Re: starting with 2.7

From: Bill Davidsen
Date: Mon Jan 03 2005 - 18:03:33 EST


Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sun, Jan 02, 2005 at 04:19:17PM -0800, William Lee Irwin III wrote:

On Sun, Jan 02, 2005 at 01:42:11PM -0800, William Lee Irwin III wrote:

This is not optimism. This is experience. Every ``stable'' kernel I've
seen is a pile of incredibly stale code where vi'ing any file in it
instantly reveals numerous months or years old bugs fixed upstream.
What is gained in terms of reducing the risk of regressions is more
than lost by the loss of critical examination and by a long longshot.

On Sun, Jan 02, 2005 at 11:15:34PM +0100, Adrian Bunk wrote:

The main advantage with stable kernels in the good old days (tm) when 4 and 6 were even numbers was that you knew if something didn't work, and upgrading to a new kernel inside this stable kernel series had a relatively low risk of new breakages. This meant one big migration every few years and relatively easy upgrades between stable series kernels.

This never saved anyone any pain. 2.4.x was not the stable kernel
you're painting it to be until 2.4.20 or later, and by the time it
became so the fixes for major regressions that occurred during 2.3.x
were deemphasized and ignored for anything prior to 2.6.x.


I don't know which specific regressions you have in mind, but for

95% of the users 2.4 is a pretty usable kernel.


On Sun, Jan 02, 2005 at 11:15:34PM +0100, Adrian Bunk wrote:

Nowadays in 2.6, every new 2.6 kernel has several regressions compared to the previous one, and additionally obsolete but used code like ipchains and devfs is scheduled for removal making upgrades even harder for many users.

My experience tells me that the number of regressions in 2.6.x compared
to purportedly ``far stabler'' kernels is about the same or (gasp!)
less. So the observable advantage of the ``frozen'' or ``stable'' model
is less than or equal to zero.

Frankly, kernel hacking is a difficult enough task (not that I
personally find it so) that frivolous patches are not overwhemingly
numerous. The ``barrier'' you're erecting is primarily acting as a
barrier to fixes, not bugs.


My point is different.

Perhaps the number of fixes for bugs equals the number of new bugs
in 2.6 .

But it's not about the number of bugs alone. The question is the number of regressions compared to a previous kernel in this series.

2.4 -> 2.6 is a major migration.

2.4.27 -> 2.4.28 is a kernel upgrade that is very unlikely to cause problems.

Compared to this, 2.6.9 -> 2.6.10 is much more likely to break an existing setup that worked in 2.6.9 .


On Sun, Jan 02, 2005 at 11:15:34PM +0100, Adrian Bunk wrote:

There's the point that most users should use distribution kernels, but consider e.g. that there are poor souls with new hardware not supported by the 3 years old 2.4.18 kernel in the stable part of your Debian distribution.

Again, the loss of critical examination far outweighs the purported
defense against regressions. The most typical result of playing the fix
backporting game for extended periods of time is numerous rounds of
months-long bughunts for bugs whose fixes were merged years ago upstream.
When the bugs are at long last found, they are discovered to fix the
problems of hundreds of users until the next such problem surfaces.


The main question is, whether it might be possible to make a very short 2.7 line (< 6 months).

Imagine e.g. a feature freeze for 2.6 now. Then 2.7 starts with a feature freeze for 2.7 one or two months later. During this time, all the changes that do now flood into 2.6 would go into 2.7, and then there are a few months of stabilizing 2.7 .

It's quite the opposite of the current 2.6 model, but a quick 2.8 should also avoid this problem you describe.

Basically, in this proposal (if it started today), what was expected to be called 2.6.11 will be called 2.7.0, and 2.6.11 will be a bugfix-only kernel (considering the amount of changes more like the current -ac than the latest -mm).

The development policy is set by majority vote on a regular basis. However, since only one vote counts and Linus prefers it the way it is, we live with it. In my opinion the stable series is -ac, Alan actually runs the kernels.

--
-bill davidsen (davidsen@xxxxxxx)
"The secret to procrastination is to put things off until the
last possible moment - but no longer" -me
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