On 11/30/18 12:11 PM, Yannis Milios wrote: > > It is pretty simple, it builds/depmods the .kos and puts them in an > "update" directory in the /lib/modules (every distribution like to > call > this "update" dir differently, even Debian vs. Ubuntu IIRC). > > > If Proxmox was shipping DRBD9 in their kernel (instead of DRBD8), as > they were doing initially, then DKMS wouldn't be needed at all, but > well, that's their decision ...
While we're at it, if Linux had binary compatible kernel modules, or a compatibility layer for older modules, ... A couple years ago I initially ran one of my servers on Solaris 10TE with a network interface card driver from Solaris 7, until Intel released an update. The limitation that every single driver has to match the exact build of the kernel has always been one of the biggest issues for business use of Linux in my opinion. I wonder that this was never changed. I also run custom kernels quite often, so I have always found it annoying not to be able to just drop a driver binary into a directory and just use it. br, Robert _______________________________________________ drbd-user mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linbit.com/mailman/listinfo/drbd-user
