Linus Torvalds Announces Ridiculously Small Second Linux 4.10 Release Candidate (softpedia.com) 43
The first day of 2017 starts off for Linux users with the release of the second RC (Release Candidate) development version of the upcoming Linux 4.10 kernel, as announced by Linus Torvalds himself. From a report on Softpedia: As expected, Linux kernel 4.10 entered development two weeks after the release of Linux kernel 4.9, on Christmas Day (December 25, 2016), but don't expect to see any major improvements or any other exciting things in RC2, which comes one week after the release of the first RC, because most of the developers were busy partying. With a total of 26 changes, Linux kernel 4.10 Release Candidate 2 is extremely small for an RC build, but Linus Torvalds decided not to skip it and interrupt the development cycle of Linux 4.10 just because of the Christmas and New Year's holidays. "It's been a really slow week between Christmas Day and New Years Day, and I am not complaining at all. It does mean that RC2 is ridiculously and unrealistically small," said Linus Torvalds in the mailing list announcement. "I almost decided to skip RC2 entirely, but a small little meaningless release every once in a while never hurt anybody."
There are no small releases. (Score:2, Insightful)
Only small minds.
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- Your wife.
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Small bank accounts*
- Your ex wife
Busy Christmas (Score:3)
Back before development was professionalized, was Christmas a period of rapid change as kernel hackers finally had time off work to really dig into Linux?
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Back before development was professionalized, was Christmas a period of rapid change as kernel hackers finally had time off work to really dig into Linux?
I doubt it. Many would be students and for Christmas they are busy with family things. The days it's soggy, windy and overall shitty to be out in late autumn or early spring long before exams would probably be the bulk of it.
Wait a Trump minute... (Score:5, Funny)
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What is this systemd people keep speaking about? I have a Linux system, no "d" needed. What would "d" stand for, "dictator"?
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I'm new to Linux, and I'm confused about how the kernel relates to systemd. Is the kernel a part of systemd? If they are separate, why?
systemd is the Windowsification of Linux: take a corporate-mandated (I'm looking at YOU, Red Hat!) solution in search of a problem, and use it to break that which is not broken (even if it might need some improvment) in order to produce vendor lock-in as much as possible.
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you are missing a third component to understand everything clearly: kerneld
IMHO, I believe systemd is spying on kerneld but I ain't too sure ;-(
http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Kerneld/... [tldp.org]
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WTF (who) dared to mod me off topic?
Further readings:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Doc... [kernel.org]
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Doc... [kernel.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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I'm new to Linux, and I'm confused about how the kernel relates to systemd. Is the kernel a part of systemd? If they are separate, why?
No it is not!
Read the headline. The kernel is supposed to be small?! Clearly it runs on top of the SystemD OS
The actual content (Score:1)
Why link to the softpedia article instead of the actual mailing list post Linus made?
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/l... [iu.edu]
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What is 'ridiculously small'? Is it anything like 'embarrassingly parallel'?
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Yup. Murphy's Law tells us that this ridiculously small update probably introduces either a serious security hole or a rare but catastrophic data loss bug. :-)
Define "small". (Score:2)
As I read behind the headline, "small" means "small number of changes".
As I read the headline itself, "small" sounds like "tiny memory footprint".
Reading the headline I expected it to be notice that Linus had released a stripped down kernel for platforms that need a minimal functionality kernel because they have limited resources or need substantial security auditing and thus a kernel with no unnecessary code to be examined for security issues. That's not what I find the article to be about, at all.
Dang!
Ca
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yeap, exactly same case here
not meaningless (Score:2)
[sigh] You don't understand the context (Score:2)
Linus Torvalds Announces Ridiculously Small... (Score:1)
This sounds more like a 4/1 announcement than a 4.10.