I can think of one good reason to up the version number to 3.0;
if parts of the interface have been broken (I'm thinking about
pty major numbers here; If other things have changed, it's even
more of a reason) a major number change at least gives a hint
that "Hey! You'll have to remake the *ENTIRE* world if you want
to upgrade to this system."
>The increase from kernel 1 to 2 saw, iirc, ext2, elf, and a slew of over
>changes. It generally changed the way we ran Linux.
Actually it didn't -- I was running elf-based binaries with 1.2.13
and for several years the extent of the changes I did for a 2.0.x
kernel was just that -- I booted with a 2.0.x kernel instead of
1.2.13 and ignored the stupid flock messages. Internally, 2.0.x
may have been massively redone, but the published interfaces stayed
close enough to 1.2.13 so that it was an incremental upgrade.
____
david parsons \bi/ Shoot, I can't even compile 2.2 unless I tweak my
\/ system to fit it.
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