On Wed, Jan 04, 2006 at 12:23:31AM -0200, Felipe Augusto van de Wiel (faw) wrote:
> Perhaps the idea of maintain a kernel with other distros is not bad, > if Ubuntu shows up as a candidate, I would like to add Progeny, Linspire, > Xandros, "DCC Alliance Fan Club" and also other Debian Derivatives. I really > don't know if it is possible to mix RH, Debian, SuSE, Slackware and > other distros to maintain the same kernel, but certainly should be possible > to get all Debian (and Debian based/derivative) playing together. :-) Different distros have different target audiences so this may not be easy. Often fixing a driver bug for one class of users breaks it for an other class of users so it is quite possible that different distros want different bugs to be fixed/left alone. Also, other distros (e.g. RedHat) already found out the hard way that diverging too much from upstream costs a lot. So unless you find someone to pay the maintainers of such a forked kernel, it will not work out in the long term. > If you give it a quick look (and a quick try), we will have more > users testing the same kernel, which means more feedback, we will have > more developers working to get it stable and working to get it secure. > Probably even upstream get benefits from this model and sounds like a very > good way to work together, even to try to integrate outside patches and > backporting things. =) Dave Jones (Fedora) and Greg KH (Gentoo) already posted a much better idea on l-k: make packages from daily -git snapshots available for distro testers, so bugs like the past udev breakages are found _before_ the next official kernel version is released. Packaging at least -rc kernels for unstable might be a good idea for Debian too. That would provide more testing coverage for -rc releases, and this is what upstream needs the most. Gabor -- --------------------------------------------------------- MTA SZTAKI Computer and Automation Research Institute Hungarian Academy of Sciences --------------------------------------------------------- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]