Of course, I've never done much kernel work except testing, so I'm not
exactly the one who should talk about it.
Still, I think that from the user point of view (and there was a post in
LKML yesterday, about Linux being used by UN*X experienced sysadmins
only... or going mainstream instead) the releases should be tested a bit
more thoroughly and actually *frozen* for some time (a day or two should
suffice I guess) before being labelled 2.4.X.
Just the two cents from a newbie - I hope/mean to offense noone with that
François Cami
Sean Elble wrote:
> Something definitely should be done to help "stabilize" the tree; it's not
> really a big deal for most of us if something is broken, as you know there
> will be a fix posted very soon after the release, _but_ bugs like these
> don't exactly make Linux "look good" to the rest of the UNIX community. A
> FreeBSD advocate might say "well, FreeBSD never does _that_". My suggestion
> to help fix the problem would be to do what SGI does; have two seperate
> trees that strive to stay as close to each other as possible, but one
> becomes part of the "maintaince stream", where only bug fixes and the such
> are added, and a "features stream", where actual new features are added in.
> Take a look at some of the IRIX web pages at http://www.sgi.com/ for a
> better idea of how that works, but believe me, it works. This would be in
> addition to some sort of testing suite that each official kernel must pass
> before it is released. With the growing number of (important/big) Linux
> users, we must make sure each kernel is rock-solid before being released.
> This is definitely more of a political topic than a technical one, but it
> has to be addressed nonetheless.
>
> -----------------------------------------------
> Sean P. Elble
> Editor, Writer, Co-Webmaster
> ReactiveLinux.com (Formerly MaximumLinux.org)
> http://www.reactivelinux.com/
> elbles@reactivelinux.com
> -----------------------------------------------
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <joeja@mindspring.com>
> To: "John Alvord" <jalvo@mbay.net>
> Cc: <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
> Sent: Monday, November 12, 2001 3:27 PM
> Subject: Re: Re: loop back broken in 2.2.14
>
>
>
>>I thought that the -pre would be the developer kernels, and that an actual
>>
> release (2.4.14) would have been somewhat tested. I fully understand that a
> 'runtime' bug in the vm or some other system could arrise and that is one
> thing. I also understand when a 'less used' driver like NTFS or VFAT breaks,
> but to see bugs in the loop device in a 'stabilizing' kernel is something
> that I thought I'd never see.
>
>>Hmm anyone working on a regression testing tool for the kernel compilation
>>
> options??
>
>>Also new features DO go into stable trees, there are many times when 2.3.x
>>
> was open that stuff was backported to 2.2.x. I also heard that ext3 might
> end up in 2.4.15, which I'd love to see happen (that and lm_sensors)
>
>>I DO think that there needs to be a better way of handling some of these
>>
> small bugs. Like maybe where the kernel is posted (in my case obtaining
> from ftp.kernel.org) there should be a readme.first.2.4.14 for every version
> of the kernel and in there things like this could be stated. Simple one
> line in loop.c commment out the two lines or remove the two lines with
> deactivate_page.
>
>>I don't mind 'testing', but how can you test what wont compile or what
>>
> compiles but does not run?
>
>>Joe
>>John Alvord <jalvo@mbay.net> wrote:
>>
>>>In developer-speak, stable == stablizing, which means that fixes go in
>>>
>>but no new features. That can include monstrous fixes like the VM
>>cleanup.
>>
>>When you are running developer kernels, you are on the kernel test
>>team whether you know it or not, whether you think thats OK or hate
>>it.
>>
>>For "stable" kernels, wait for the distributors like red hat/suse/etc.
>>There is no way around serious testing which they perform.
>>
>>john
>>
>>
>>On Mon, 12 Nov 2001 12:40:43 -0500, joeja@mindspring.com wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Okay, I can delete out those two lines to get loop working.
>>>
>>>Is 2.4.x really a stable tree? Or should I wait for 2.4.25 before I
>>>
> consider it really stable?
>
>>>>>François Cami wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>yes, see 2.4.15pre1
>>>>>>warning, the iptables code in 2.4.15pre1 and pre2 seems broken.
>>>>>>
>>>>>and further it is likely that pre3 fixes iptables code :)
>>>>>(it looks like the patch got reverted)
>>>>>
>>>>Actually it doesn't seem to be reverted,
>>>>just reworked -
>>>>
>>>hmm, spoke too soon -
>>>
>>>looks like they were reverted after all...
>>>
>>>cu
>>>
>>>jjs
>>>
>>>
>>>-
-
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