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2.6.26-rc1, "Less Scary Stuff Going On"

May 4, 2008 - 9:47am
Submitted by Jeremy on May 4, 2008 - 9:47am.
Linux news

"So this merge window was somewhat rocky in the sense that there was a lot of arguments about it, but at the same time I at least personally think that from a technical angle, we had somewhat less scary stuff going on than has been almost the rule lately," noted Linux creator Linus Torvalds, announcing the 2.6.26-rc1 kernel. He continued:

"Lots of changes, but nothing that really feels all that fragile to me. Famous last words. I expect that the x86 PAT support (which has been long in the making) has the potential to have some issues, but the obvious problems were hashed out long ago, and while the merge window already showed one bug, that one was fairly benign and quickly fixed."

Linus highlighted, "another feature that is notable not for its size, but because people have tried to get me to merge it for some long is kgdb support. Which really turned out pretty small and clean, once people started putting their effort into making it so." He concluded, "so go out and test it. The diffstat and shortlogs are too big to post here (7500+ commits and the compressed full patch is 8.5MB in size), but one interesting tidbit I found was that during this *one* merge window, we had almost 800 different authors."


From: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@...>
Subject: Linux 2.6.26-rc1
Date: May 3, 3:38 pm 2008

So this merge window was somewhat rocky in the sense that there was a lot 
of arguments about it, but at the same time I at least personally think 
that from a technical angle, we had somewhat less scary stuff going on 
than has been almost the rule lately. 

Lots of changes, but nothing that really feels all that fragile to me. 
Famous last words. I expect that the x86 PAT support (which has been long 
in the making) has the potential to have some issues, but the obvious 
problems were hashed out long ago, and while the merge window already 
showed one bug, that one was fairly benign and quickly fixed.

As usual, the bulk of the changes are to drivers (roughly 40% of the 
diffs, and that's with rename detection - with renames shown as 
delete/create events it was pretty exactly half of the diff). The network 
driver updates were about half of that (again, that's not unusual, and is 
mostly indicative of the fact that there's a metric buttload of networking 
drivers out there).

Arch updates were another 20%, still leaving a fair amount of stuff spread 
out all over (that said, the "dirstat" with rename detection is a bit 
flaky - if files get renamed across directories, the accounting is 
obviously not very meaningful - so take the numbers as a guideline rather 
than anything else).

Among the randon stuff, filesystems (ext4, gfs2, ocfs2 and xfs stand out), 
and networking (with the generic 802.11 layer being a big part of it, so I 
guess that should counts as partly driver-related).

Of course, sometimes the small patches is what is more noticeable 
(especially if they introduce bugs ;). The VM doesn't really show up very 
big in diffstat, but there were a fair number of cleanups there.

Another feature that is notable not for its size, but because people have 
tried to get me to merge it for some long is kgdb support. Which really 
turned out pretty small and clean, once people started putting their 
effort into making it so.

So go out and test it. The diffstat and shortlogs are too big to post here 
(7500+ commits and the compressed full patch is 8.5MB in size), but one 
interesting tidbit I found was that during this *one* merge window, we had 
almost 800 different authors. Now, some of them will have gotten counted 
multiple times due to different versions of the same name, and I didn't 
filter that, but from a quick look, that is been pretty rare.

Obviously, most of those had just a couple of commits (more than half had 
three commits or less), but that's how everybody starts. 

			Linus
--


Yuck

May 4, 2008 - 2:43pm
Anonymous (not verified)

Yuck, what an ugly and poor development model.

Yuck, what an ugly and poor

May 4, 2008 - 7:01pm
Anonymous (not verified)

Yuck, what an ugly and poor comment.

Yuck, what an ugly and poor

May 4, 2008 - 8:49pm
Anonymous (not verified)

Yuck, what an ugly and poor windowzer or/and BSD'er troll

A good life for you

May 4, 2008 - 10:48pm
Jack Ripoff (not verified)

It's nice to see that the Linux community is open for criticism...

Don't think so...

May 4, 2008 - 11:49pm
Anonymous (not verified)

Nor the first comment was clever and critic enough to be considered as a good/positive criticism/feedback towards the community. In my opinion, just another troll...

The other model's already taken

May 5, 2008 - 4:51am
Peder (not verified)

I agree.
Linus should do a release every seventh year. A release almost nobody will want since the old release works better, but with a bigger clock visible.

Oh, wait. That model's already taken...
Dang!

- Peder

Don't feed the trolls

May 5, 2008 - 8:34am
Jeff Schroeder (not verified)

Come on people, don't do it.

Re: kgdb

May 4, 2008 - 3:24pm
Anonymous (not verified)


"another feature that is notable not for its size, but because people have tried to get me to merge it for some long is kgdb support."

About time =D

it can be still kicked out before -final is released ;)

May 5, 2008 - 4:18am
Tomasz Chmielewski (not verified)

Well, it can be still kicked out before -final is released ;)

Dude...

May 6, 2008 - 12:35am
Anonymous (not verified)

You're harshening my buzz...

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