Re: [PATCH] aic79xx should be able to ignore HostRAID enabled adapters

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All,

At last, I've been given the go-ahead to work on hostraid support for
dmraid.  I'll post some patches when I've made some progress.

Is linux-lvm the appropriate place for dmraid patches/discussion?  I
couldn't find any mailing lists that sounded more appropriate.

--D

Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Salyzyn, Mark wrote:
> 
>> Jeff Garzik [mailto:[email protected]] sez:
>>
>>> All throughout development, before Justin had written a single line
>>> of code, he was told to do things via Device Mapper.
>>
>>
>>
>> He did not strictly write the emd code, it was written years earlier by
>> a team. It's release was the result of it being placed on his lap
>> submit.
> 
> 
> Ah, I stand corrected.
> 
> I just recall being on concalls months prior to public EMD release,
> urging the use of Device Mapper, and telling Adaptec and other involved
> companies that the submission would be rejected if the current course
> was continued.
> 
> No doubt it was very frustrating for the engineers doing the work to
> have their months of effort rejected, but it was also frustrating for
> me, since I was trying make all parties aware of the impending rejection
> well in advance.
> 
> 
>> As I said, it all ended up being an unfortunate timing of events with
>> unexpected side effects. At each instant of time it has always been
>> clear what to do ...
>>
>> 2005? We tried to set up a case for ROI for the support of a dmraid
>> plugin. I am merely a JAFO to that process trying to push it along.
> 
> 
> Well, all your efforts are appreciated :)
> 
> Adaptec has an unfortunate history of simply not communicating well with
> the Linux community -- and I note that's a two-way street.  I've even
> heard it whispered that Linux people "hate Adaptec", that we take some
> sort of pleasure out of putting the screws to Adaptec.
> 
> Nothing could be further from the truth.
> 
> Exclusing you, Mark, who seems to understand this stuff, Adaptec just
> seems to have a tough time understanding the rationale and goals behind
> the feedback from SCSI and Linux maintainers.
> 
> Adaptec -- excluding aacraid -- continues to have a history of (a) being
> grossly dissatisfied with the current SCSI code, and (b) concluding that
> a proper solution simply works around all the problems.  That's a fair
> perspective, but Linux prefers the more cross-vendor approach of
> modifying the base Linux code.
> 
> Greater than Linux itself, the GPL and open source create a commodity
> effect:  competitors work on the same piece of software, rather than
> producing competing versions of software.  Out of this principle falls
> the "update SCSI core, don't workaround in your driver" approach.  Ditto
> for use of Device Mapper, rather than doing RAID in the driver itself,
> or duplicating effort with EMD.  With open source, code duplication just
> increases effort, decreases test coverage, and increases the likelihood
> of bugs.
> 
> The downside (from a vendor perspective) is that vendor engineers are
> drafted into updating the Linux core, when a new spiffy hardware feature
> needs to be supported.  This is actually not a downside, but a benefit.
>    In the long run, common code is highly reus{able,ed}, leading to
> rapid development, vastly increased test coverage, and maintainable even
> if the original hardware vendor goes out of business, or EOLs the hardware.
> 
> I wish I could rewind the clock, and demonstrate to Justin, Scott, Luben
> and other Adaptec engineers that there are solid reasons behind each of
> these decisions, and its not "politics" or "NIH" or "we hate you" or "we
> are the anointed ones, bow to us."
> 
> Linux doesn't have a roadmap, rather it has certain code patterns that
> experience has taught us are sustainable, portable, and performant in
> the long term.  As long as new source code fits these code patterns, we
> welcome the addition with open arms.  From any company.
> 
>     Jeff
> 
> 
> 
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