David Miller wrote:No. The problem is more than just a bad merge window. There is poor or non-existent review; frequent "regressions"; release of kernels as stable when they are not. There is resentment and resistance to even acknowledging these problems. Take, as an example, the desire to NOT record who gives good code and who gives bugs: that one clearly hit a nerve, which it should not have except from people who feel guilty. I don't claim BSD to be perfect, but it appears to have a consistently good quality. Old Linux kernels also have that; new ones not so. --
| Linus Torvalds | Re: O_DIRECT question |
| Greg KH | [GIT PATCH] driver core patches against 2.6.24 |
| Dave Airlie | Re: [2.6.25-rc6] possible regression: X server dying |
| Florian Schmidt | blacklist kernel boot option |
git: | |
| Petr Baudis | repo.or.cz wishes? |
| Jon Smirl | ! [rejected] master -> master (non-fast forward) |
| Matthieu Moy | [BUG] git-svn dcommit fails (connection closed unexpectedly) |
| Jakub Narebski | Git User's Survey 2007 partial summary |
| Ondřej Surý | openbgp not exporing ipv6 to routing tables |
| Nick Guenther | Re: Real men don't attack straw men |
| Christophe Rioux | OpenBSD as host for VMWare Server |
| Bambero | two wan interfaces |
| Warner Losh | Re: SMP re-eetrancy in "bottom half" drivers |
| Martin Husemann | Re: Prototype kernel continuation-passing for NetBSD |
| Martin Husemann | Dynamic registry of ehternet frame types |
| der Mouse | Re: file id alignment |
