Okay, Linus has left for the Linux Lunacy Cruise (see http://www.geekcruises.com),
which ends october 27. When he gets back, he's implied that there will be
EXACTLY ONE more set of last minute merges before we switch over to the
3.0-pre (or 2.6-pre) series. Those of you waiting for the last minute: this
is it.
There are people patch-hoovering while Linus is off "lecturing" on a boat in
the carribean, but we don't know who those are, so that's not useful. What
IS useful is knowing what the candidate patches are. Not bug fixes, but new
features with one final shot at 2.5.45.
The October 19 entry from Guillaume Boissiere's 2.5 status list
(http://kernelnewbies.org/status/) has the following entries in the "ready
for merging" state:
=====================================================
o in -ac PCMCIA Zoom video support (Alan Cox)
http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0203.1/0326.html
o in -ac Device mapper for Logical Volume Manager (LVM2) (LVM2 team)
http://www.sistina.com/products_lvm.htm
o in -mm VM large page support (Many people)
http://lse.sourceforge.net/
o in -mm Page table sharing (Daniel Phillips, Dave McCracken)
http://www.geocrawler.com/mail/msg.php3?msg_id=7855063&list=35
(or possibly here:)
http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6446.html
o Ready - Build option for Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) (Karim Yaghmour)
http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0832.html
o Ready - Dynamic Probes (dprobes team)
http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/linux/projects/dprobes
o Ready - Zerocopy NFS (Hirokazu Takahashi)
http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0429.html
o Ready - High resolution timers (George Anzinger, etc.)
http://high-res-timers.sourceforge.net/
o Ready - EVMS (Enterprise Volume Management System) (EVMS team)
http://sourceforge.net/projects/evms
o Ready - Linux Kernel Crash Dumps (Matt Robinson, LKCD team)
http://lkcd.sourceforge.net/
o Ready - Rewrite of the console layer (James Simmons)
http://linuxconsole.sourceforge.net/
To the above can be added the following recent submission on the list:
o Ready- Kexec, luanch ELF format linux kernel from Linux (Eric W. Biederman)
http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6584.html
=================================================
That's currently it, that I'm aware of. If your patch isn't on that list, and
getting testing by people on linux-kernel (and getting a bunch of satisifed
users to go "worked for me!" at it), then you should speak up and GET it on
that list, or wait for the next development series.
When Linus comes back, at best he's going to give a thumbs up or thumbs down
to each patch currently sitting there in front of him, and then it's on to
the feature freeze. He may not take any of them, or he may just take one or
two. But the best we can hope to do is present him with a nice (short) list
of tested patches. (Remember, the less work Linus has to do, the higher the
percentage of it that will actually get done.)
So everybody, try the above patches. If they work for you, say so on this
list. It's no guarantee, but Linus has said endorsements from testers can
make him feel more comfortable about a patch. Possibly we can collect a list
of names of people for whom a patch "worked for me", to add to the list.
If your patch isn't on the list, speak out now. Better yet, post a URL to the
latest version. It's "show me the code" time. (Yes, Hans Reiser, this means
you. :) There are still 7 days till the end of Linus's cruise, but that's
not much time to get guinea pigs to publicly pipe up with a hearty "AOL!" of
support for your work...
Again, some of the things on this list won't make it into 3.0. It's just
candidates. But everything that is NOT on this list in about 7 days is
probably going to become 3.1 material by default.
Speak now, or till 3.1 hold your peace...
Rob
P.S. If somebody wants to put together a tree integrating some or all of the
above, ala Folk/Wolk, it might be useful for testing purposes. Good idea to
find conflicts now, eh?
We will send Reiser4 out soon, probably around the 27th.
Hans
Rob Landley wrote:
>Okay, Linus has left for the Linux Lunacy Cruise (see http://www.geekcruises.com),
>which ends october 27. When he gets back, he's implied that there will be
>EXACTLY ONE more set of last minute merges before we switch over to the
>3.0-pre (or 2.6-pre) series. Those of you waiting for the last minute: this
>is it.
>
>There are people patch-hoovering while Linus is off "lecturing" on a boat in
>the carribean, but we don't know who those are, so that's not useful. What
>IS useful is knowing what the candidate patches are. Not bug fixes, but new
>features with one final shot at 2.5.45.
>
>The October 19 entry from Guillaume Boissiere's 2.5 status list
>(http://kernelnewbies.org/status/) has the following entries in the "ready
>for merging" state:
>
>=====================================================
>
>o in -ac PCMCIA Zoom video support (Alan Cox)
>http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0203.1/0326.html
>
>o in -ac Device mapper for Logical Volume Manager (LVM2) (LVM2 team)
>http://www.sistina.com/products_lvm.htm
>
>o in -mm VM large page support (Many people)
>http://lse.sourceforge.net/
>
>o in -mm Page table sharing (Daniel Phillips, Dave McCracken)
>http://www.geocrawler.com/mail/msg.php3?msg_id=7855063&list=35
>(or possibly here:)
>http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6446.html
>
>o Ready - Build option for Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) (Karim Yaghmour)
>http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0832.html
>
>o Ready - Dynamic Probes (dprobes team)
>http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/linux/projects/dprobes
>
>o Ready - Zerocopy NFS (Hirokazu Takahashi)
>http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0429.html
>
>o Ready - High resolution timers (George Anzinger, etc.)
>http://high-res-timers.sourceforge.net/
>
>o Ready - EVMS (Enterprise Volume Management System) (EVMS team)
>http://sourceforge.net/projects/evms
>
>o Ready - Linux Kernel Crash Dumps (Matt Robinson, LKCD team)
>http://lkcd.sourceforge.net/
>
>o Ready - Rewrite of the console layer (James Simmons)
>http://linuxconsole.sourceforge.net/
>
>To the above can be added the following recent submission on the list:
>
>o Ready- Kexec, luanch ELF format linux kernel from Linux (Eric W. Biederman)
>http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6584.html
>
>=================================================
>
>That's currently it, that I'm aware of. If your patch isn't on that list, and
>getting testing by people on linux-kernel (and getting a bunch of satisifed
>users to go "worked for me!" at it), then you should speak up and GET it on
>that list, or wait for the next development series.
>
>When Linus comes back, at best he's going to give a thumbs up or thumbs down
>to each patch currently sitting there in front of him, and then it's on to
>the feature freeze. He may not take any of them, or he may just take one or
>two. But the best we can hope to do is present him with a nice (short) list
>of tested patches. (Remember, the less work Linus has to do, the higher the
>percentage of it that will actually get done.)
>
>So everybody, try the above patches. If they work for you, say so on this
>list. It's no guarantee, but Linus has said endorsements from testers can
>make him feel more comfortable about a patch. Possibly we can collect a list
>of names of people for whom a patch "worked for me", to add to the list.
>
>If your patch isn't on the list, speak out now. Better yet, post a URL to the
>latest version. It's "show me the code" time. (Yes, Hans Reiser, this means
>you. :) There are still 7 days till the end of Linus's cruise, but that's
>not much time to get guinea pigs to publicly pipe up with a hearty "AOL!" of
>support for your work...
>
>Again, some of the things on this list won't make it into 3.0. It's just
>candidates. But everything that is NOT on this list in about 7 days is
>probably going to become 3.1 material by default.
>
>Speak now, or till 3.1 hold your peace...
>
>Rob
>
>P.S. If somebody wants to put together a tree integrating some or all of the
>above, ala Folk/Wolk, it might be useful for testing purposes. Good idea to
>find conflicts now, eh?
>
>-
>To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
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>More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
>Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
>
>
>
>
Rob Landley wrote:
> o Ready - Build option for Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) (Karim Yaghmour)
> http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0832.html
LTT has seen a number of changes since the posting above. Mainly,
we've followed the recommendations of quite a few folks from the LKML.
Here are some highlights summarizing the changes:
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103491640202541&w=2
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103423004321305&w=2
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103247532007850&w=2
The latest patch is available here:
http://opersys.com/ftp/pub/LTT/ExtraPatches/patch-ltt-linux-2.5.44-vanilla-021019-2.2.bz2
Use this patch with version 0.9.6pre2 of the user tools:
http://opersys.com/ftp/pub/LTT/TraceToolkit-0.9.6pre2.tgz
Karim
===================================================
Karim Yaghmour
[email protected]
Embedded and Real-Time Linux Expert
===================================================
On Monday 21 October 2002 01:03, Karim Yaghmour wrote:
> Rob Landley wrote:
> > o Ready - Build option for Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) (Karim Yaghmour)
> > http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0204.1/0832.html
>
> LTT has seen a number of changes since the posting above. Mainly,
> we've followed the recommendations of quite a few folks from the LKML.
> Here are some highlights summarizing the changes:
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103491640202541&w=2
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103423004321305&w=2
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=103247532007850&w=2
>
> The latest patch is available here:
> http://opersys.com/ftp/pub/LTT/ExtraPatches/patch-ltt-linux-2.5.44-vanilla-
>021019-2.2.bz2 Use this patch with version 0.9.6pre2 of the user tools:
> http://opersys.com/ftp/pub/LTT/TraceToolkit-0.9.6pre2.tgz
>
> Karim
Cool. I just grabbed the URL off of G.B's list (I'm not even going to TRY to
spell his name again just now). it would be nice if the october 19 link was
up as soon as the "latest" link was up: right now I can't post a URL to it in
a way that will remain referring to what I was talking about after he posts
the next update. :(
Another thing I've noticed somebody still hoping to shoehorn into 2.5 is Roman
Zippel's new kernel configuration system, which is here:
Announcement:
http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6898.html
Code:
http://www.xs4all.nl/~zippel/lc/
That was listed as a "beta" on the status list, I guess at version 1.1, it has
now been promoted. (Anything else on the beta that's still trying to make it
into 2.5? The 27th is sunday, meaning Linus should be back at transmeta on
monday. Assuming 2.4.45 ships on the 31st, that would be the following
thursday...)
Ted Tso has also been posting new ext2/ext3 code with extended attributes and
access control lists.
Announcement:
http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6787.html
Code (chooe your poison):
bk://extfs.bkbits.net/extfs-2.5-update
http://thunk.org/tytso/linux/extfs-2.5
Apparently generic ACL support went into 2.5.3 (the status list again), but I
guess it wasn't added to EXT2. I suppose this makes this a good candidate
for inclusion then. :)
So, 11 items from the 2.5 status list (in -aa, in -mm, and "ready"), plus
kexec, kernelconfig, and ACL for EXT3. I believe this brings the total
number of pending patchsets still hoping for 2.5 inclusion to 14.
I can repost the full list if nobody beats me to it, but I think I'll wait to
see who else pipes up first. :)
Rob
On Oct 20, 2002 20:37 -0500, Rob Landley wrote:
> Ted Tso has also been posting new ext2/ext3 code with extended attributes and
> access control lists.
>
> Announcement:
> http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6787.html
> Code (chooe your poison):
> bk://extfs.bkbits.net/extfs-2.5-update
> http://thunk.org/tytso/linux/extfs-2.5
>
> Apparently generic ACL support went into 2.5.3 (the status list again), but I
> guess it wasn't added to EXT2. I suppose this makes this a good candidate
> for inclusion then. :)
>
> So, 11 items from the 2.5 status list (in -aa, in -mm, and "ready"), plus
> kexec, kernelconfig, and ACL for EXT3. I believe this brings the total
> number of pending patchsets still hoping for 2.5 inclusion to 14.
I belive that the ext3 EA+ACL stuff is now in -mm.
Cheers, Andreas
--
Andreas Dilger
http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/ext2resize/
On 20 October 2002 21:49, Rob Landley wrote:
> When Linus comes back, at best he's going to give a thumbs up or
> thumbs down to each patch currently sitting there in front of him,
> and then it's on to the feature freeze. He may not take any of them,
> or he may just take one or two. But the best we can hope to do is
> present him with a nice (short) list of tested patches. (Remember,
> the less work Linus has to do, the higher the percentage of it that
> will actually get done.)
Well, maybe it makes sense to reduce flow of non-features patches
for a couple of days to let Linus feel less buried in email?
I think VM tweaking and such... It could be done after Linus
say what got in and what did not.
Although I doubt we can keep akpm/acme/davem/etc/etc/etc from hacking,
maybe there's a way to block SMTP traffic from them? ;)
(just kidding. They develop features as well)
--
vda
On Monday 21 October 2002 01:43, Andreas Dilger wrote:
> On Oct 20, 2002 20:37 -0500, Rob Landley wrote:
> > Ted Tso has also been posting new ext2/ext3 code with extended attributes
> > and access control lists.
> >
> > Announcement:
> > http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2002/Oct/6787.html
> > Code (chooe your poison):
> > bk://extfs.bkbits.net/extfs-2.5-update
> > http://thunk.org/tytso/linux/extfs-2.5
> >
> > Apparently generic ACL support went into 2.5.3 (the status list again),
> > but I guess it wasn't added to EXT2. I suppose this makes this a good
> > candidate for inclusion then. :)
> >
> > So, 11 items from the 2.5 status list (in -aa, in -mm, and "ready"), plus
> > kexec, kernelconfig, and ACL for EXT3. I believe this brings the total
> > number of pending patchsets still hoping for 2.5 inclusion to 14.
>
> I belive that the ext3 EA+ACL stuff is now in -mm.
>
> Cheers, Andreas
Query: is the stuff in -mm guaranteed to make it into Linus's tree? Or is it
another variant of -ac and -dj, from which Linus pulls what he wants?
The first seems HIGHLY unlikely. But is nice to know anyway... :)
Rob
On Monday 21 October 2002 07:23, Denis Vlasenko wrote:
> On 20 October 2002 21:49, Rob Landley wrote:
> > When Linus comes back, at best he's going to give a thumbs up or
> > thumbs down to each patch currently sitting there in front of him,
> > and then it's on to the feature freeze. He may not take any of them,
> > or he may just take one or two. But the best we can hope to do is
> > present him with a nice (short) list of tested patches. (Remember,
> > the less work Linus has to do, the higher the percentage of it that
> > will actually get done.)
>
> Well, maybe it makes sense to reduce flow of non-features patches
> for a couple of days to let Linus feel less buried in email?
> I think VM tweaking and such... It could be done after Linus
> say what got in and what did not.
It would also be nice to buy the dude his own private jet, but I'm not sure
it's a practical suggestion in the short term. :)
Linus has already said he intends to read his mail with the "D" key when he
gets back. The point of collating the pending feature list is to pluck stuff
out of the mess, shake it off a bit, and present him with a nice menu to make
choices from on his return.
Deciding not to include stuff is Linus's perogative. (More than that, it's
more or less his JOB in kerneldom, acting as goalie for the main tree.) Once
again, we're just trying to make sure nothing gets dropped because he didn't
see it rather than because he saw it and went "no".
In the past half-hour, the MMU-less patch and unlimited groups support have
been fielded as "ready for 2.5", although I haven't seen URLs to either yet.
Add Rusty's three items and we're up to... 19? Plus Hans Reiser said reiser4
will be ready around the 27th, so that's 20.
I don't think half that many will make it into 2.5, but some of them are
small, so...
Oh, and of course one more little item that only Linus can merge (speaking of
small, yet still important):
The version number: is it 2.6 or 3.0?
So that's 21. :)
Rob
On Oct 20, 2002 21:47 -0500, Rob Landley wrote:
> On Monday 21 October 2002 01:43, Andreas Dilger wrote:
> > On Oct 20, 2002 20:37 -0500, Rob Landley wrote:
> > > Ted Tso has also been posting new ext2/ext3 code with extended attributes
> > > and access control lists.
> > >
> > > So, 11 items from the 2.5 status list (in -aa, in -mm, and "ready"), plus
> > > kexec, kernelconfig, and ACL for EXT3. I believe this brings the total
> > > number of pending patchsets still hoping for 2.5 inclusion to 14.
> >
> > I belive that the ext3 EA+ACL stuff is now in -mm.
>
> Query: is the stuff in -mm guaranteed to make it into Linus's tree? Or is it
> another variant of -ac and -dj, from which Linus pulls what he wants?
I doubt it. However, being included in "-mm" or "-ac" is one step closer to
being included in "" than just being a random patch/cset on the internet...
Cheers, Andreas
--
Andreas Dilger
http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/ext2resize/
Rob Landley wrote:
>
> Query: is the stuff in -mm guaranteed to make it into Linus's tree?
Nope.
It's mainly there for the other VM/MM/IO developers to
integrate against.
Also for getting their more experimental work more testing and exposure.
Also for getting external testing of the performance work
which is going into it.
Also for maintainers of other architectures to pick up breakage
before things break.
I prefer to only send things which I understand and have tested.
So that excludes, say, dcache-rcu and the EA/xattr patches. I
did send ext3-htree, but it had big "I haven't tested this" labels
all over it.
On Mon, 2002-10-21 at 00:49, Rob Landley wrote:
> o in -ac PCMCIA Zoom video support (Alan Cox)
> http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0203.1/0326.html
This is just device driver forward porting from the 2.4 kernel. While
its a rather important and useful feature its impact on the kernel core
is actually nil.