On Mon, 27 Aug 2018, Oliver Hartkopp wrote: > "released upon production" means usually: Oh, we put that driver in > a tar-ball on a CD that's shipped with the product and which will > get no further visibility nor (security) maintenance. > > Robert, please tell your manager that creating a driver is no rocket > science and also brings no "costumer differentiation" which needs to > be covered under NDA. > > Posting drivers and bring it into mainline Linux heavily increases > the quality due to the review process and all the people that are > willing to help you to get better. At the end your driver gets > long-term maintenance and other people can benefit from it - as your > boss is getting benefit from using Linux right now. > > When something is "released upon production" it will not be in a > quality that it could go into the kernel - and no one will have the > time/money/ambition to spend effort on it then. You have just > produced one of the numerous dead out-of-tree drivers. That would be > just sad.
i make these arguments on a regular basis with all of my clients but, as a contractor, i have little influence. but i will continue to make them. rday -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA http://crashcourse.ca/dokuwiki Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday LinkedIn: http://ca.linkedin.com/in/rpjday ========================================================================