haven't touched the development kernels since. It might just be resolved by now, I don't know... Anyway, I will soon replace these disks by a couple of IDEs, with no RAIDing, to save some CPU cycles, so this will not be such a big problem.
So, anyone care to give me one (or more) reason s to try 2.6 again?
Re:2.6 Kernel issues - Is it really ready? (Score:5, Informative)
Well, the reason devfs is not actively supported is because the maintainer disappeared, and nobody has stepped up to take over the code.
udev seems to solve the problem of only have
Re:Welcome to the immaturity of Linux (Score:4, Funny)
CyberDeX would be released 3 months later and if you tried to use it with more than 2 users it would fall over. A patch would be released 6 weeks later which allowed you to have 3 users. The product would crash daily.
One year later CyberDeX would finally become something approaching stable with the release of Service Pack 4, which essentially rips out SupraDev and puts HyperDev back in.
The head of Team SupraDev gets promotion and a raise.
Re:2.6 Kernel issues - Is it really ready? (Score:2)
Re:2.6 Kernel issues - Is it really ready? (Score:2)
All that APIC stuff is still being ironed out I guess. I only had a problem with that in test7 and test8, but with my archaic hardware (i440BX) I'm thankfully less prone to weirdness then, say, people with VIA or NVidia motherboards.
I'd never heard of these preemption problems until test10, and I've certainly
Re:2.6 Kernel issues - Is it really ready? (Score:2)
Because a huge number of modern machines *require* ACPI in order to operate properly. my machine at work (Compaq Evo) requires it to reboot properly, my laptop can't be on for more than a few minutes without it, my home-built desktop machine needs it for a few things, etc.
Distributors
Off you go then (Score:2)
Any distro with kernel 2.6 and KDE 3.2 yet? (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't have time to compile everything myself, so it has to be at least a little user friendly
Re:Any distro with kernel 2.6 and KDE 3.2 yet? (Score:2)
I'm running test10 and KDE 3.2beta, all emerged from ebuilds.
Dear moderators, (Score:5, Insightful)
Those who are interested in such reports should read LKML. Let's keep slashdot for posts of general interest.
Re:Dear moderators, (Score:2)
My old prediction (Score:2)
Re:My old prediction (Score:2)
(this has been a pointless, offtopic bit of joy. yay)
BBK
And it has crypto built in, too! (Score:2)
Now...can anybody tell me the argument to specify aes keysize? -k doesn't seem to work anymore.
LVM to LVM2 in kernel 2.6 (Score:2)
test11 (Score:2)
Actually, according to kernel.org [kernel.org], linux-2.6.0-test11 was released today.
notebooks unusable kernel 2.6.0: trackpoint ?? (Score:2)
Maybe someone needs to add a dedicated serio driver for trackpoints? I thought IBM was a great linux supporter? What about my desktop now?
Ethernet (Score:2)
I have a 3C905b. Hope they fix this!
Re:Xmas (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Xmas (Score:4, Interesting)
I love 2.6. Ive been using it since -test4 and Ive only had a couple of issues with some of the Morton Patches. Other than that, it IS everything people say it is (on my desktop machine). Fast, stable, and performs amazing under heavy load.
Its the first time I could compile GIMP and surf the web without feeling any slowdown when scrolling.
Re:Xmas (Score:2, Interesting)
alsa sound kernel support (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm looking forward to the end the nasty OSSFree, and the beginning of the silky smooth default included Alsa [alsa-project.org] sound kernel.
no more annoying upgrading my system to Alsa when I want to make it into a professional audio workstation [stanford.edu]
Re:alsa sound kernel support (Score:2)
Silky smooth, not-as-loud, perceptable-hiss Alsa? No thank you. I'll stick with OSS. The implementation might suck, but the sound reproduction on every card and speaker pair I've thrown OSS at (studio-level gear, not Labtec speakers here), is centuries beyond what today's Alsa can do. I can't stand that constant background hiss, even at low volumes (which Alsa seems to excel at;
Re:alsa sound kernel support (Score:2, Informative)
If you hear a hiss or have volume trouble, it means that the ALSA driver for your particular card you're using is buggy and not initializing the card correctly, and it has nothing to do with the ALSA core itself. File a bug report with ALSA, and include which driver you're using and what card you have, because it'll never get fixed if the developers are never told about it.
Re:Keyboard still doesn't work (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think I have any problems with 2.6.0-test9-mm1 at all.
Re:Debian support (Score:2)
Okay, you can run "testing", but I think a lot of the sysadmins only wants to run "stable" on their company machines.
People run 'stable' for a reason, that reason is that it's well tested, and that is exactly the reason why there won't be a 2.6 kernel in stable anytime soon.
Re:Debian support (Score:5, Informative)
Re:any info on improved SATA support? (Score:2, Informative)
Try SuSE 9 (Score:2, Informative)
I just installed SuSE 9, and it works fine. One caveat: on my machine, I had to add the following options:
apm=off acpi=ht
in order to get the thing working. And now it works fine. I'm not sure that I'm up to full SATA speed yet, but it's pretty fast.
Benchmarks here (linux 2.4, 2.6, *bsd) (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Multiple Firewire drives? (Score:2)
I suspect the issue is with your controller card driver, or the card itself. We're using Adaptec FireConnect 4300 cards with Texas Instruments TSB12LV26 chips on them in 2.4.18
Re:About Java ... (Score:2)
Java does work faster, I notice the difference with RH9's backported NPTL. (New POSIX thread library). You have to use Sun Java 1.4.1 or later, however, earlier versions are incompatable.
Re:Answer me please (Score:2)
Here's an answer: I have no idea.
But honestly, the kernel doesn't take very long to boot up anyway. The real delay comes from the init bootup sequence, and there's a few solutions out there already to speed that up, by executing init scripts simultaneously.
A Very Linux Christmas ... (Score:2)
On the first day of christmas,
My true love gave to me,
A stocking with a Linux Kernel 2.6.0 CD.
On the second day of christmas,
I sent my ex-true love packing.
And we all wonder why geeks don't have many girlfriends/boyfriends/whatever is your fancy (not that there's anything wrong with that)