Re: Reviving the concept of a stable series (was Re: starting with2.7)

From: Robert W. Fuller
Date: Mon Jan 03 2005 - 07:18:28 EST


My 2 cents (not that anybody asked for it or I have any currency here since it's rare I get answers to my posts anyway....)

1. The distributors, such as Redhat, Mandrake, etc. ought to be actively involved in stabilizing the kernel especially if they offer kernel support services. (This isn't meant to imply that they aren't currently doing so. After all, they employ a number of people who work on the kernel.)

2. There is nothing to prevent the distributors from pooling their resources and funding a small group of developers to maintain a "stable" branch as their fulltime job.

3. If progress is to be made in the development model for Linux, then people need to be less reactionary. In other words, don't criticize changes in the development model unless you have a suggestion for progressing the model.

L. A. Walsh wrote:
*omitted*
However, all that being said, there would still be the choosing of
someone, steady and capable, of holding on to the stable release and
being it's gate-keeper. It seems like it would become quite a chore
to decide what code is let into the stable version. It's also
considered by many to be "less" fun, not only to "manage the
stable distro", but backport code into the previous distro. Maybe no one _qualified_, wanted to manage a stable release. It takes time and possibly enough time to qualify as a
full-time job. It takes a special person to find gainful
employment as a vendor-neutral kernel maintainer. The alternative is
to try to work 2 jobs where, in programming, each job might "like"
to have 60-80 hours of attention per week. That's a demanding
sacrifice as well.

It may be the case that no one at the last closed door kernel developer
meeting wanted to undertake the care of a stable kernel. No
volunteers...no kernel. There is less "wiggle room" in the average,
mature, developer's schedule with the advent of easy outsourcing to
cheaper labor that doesn't come from societies that breed independence
and nurture talented, more mature, or eccentric developers that love
spending spare cycles working on Open Source code.

Nevertheless, it would be nice to see a no-new-features, stable series
spun off from these development kernels, maybe .4th number releases,
like 2.6.10 also becomes a 2.6.10.0 that starts a 2.6.10.1, then 2.6.10.2,
etc...with iteritive bug fixes to the same kernel and no new features
in such a branch, it might become stable enough for users to have confidence
installing them on their desktop or stable machines.
*more omitted*
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