On Wed, 27 Jun 2007, Zoltán HUBERT wrote:
> I don't remember how it was during 2.4 and before, but I
> find it very suspicious that SuSE and RedHat only provide
> 2.6.10 and 2.6.9 for their OS. It looks as if THEY didn't
> trust 2.6.x to be a replacement to 2.6.y
>
> And as I understand it, this is (was ?) the whole point of
> stable/development kernels. "We" can trust a newer stable
> kernel to be a drop-in replacement for an older stable
> kernel (from the same series), while development kernels
> need time to stabilize with the new whizz-bang-pfouit stuff
> that you all so nicely add.
>
> Are the good ol' days lost in nostalgia ?
Lost? maybe. Improved on, defiantly so it's loss isn't a bad thing.
The 2.4/2.5 split was, as far as I recall, a mess. 2.5 had too many
changes to stabilize in any reasonable amount of time and 2.4 then needed
new drivers and features to keep it from becoming obsolete. Back porting
drivers without the needed infrastructure resulted in instabilities in
the 2.4 branch.
I recall one time where I needed a certain raid device working and not a
single kernel had that driver working properly. 2.4.x oopsed in the
driver after random intervals and the 2.5 kernel crashed in other places.
Now development is broken into smaller stages that are easier to debug and
made stable in shorter time. If I just need to update a kernel and don't
need any new features and drivers I can just update to the next point
release and I know it won't break anything. If I want new features I can
update to the latest stable branch or the latest pre release but either
way my stuff is more likely to work than I did back in the 2.5 days.
I think people who keep demanding a return to the old development system
forget how badly it sucked in the first place.
Gerhard
--
Gerhard Mack
[email protected]
<>< As a computer I find your faith in technology amusing.
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]