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2.4, The Kernel and Forking

darthcamaro writes "We all assume that the kernel is the kernel that is maintained by kernel.org and that Linux won't fork the way UNIX did..right? There's a great story at internetnews.com about the SuSe CTO taking issue with Red Hat backporting features of the 2.6 Kernel into its own version of the 2.4 kernel. "I think it's a mistake, I think it's a big mistake," he said. "It's a big mistake because of one reason, this work is not going to be supported by the open source community because it's not interesting anymore because everyone else is working on 2.6." My read on this is a thinly veiled attack on Red Hat for 'forking' the kernel. The article also give a bit of background on SuSe's recent decision to GPL their setup tool YAST, which they hope other distros will adopt too."

125 of 384 comments (clear)

  1. So what? by Zweistein_42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is anybody really still paying attention to RedHat's 2.4 offerings? Does it look like they'll keep up the backporting practice?

    --
    - To err is human; but to really screw up, you need a computer
    1. Re:So what? by JoeBuck · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Red Hat Enterprise Linux is pretty much the standard at this point for electronic design automation (EDA) tools. This means that it will be used in the design of most chips produced this year and in the next several years. It's 2.4 based, and will remain so for some time.

    2. Re:So what? by msh104 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      yet anothing redhat kernel war? don't get me wrong, but I never liked redhats patchparty really much. there gcc 2.96 compiler used to segfault the hell out of my redhat distro, and the kernel itself was the biggest patch pile I have ever seen in my entire live. I never was never succesful in compiling it. (not to mention compiling non-kernel.org modules.) there "performence" patches also gave me lots of trouble with more advanced code. (wine emulator anyone?) in short: I hope this fork will be soon forgotten, and redhat will spend its time in sending patches to linus for inclusion in the linux 2.6 kernel instead.

    3. Re:So what? by DebianRcksLindowsLie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have to agree. Red Hat is very firmly entrenched in enterprise for one main reason - it works.

    4. Re:So what? by tacocat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not because it works. They all work. It's because RedHat has a very aggressive marketing program in America.

      Debian has not marketing program to speak of. Neither does just about anyone else.

      SuSE (until recently) and Mandrake have no presence in America and as such are viewed as foreign commercial entities and are looked upon dimply. I don't know exactly why, but they aren't getting fair billing.

      RedHat has done a tremendous job at selling their name to the point where a huge majority of PHBs think that the Linux software is at version 9.0 and that it's logo is not a penguin but a dude in a hat. Think Kleenex and facial tissue.

      It is because of this job selling that their recent increase in licensing costs will have near zero effect on their corporate incursion.

      SuSE, however, will probably make some awesome inroads to the SOHO market because of their better cost model and lower entry cost.

      But Debian will still be the best distro ever!!! <g>

  2. Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by MartinG · · Score: 4, Funny

    News at 11.

    --
    -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
    1. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by fr2asbury · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're moderated as funny, but it makes the point I was going to make. The venders routinely do not ship with a vanilla kernel. I do not believe that RedHat/Fedora is not alone in shipping with a heavily patched and customized kernel. It's hardly forking, it's just the way they package up the kernel.

    2. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The venders[sic] routinely do not ship with a vanilla kernel.

      Slackware does. The whole idea is that if you have a *good* reason to patch your kernel, you can do it yourself.

    3. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by mahdi13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You can say their kernels are patched, but from what I've seen they are more customized then patched. Most of their patches do not apply very well to other vendors kernels or even systems. Every try to install a SUSE kernel on a Red Hat install? Sure they are both RPM based, but their systems are truely unique and you will get many boot errors at the least.

      I am not against vendors making custom kernels at all, it's really a good idea. They make kernels that are designed for a specific purpose, Red Hat aims more for the server support/performance and SUSE has been focusing more on the Desktop install. There are optimizations done for servers that would be silly, or even degrading, for a desktop.

      I agree that this is not a matter of 'forking' the kernel, but packaging.

      --
      "Some things have to be believed to be seen." - Ralph Hodgson
    4. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by CrankyFool · · Score: 3, Funny

      Double negatives do not sometimes fail to not make your point clearer.

      For example, in this comment you seem to suggest that you believe RH/FEdora is alone in shipping with a heavily patched and customized kernel.

    5. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by ValourX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What I have a problem with is when you try to install a Vanilla kernel on a RedHat system, it still goes berserk. Commercial GNU/Linux vendors have found new and unusual ways to make their software proprietary. It's just a different kind of vendor lock-in, because if you've got RedHat you're stuck with RedHat Inc. for patches and updates.

      -Jem
    6. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've never had a problem with a vanilla kernel on a RH system without any tweaking. Granted, I haven't done it in a while, but it has always worked the 30+ times I have. I'm sure that there are problems for some setups, I don't doubt you in that, but to imply it can't be done or isn't easy isn't quite accurate either.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    7. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by ValourX · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I had a problem trying to get RH9 to work on an Athlon64 system a few months ago. I downloaded the vanilla 2.6 kernel as I've done with other distros, followed the directions and did everything I was supposed to, and then it wouldn't compile, needed special extensions to work with RH... then X was screwed for some reason. In general RH9 is just not made for the 2.6 kernel. I didn't try the 2.4 vanilla kernel because I didn't think it would add the functionality I needed.

      -Jem
    8. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by blugu64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Another reason I like debian....

      --
      "Personal ownership is a hallmark of conservative capitalism. And I don't believe I am entitled to anything that I did n
    9. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by Anna+Merikin · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is almost never trivial to install a new major version of a kernel on a distro not designed for it -- and RH9 was not designed for 2.6. That's why backporting of newer features can be a Good Thing.

      Until three months ago, I used RH-6.2 with many features backported from 2.4 including USB support. I also have successfully installed plain jane kernels from kernel.org and custom kernels of my own. No probs that can be traced to incompatibilities -- just nincompooperies on my part.

    10. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by anothy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i call nonsense!
      you still have source. you can still release patches. the fact that they'll only work with one distribution is a minor deal, if what you're really after is fixing some problem with that distribution or adding some feature to it. patches are seldom valid across version of the same code line, either. this is not any form of vendor lock in. i'm not stuck with Red Hat here. in the MS world, you nobody else is able to produce these patches. that's vendor lock-in.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    11. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wha?

      I've been installing kernels based on vanilla source since I started with Red Hat 6.0. From my experience, they work fine. In fact, the second thing I do after installing a new version of Red Hat/Fedora, after closing all the really obvious security holes (why the hell is sendmail running by default???!!!???), is build a kernel to my own specifications and needs.

      It runs fine.

      Having not tried Fedora Core yet, I don't know if that project did something to tie a successful bootup to the presence of certain modules or a certain kernel version (which would be mind-bendingly dumb). Maybe the Enterprise version freaks out if the default RAID configuration calls for a certain set of modules, I don't know. However, I don't think I've ever had a problem dropping a vanilla kernel into Red Hat.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    12. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by BoredByPolitics · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Interesting that you were still using 6.2 - at my last company their product ran on 6.2 because it was so stable. When I needed to add things or drivers to the kernel, I just packaged them up as additions to the RedHat kernel - took a bit of getting to know rpm, but was well worth it.

      Unfortunately I may have made it all a little too easy to use and install, as they eventually made me redundant.

    13. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by ValourX · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Going from 2.4 to 2.6 worked great on Debian and Gentoo, but they automatically download the proper extras for you whereas RedHat only distributes single RPMs for everything. I see where my mistakes were, but the problem lies with RedHat and the way they distribute software. RH9 is really not meant to be upgraded; it is designed to be replaced by RHEL.

      -Jem
    14. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by Cobron · · Score: 2, Informative

      ... and those are the ones I use.
      In the beginning ofcourse I HAD to try all those patched mm/ck/gaming/gentoo/...-kernels coz they'd be all this wack and such, but after my occasional kernel panics I gravitated to the dev-sources.
      No problems with the development-kernel whatsoever.
      (ah no, I'm gonna be honest: 2.6.6_rc1 (i think) won't load my nvidia driver, so I using the 2.6.5 until I find some time to find out why).

    15. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by irix · · Score: 4, Informative

      Going from 2.4 to 2.6 worked great on Debian and Gentoo, but they automatically download the proper extras for you whereas RedHat only distributes single RPMs for everything. I see where my mistakes were, but the problem lies with RedHat and the way they distribute software.

      I think that your problem is understanding how RedHat distributes software. Your upgrade worked ok on Debian or Gentoo because the version you were using supported being upgraded to a 2.6 kernel.

      RedHat does not support RH9 upgrading to a 2.6 kernel, but you can do it if you look for instructions.

      RH9 is really not meant to be upgraded

      Sure it is. Grab yum and pull RH9 up to FC1. Then use yum to pull FC1 up to FC2 test - voila, a RedHat distribution that supports a 2.6 kernel.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    16. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by Blimey85 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Every try to install a SUSE kernel on a Red Hat install? Maybe I'm ignorant but why would anyone try this? Just to see if it could be done? I liken this to installing a Ford motor in a Chevy car or vice versa... you may get the motor to fit but the transmission won't bolt up without some modifications or an adapter kit... and in the end, what do you have? Is there a good reason for wanting to have a SUSE kernel on an RH install?

      --
      How is it that one careless match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box to start a campfire?
    17. Re:Vendor adds lots of patches to kernel by conway · · Score: 2, Funny
      There are optimizations done for servers that would be silly, or even degrading, for a desktop.

      I find it degrading to be forced to use your heathen server patches on my pure desktop! Begone, foul server distro's!

  3. It happens all the time by Unregistered · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are tons of kernel patchsets out there. some (ck-sources for example) include 2.6 code as well.

    1. Re:It happens all the time by dominator · · Score: 4, Informative

      Definitely. I wonder if he's aware that the latest SuSe 2.4.x kernel has no fewer than 2400 patches, many of which were backported from the 2.6 series...

    2. Re:It happens all the time by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course he is. I really don't think he even cares about the practice. He's just trying to drum up more business for SuSE and take some away from Red Hat. Nothing more than capitalism at work.

      Move along, nothing to see here.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    3. Re:It happens all the time by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As a fellow capitalist (20 years in marketing), I can verify your statement. This applies to durable products in my case, but could apply to software as well.

      If the competition has it, and you don't, its because it is not reliable enough, will cause potential problems, not fully compatible or affects performance/comfort/durability in a negative way.

      If you have it and the competition doesn't, it is because they are technologically behind, outdated, incapable of incorporating change, or they just don't care about you.

      If you both have it, yours is better tested, proven, the correct version, or better documented.

      If they got it before you did, it was because you care enough about your customers to fully test it to prevent any potential problems. If you got it before they did, it is because you have better facilities/personel for testing so you can get it to market faster.

      Steel is stronger than plastic, unless mine is plastic. Then plastic is lighter than steel, and stronger, pound for pound. Bigger is better, unless mine is smaller. Then we use more modern parts, instead of old technology, so ours is smaller.

      Any feature my product has or doesn't have, I can give you a very good explanation that will demonstrate why we are better for having it / not have it. No matter the circumstances, we did it on purpose, and we did it because we care more than the evil/incompetent/small competition. If you give me at least 30 minutes, I will also produce graphs and charts that clearly demonstrate this point.

      As to what the magical "it" I keep referring to, it doesn't matter. What ever "it" is, we have a reason for having / not having "it" and why we implimented it first / last. (please refer to the image for obvious proof.)

      You don't have to be evil to be in Marketing, but it really does help ;)

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  4. Since when? by Progman3K · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since when is it OK to develop a new kernel and abandon one that many users are still betting on?

    2.4 can have new things added to it, there's now law that says it can't.

    And if the 2.4 maintainers have found some good additions, well, all the better for users of 2.4

    --
    I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    1. Re:Since when? by AndroidCat · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Would the change to 2.6 break that much of their software? Why?

      Are the people sticking with 2.4 the sort that need two years of meetings and proposals before they're allowed to bump a version number? (I don't see that back-porting mods is less risky.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    2. Re:Since when? by Progman3K · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >I don't see that back-porting mods is less risky.

      I think you've summed it up, right there.
      It isn't safer, but it's something open-source gives YOU the ability to determine.

      CAN you fork when the source is open?
      If a fork springs to life and has more adoption than the unforked branch, doesn't that mean that it suits users' needs better?

      Any change to your kernel involves risks, but at least you get to choose.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    3. Re:Since when? by n1ywb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Features from new kernels have always been backported to old kernels. Backporting is nothing new and it's often a Good Thing(tm). Lots of stuff from 2.3/2.4 has been backported to 2.2, and lots of stuff from 2.5/2.6 has been backported to 2.4, and hopefully more good stuff will be backported so that the people that for whatever reason won't or can't upgrade to 2.6 will not be left out in the cold.

      I don't know much about RedHat's backporting efforts specifically, although some people seem to think they've done a cob job of it. Perhaps that's the point the SUSE guy was trying to make? Not so much chiding RedHat for backporting, but for doing a crappy job of it.

      --
      -73, de n1ywb
      www.n1ywb.com
    4. Re:Since when? by ValentineMSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful
      As a point in fact, look at the current fracas going on in the X world with XFree86 and X org. Granted, the code itself didn't fork, but an implementation of an open standard appeared which serves the users better.

      Guess where all the talent went?

      And guess which X subsystem is being used in virtually all of the newer versions of the more popular distros?

      Open Source software development is a particularly Darwinian environment. Which, in my opinion, is a good thing.

      --
      Karma: Chameleon - mostly influenced by bad '80s New Wave music
    5. Re:Since when? by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except for the fact that 2.6 (unless you mean Solaris 2.6) is not a "proven" codebase. Backporting is inherently a much safer practice than moving an entire operating system to a new kernel for the simple fact that the "old" kernel has been used and abused for the last couple of years.

      Red Hat isn't doing what they are doing for the benefit of the Linux community, they are doing this for the benefit of their customers. Consider this; Solaris 8, despite being released a couple of years ago is just now starting to gain widespread acceptance as a "Stable" operating system for use by many corporations for critical systems. Solaris 9 is largely considered too new for critical systems at some of the world's largest financial institutions. In large corporate datacenters, products under 2 years old are rarely considered "stable". Ask a Fortune 500 CTO whether or not you can apply a kernel patch to the Oracle Financials server or upgrade it to a whole new kernel to get a much needed feature and see what response you get. As a result, the only way Red Hat can bring some of these features to their customers is through backporting.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    6. Re:Since when? by Rik+van+Riel · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sure, but let's look at a hypothetical scenario;

      User x needs the O(1) scheduler in kernel 2.5, but NOT...

      Not so hypothetical as you think. There was an article in Linux Journal (IIRC) recently that shows how RHEL kernel development is done.

      Yes, I guess it DOES create a fork, but in this case, it's warranted for this user.

      Note that maintaining hundreds of patches (and growing the pile) is a lot of work and would take up a lot of full-time employees; not something any business could justify if there was a better alternative:

      • only the most important/popular features are backported, since maintaining a backport for 5+ years is a lot of work
      • when a new feature is developed, it is first merged into the upstream kernel to avoid future incompatibility
      • because of the push to get every patch merged upstream eventually, it is really more of a branch than a fork
      • merging features upstream reduces the maintenance burden of the distribution developers, leaving them more time to work on other customer requests ... there is actually a business reason for contributing to the Linux kernel!

      Of course, this is strictly my personal opinion. Others may not see things the same way. The fact that I can't imagine somebody maintaining a large pile of patches for fun is probably due to a lack of imagination...

  5. Re:Red Hat?` by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Does anyone here still use Red Hat?

    Lots, I expect. But they don't get to be as pretentious as the less popular distro users.

  6. Who cares? by rehabdoll · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is this really interesting? Open Source / Free software is designed for forking. Why dont they just call it "RedHat kernel" or something?

  7. Yesterday's news? by ivan256 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    RedHat has been backporting patches forever. That doesn't make it a fork any more than the actual kernel forks. Look at the LinuxPPC tree for an example of a real fork. Look at rtLinux, uClinux, and all the other actual kernel forks before crying wolf.

    Kernel forks don't kill the kernel.

    1. Re:Yesterday's news? by n1ywb · · Score: 2, Informative

      uCLinux has been merged back into 2.6.

      --
      -73, de n1ywb
      www.n1ywb.com
    2. Re:Yesterday's news? by ivan256 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      LinuxPPC is merged back in periodically too. Hence the reason that forks of Linux don't have the effect forks of Unix did. They're not all hiding their work from each other, and they're all allowed and willing to take the good from another fork and incorporate it into their own trees. Even if they don't, users are free to if they wish. Forking can be healthy in a free software environment.

    3. Re:Yesterday's news? by norwoodites · · Score: 2, Interesting

      More to that point, Linus now has a Power Mac G5 so the mainline sources for Linux has to be kept up todate.

  8. Oh, please by JoeBuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Things have always been this way. None of the major distributors ship a pure Linus kernel, including SUSE. Everyone includes patches. Backporting 2.6 features helps everyone because it subjects those features to more testing, meaning that 2.6 will be better as a result.

    Red Hat has more kernel hackers than anyone else, which means that they have the ability to support kernels with more hacks. So what SUSE is really saying is "How dare Red Hat use its competitive advantage?"

    Finally, it's not true that "everyone else is working on 2.6". People in the "open source community" are still maintaining 2.2, remember. Future 2.4 releases may well include some of the backported stuff developed by Red Hat and others.

    1. Re:Oh, please by ananke · · Score: 4, Informative

      "None of the major distributors ship a pure Linus kernel"

      actually, slackware does ship vanilla kernel.

      --
      --- d'oh
    2. Re:Oh, please by ivan256 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Backporting 2.6 features helps everyone because it subjects those features to more testing, meaning that 2.6 will be better as a result.

      Unlikely. Testing of features that have been hacked back into an older kernel won't provide representative results. You'll only find the most glaring of bugs through that kind of testing, and the hope typically is you find those before you put them into production anyway.

      The real effect of backporting features is that it scares off third party developers. Companies that want linux drivers for their devices have to pick a version to work with. RedHat's backports are notorious for changing things in the driver interfaces. That means a vendor, who may not be informed as to the dynamics of the kernel development process, may choose to support only RedHat's version of the kernel, to speciffically not support RedHat's version, or worst and most likely, to not support linux at all.

      I've done consulting and contracting for all three types of companies, as well as one who tried to support both RedHat's tree and Linus' tree from the same code base, and believe me when I say that it's a mess. Let's just hope that somewhere along the way RedHat decides to pick a versioning scheme that makes it easy to tell their features are in there at compile time, and starts providing change logs so you can figure out what they've done. As of right now their stuff is a nightmare.

  9. RedHat's kernels = more like dev kernels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    before 2.6 existed, their 2.4.x kernels looked WAY more like 2.5.x kernels. I always thought this was dangerous, as what they were effectively doing was dressing up "alpha" 2.5.x code as "stable" 2.4.x code and letting it run riot on people's production servers.

    1. Re:RedHat's kernels = more like dev kernels by AstroDrabb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What is the point in modding up an Anonymous Coward with no proof to back up his or hers claim? Red Hat does not put out beta code an call it production. In fact, RH has 6 of the top 10 Linux kernel developers working for them. They know what they are doing. I personally don't care if RH puts 16,000 patches in their kernel and calls it Red Hat's super duper kernel 99.7. What matters is that RHEL is stable, and in my experience, RHEL is damn stable.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  10. Do we need to keep discussing this? by arashiakari · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How many times have we argued this issue? At this point it has been resolved hundreds of times here on Slashdot, and many thousands of times in editorial write-ups elsewhere.

    YOU CANNOT FORK OPEN-SOURCE CODE, people can do whatever the hell they want to with it, including back-porting features... BECAUSE YOU HAVE TO SHARE THE SOURCE.

    What is so complicated about that? The entire concept of a "FORK" requires secret proprietary source code and copyrighted functions and pantented methods.

    1. Re:Do we need to keep discussing this? by Phs2501 · · Score: 5, Funny
      The entire concept of a "FORK" requires secret proprietary source code and copyrighted functions and pantented methods.

      Actually, the concept of fork(2) really just requires a simple system call. Copy-on-write pages help a lot too, though.

      :)

    2. Re:Do we need to keep discussing this? by Dave2+Wickham · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Eh? A fork in a road is where a road splits into two; each going in different directions. A fork in a software project is the same. I don't see why a fork in software "requires secret proprietary source code and copyrighted functions and pantented methods".

      (Not that I consider the redhat kernels to be a fork)

    3. Re:Do we need to keep discussing this? by dougmc · · Score: 2, Interesting
      What is so complicated about that? The entire concept of a "FORK" requires secret proprietary source code and copyrighted functions and pantented methods.
      I think I understand the problem here -- your definition of `fork' doesn't match with the defintion of `fork' used by most everybody else here. To everybody else, it means that one package/program/group of code/whatever becomes two or more, each diverging more as time goes on.

      You want some examples of open source forks? How about ssh -> openssh? X11 -> Xfree86? Xfree86 -> Xorg? emacs -> xemacs? BSD -> FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD. There's probably thousands of packages out there that have forked for whatever reason (usually political) and are open source.

      Personally, I think this issue of Red Hat shipping a custom kernel is a non-issue -- they've been doing this since beginning, and so does everybody else. I guess technically it does qualify as a fork, but forks are not inherently bad.

    4. Re:Do we need to keep discussing this? by the_thunderbird · · Score: 2, Funny

      Errr, so when do we start using threading - ooo hey look I threaded the kernel ;)

  11. Forget Forking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... What happens when the Linux kernel starts spooning? We will never see him again, because he will be spending all his time with his new girlfriend. That is until she kicks him to the curb, and he comes crawling back looking for his old friends again.

    You know you have all seen this happen a million times before.

    1. Re:Forget Forking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      But there is no spoon...

      And since there is no spoon:

      "Use the forks, Luke!"

  12. There is no meaningful "fork" here. by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Informative

    Red Hat's applying a few patches.

    I use Red Hat's distribution.

    I don't, however, use their kernel; instead, I use a kernel.org kernel that I compile myself.

    The fact that this isn't just possible, but is easily (i.e. drop-in) possible, indicates that There Is No Problem Here.

    The kernel is binary compatible. The .config files are compatible (i.e. make oldconfig). The config/menuconfig/xconfig interfaces are the same. Red Hat's kernels track kernel.org version numbers, but just apply extra patches.

    This is not a "fork" of the kernel in any meaningful way.

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:There is no meaningful "fork" here. by justins · · Score: 4, Informative
      The kernel is binary compatible.

      Whatever gave you that idea? Redhat has created kernels in the past with threading features that nobody else had. Software using those features would not run on a kernel without those nonstandard patches. That's binary incompatibility.

      Redhat has a history of doing stuff like this, as with their GCC 2.96 fiasco.
      --
      Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
    2. Re:There is no meaningful "fork" here. by Compenguin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      GCC may not have been really GCC but it its g++ was much more of a c++ compiler than 2.95. All they did was branch from the development tree. Things that didn't compile with it didn't compile because of broken code not because of a broken compiler. Furthermore as far as compiled c++ binaries goes, due to the magic of versioned libraries, c++ binaries compiled with all recent "real" gcc releases worked fine.

      I don't see how it's anyone else's buisness what compiler redhat uses. I know some project maintainers complained that they didn't want to support this compiler version but they had the option of not supporting it and letting redhat or a redhat user contribute a patch or they could just plain let it be, and continue to ship broken code.

      Furthermore, redhat shipped a secend compiler with that release compat-egcs-6.2 (egcs-1.1.2) just in case code was tied to specific existing gcc behaviors).

      So next time lets save the complaints for when redhat commits an attrocity like changing the default theme.

  13. Damned if you do, damned if you don't by realdpk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Redhat is supporting a kernel they've used for some time now, by backporting patches. What's the big deal? *Lots* of people are going to be running 2.4.x for a long time, and having vendor support still available is great. We should be supportive of Redhat here.

    The worst thing they could do is drop support for 2.4.x entirely and mandate everyone upgrades to 2.6.x. Why make such a major change to something that works?

  14. RHEL Backporting, fine by me. by Erik_ · · Score: 5, Informative

    I *might* agree with the CTO of SUSE if Red Hat backported features, but didn't support them. Yet that is not the case. Red Hat promises a 5 year support for their Enterprise Linux releases, and I'm willing to pay for such a support. For my company's systems, I don't need to stay on the edge of new features, tools and other improvements. I NEED a stable operating system, requirering low change management (expect for security issues).

  15. .. and we like it. by Outland+Traveller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Redhat backporting features into 2.4 for their own customers is a win for everyone and yet another victory for open source. Case closed.

  16. GMAFB!!! by tm2b · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is insane. What is the GPL about if not the freedom for an individual or business to make changes to the kernel and distribute those changes? If Linus wanted to maintain a single point of control, which is what this guy is indirectly advocating, he would have used a different license.

    This is a very dangerous attitude from a company that is supposed to be steeped in the GPL. "Work it our way or don't work it" is not an attitude that helps the open source movement. "Let a thousand flowers bloom" should be the theme.

    Sounds to me like SuSe is upset that they will have to either duplicate this work or use Red Hat's work in order to stay competitive.

    --
    "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
    1. Re:GMAFB!!! by trashme · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You seem to be taking this argument too far.
      "Work it our way or don't work it"
      I did not pick up that sort of attitude from the article. I gathered that his message was simply this: It would be better for the entire community if Red Hat used the 2.6 kernel so that the linux communities resources can be spent moving forward with the new kernel.
      You may or may not agree with that, but don't go stretching his argument to an extreme. That's just false.
  17. Re:Red Hat?` by buro9 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Yes, as their Red Hat Enterprise product (which uses their custom 2.4 kernel) is widely deployed at hosting companies such as The Planet.

    If datacentres and hosting companies are deploying this widely, then you can be sure that there are many sysadmins out there who are creeping up the learning curve and are unaware of precisely what they run on or what it means (2.6 kernel performance with MySql should prompt many to upgrade, but it doesn't).

    So the 2.4 kernel is far more widely deployed than you may initially suspect. This is where Red Hat are making their money and why it matters to use.

  18. I do by Erik_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And I'm willing to pay for the long-term support of my company's systems.

  19. The fear by Effugas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The fear is that a version of Oracle will come out that depends on 2.6-ish kernel features but doesn't actually work on 2.6 proper (i.e. it has dependencies on 2.4-era semantics). At that point, the only way to run Oracle -- no matter your toolchain -- is to use the Redhat kernel.

    --Dan

    1. Re:The fear by GoofyBoy · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you are serious about Oracle + Linux, then you will run it under RedHat.

      When its something like Oracle, you choose the application, then the OS to match.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    2. Re:The fear by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 2, Informative

      " If you are serious about Oracle + Linux, then you will run it under RedHat."

      Actually I've had problems with RedHat and Oracle (8 and 9). RedHat 7-9 and the RHAS 2.1 distro's. RH 9 actually turned out to be the easiest to setup with Oracle. Once I modified the memory settings in /proc AND skipped an error during the install it came up just fine. The install error was a mistake in one of makefiles during linking. I had to run it after the fact after tweaking it.

      Haven't tried it with SuSE yet. I've been told it works great and doesn't require any makefile tweaking. I've setup quite a number of these with RedHat for the military. You would be surprised how many of these they want to install under Linux.

      Has anyone tried it with RHAS 3? I understand it hasn't been certified yet by Oracle.

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    3. Re:The fear by leandrod · · Score: 5, Informative
      > If you are serious about Oracle + Linux, then you will run it under RedHat.

      Not true. UnitedLinux and SuSE are also certified. In fact Oracle is compiled not on Red Hat, but on SuSE.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    4. Re:The fear by bigjnsa500 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If you are serious about Oracle + Linux, then you will run it under RedHat.

      Really? Why? Works fine with Slackware here.

      --
      This is a test. This is a test of the emergency sig system. This has been only a test.
    5. Re:The fear by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because if you are using Oracle, you are generally doing something serious, which means that product support is critical. If Oracle does not support your Oracle/OS combination that means you don't get support.

      And for the record here are the Linux distributions which Oracle will support;

      http://otn.oracle.com/tech/linux/htdocs/linux_te ch supp_faq.html#Linux_Distributions

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    6. Re:The fear by Rik+van+Riel · · Score: 2, Informative
      Suppose you have something like a syscall number getting changed. Suddenly, all binaries compiled for a "vanilla" kernel need to be recompiled for the Redhat kernel. This is a massive undertaking.

      This would create such a big maintenance hassle for everybody that changes like this aren't made. If new system calls are needed, they are first merged into the vanilla kernel, before being backported into a Red Hat kernel.

      NPTL would be a good example. Red Hat customers requested a good threading system, so NPTL was developed. However, something that invasive can't be done in a distribution kernel, so it was developed for the 2.5/2.6 kernel first and only ported to 2.4 later.

      Believe it or not, but people have actually thought about all the implications. ;)

      This is my personal opinions. Other people may have different opinions. Please check the facts and come up with your own opinion.

  20. Not only that, but they did it wrong... by bc90021 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    # diff base.c base.c.original
    1417c1417
    real_parent; p != &init_task; p = p->real_parent)
    ---
    > for (p = current->p_opptr; p != &init_task; p = p->p_opptr)

    It seems that RedHat's testing methods weren't so good, and they neglected to see that certain things had had their names changed. Since they didn't test their kernel, it made it difficult to track down that particular error when trying to recompile the kernel.

  21. Re:Oh, please; But is it a useful test? by David+Hume · · Score: 2, Informative

    Backporting 2.6 features helps everyone because it subjects those features to more testing, meaning that 2.6 will be better as a result.


    But is this testing in a different context or enviroment -- i.e., of a patch or feature in 2.4 instead of 2.6 -- useful? More precisely, is such testing as useful as the testing of the patch or feature in the enviroment for which it was designed, i.e., 2.6?

  22. If there's one thing I learned from M:tG... by ProppaT · · Score: 2, Funny

    If there's one thing I learned from Magic: the Gathering it's that Forking will never make you any friends. It's also illegal and banned under type II rules. Just like a Red Hat deck...always stacking, full of burn, and ready to screw over the entire community with a 20 point forked Fireball...

    --
    Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
  23. USB by CaptainZapp · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Wasn't it the friendly folks at SuSE that implemented a backport for USB from 2.3. to 2.2 at the time (and some USB devices really did work)?

    Was that different or are they the most recent victims of marketing doublespeak?

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  24. Chasing versions numbers. by Godeke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This just goes to show that SUSE is relying on a full steam ahead adoption of any new version rather than a more carefully planned transition between versions. I still run 2.4 (conversion is set for a couple of months from now) and appreciate backported stable features. Providing the latest and greatest is a good thing I guess if you are a in this individually or as a hobby, but I'm not interested in upgrading until a product matures and I have regression tested everything. SUSE seems to not understand that, which would disqualify it for me as an enterprise vendor.

    --
    Sig under construction since 1998.
  25. Forget Forking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...what happens when the Linux kernel starts spooning? We will never see him again, as he will be spending all his time with his new "girlfriend". That is until she kicks him to the curb, and he comes crawling back looking for his old friends again. You know you have all seen this happen a million times before.

  26. yeah .. and.. by josepha48 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Redhat has done their own thing as far as kernels go for the past I don't know how many years.

    There 2.4 kernel has support for lmsensors, which is not in 2.4 default. They have support for more drivers to. So what. Redhat will support these features if they put them in their kernel. They have to, especially since there new business modle is selling redhat OS for a pretty penny.

    I would think that Fedora would just make their system 2.6 asnd 2.4 compatible when Fedora core 2 comes out.

    I've had issues with Redhat doing things like this in the past, and you can still use the default kernel with Redhat, you just have to know what you are doing.

    SuSE has their own kernel too. They are just upset cause they didn't think of it first. Some people will not want to upgrade to 2.6 because of its newness, but they will want the features. If these can be ported back, and supported by Redhat then what is the big deal? Its open source people and as long as Redhat gives the source code away also they are well within their rights under the GPL. Remeber the GPL says something about "use and modify as long as you give the source ...". They always have done this and always will. So what!

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!
    Does slashdot hate my posts?

  27. Re:Damn redhat by dougmc · · Score: 5, Informative
    like xinetd, on regular systems, it was just inetd, then redhat had to be all different and put an x in front of it. *shakes head*
    Xinetd was a replacement inetd that was created many many years ago, and used by some systems administrators who wanted more control over inetd than the standard inetd gave. It gives you what tcp_wrappers does, plus a lot more. It worked on most *nix platforms -- not just Linux. (in fact, I think it's even slightly older than Linux.)

    Xinetd wasn't just something that Red Hat threw together to upset you -- it was a well tested, established package that they decided Red Hat would benefit from.

    And Red Hat didn't just put the x in there -- it was there long before Red Hat existed :)

  28. Not a fork by kundor · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Maintaining a separate patchset is normal, accepted, and not considered forking. They'll still be just applying these patches to the mainline tree, not severing development. Forking would be if they took the codebase and began changing it with a different set of developers and not just adding some code to each release of the kernel. EVERY distro does that. Perhaps not slackware or debian, I don't know, but Gentoo, Mandrake, Gobo, all have heavily patched kernels.

    I'd see this mostly as SuSe posturing.

  29. Way too many assumptions by jdavidb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We all assume that the kernel is the kernel that is maintained by kernel.org and that Linux won't fork the way UNIX did..right?

    First of all, some of us assume "the kernel" is /kernel/genunix or something else, because we're working on Solaris or something. (There's one assumption on you're part that was unspoken: we're not all Linux users.) Secondly, I don't assume the kernel will never fork. Forking has often been very productive for Free Software programs, and the right to fork is one of the most valuable incentives for development. The kernel has forked all the time (remember the -ac tree from Alan Cox? how about uCLinux?), and that's a good thing.

    So your explicit assumptions that "we" "all" have, that the kernel will never fork, are wrong, as well as your implicit assumptions that we all use Linux and that forking is a bad thing. Thus I'm not sure what the big deal is.

  30. Many RH Enterprise Linux users by GringoGoiano · · Score: 4, Informative

    My company sells product to large enterprises, and most of them run one of the RedHat expensive-support options. We've seen few instances of other commercial or custom distributions.

    For a list of the 2.6 features that have and have not been back-ported into 2.4 for the current RH Enterprise Linux release, look here.

  31. Re:Oh, please; But is it a useful test? by wfberg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But is this testing in a different context or enviroment -- i.e., of a patch or feature in 2.4 instead of 2.6 -- useful? More precisely, is such testing as useful as the testing of the patch or feature in the enviroment for which it was designed, i.e., 2.6?

    I'd think it's more useful to test it in 2.4 as well as 2.6 rather than only testing in 2.6. Sure, it's more work (work that RedHat is willing to do) but it may turn up bugs in conditions that do not occur in 2.6 yet (or not reproducibly, etc.)

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  32. 2.6 features backported to 2.4 by miguel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a happy user of a 2.4 kernel with backported
    features from 2.6, I love the fact that Red Hat
    went the extra mile to provide this feature.

    We have been using NPTL extensively in the Mono
    debugger. Without it, it would be much harder
    to write the debugger for Mono.

    Miguel.

  33. Customers refuse to run Red Hat's kernel by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I have a large customer who refuses to run Red Hat's kernel even when they run Red Hat's distribution. And it's just for the reason that SuSE talks about. The kernel is so far diverged from the main thread of Linux that it's a dead-end, and there's no hope of getting it supported from anyone but Red Hat.I don't know if they meant it as a lock-in play, but it works out that way. And my customer doesn't have patience for Red Hat's support.

    If you have a problem and you bring it to the kernel hacker who made the subsystem you're using, it's really very difficult for them to support Red Hat's thread. Generally they just say to look to the vanilla 2.6 kernel.

    Bruce

    1. Re:Customers refuse to run Red Hat's kernel by deKernel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are missing the point. The reason people buy RH is because they don't want to spend time finding the person who did XYZ. They just go to RH because they have a support contract, and make RH fix the problem.

      Companies don't really care who or what caused the problem. They just want a fix NOW. That is the value -add that RH brings to the table.

    2. Re:Customers refuse to run Red Hat's kernel by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Informative

      This does have advantages. In particular, when a backport is done, small bugs tend to get found. Basically, if redhat takes the time to backport and they find bugs, who cares.

      That does not mean that I will be running redhat any time soon.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    3. Re:Customers refuse to run Red Hat's kernel by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 2, Interesting
      They just go to RH because they have a support contract, and make RH fix the problem.

      That doesn't work very well for my customer. But I agree that it should work that way. But today you have a better assurance of service if you stick with the main kernel thread.

      Bruce

  34. This is how it's SUPPOSED to work! by mjh · · Score: 5, Insightful
    RedHat is not alone in backporting changes to current software into a previous version. Debian does this too - albeit not with the kernel. Security patches comes out all of the time for current software. But debian may have a version of that software in it's stable tree that isn't current but still vulnerable and require that patch. The debian folks simply backport the patch and release an update.

    This is one of the things that makes debian's stable tree live up to it's name. It isn't a bug in opensource, it's a feature. Now, of course, this puts additional pressure on debian to ensure that their stable branch continues to work as expected considering that the stable software is patched in a way that's unique to debian. But if they want to do that, good for them. It's up to their users to decide if this is a good practice. And historically, it's been an excellent practice.

    Is SuSe saying that they don't do this? Are they saying that if you're using a piece of software that they distribute that's slightly older than current and a patch comes out for current, that they won't patch the old software? If so, that leaves SuSe customers with a horrible choice:

    1. Upgrade to the most recent software and possibly change features that you rely on, or
    2. Live with the vulnerability

    I wouldn't think that'd be good for business. legacy piece of software on their distro, and a patch for a current version comes out, that they won't support it? I would think that'd be bad for business.

    --
    Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    1. Re:This is how it's SUPPOSED to work! by mjh · · Score: 2, Informative
      And this is exactly why I won't use Debian. It's hard to know just what your codebase is. I once had a program that wouldn't work because it wanted a version number of perl beyond a certain patch release, due to a known security bug in the "version" that debian shipped.

      See, I consider this to be a perfect example of providing you an additional choice. Without debian backporting the patches, you only have the first two choices below. Debian provides you the third:

      1. Upgrade to the most recent software and possibly change features that you rely on
      2. Live with the vulnerability
      3. Use the old software with debian's backported patch
      There are risks to each of these choices, but IMHO, 3 choices are better than 2. You choose #2, which is fine. You just take on the risks associated with that choice. I choose #3 so I take on the risks associated with that choice. We are each able to pick our own set of acceptable risks. Which makes my point: this isn't a failure of opensource. It demonstrates that it works.

      The only responses from debian folks was the typical, "our stuff isn't broke, so it must be you" attitude.

      That's too bad. I've had much better responsiveness from debian developers. Of course, I had to learn to the balance between providing too many details and not enough details. I don't always get it right. But generally, I've had good response from developers. Sorry you haven't.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    2. Re:This is how it's SUPPOSED to work! by MacJedi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And this is exactly why I won't use Debian. It's hard to know just what your codebase is. I once had a program that wouldn't work because it wanted a version number of perl beyond a certain patch release, due to a known security bug in the "version" that debian shipped.

      I think you are looking at it the wrong way. Debian has made a commitment to supporting their stable branch, specifically to fix known security vulnerabilities. There are two ways to do this:

      1. Update to the next version of the software, which includes the fix and quite possibly many other features, API changes, etc.
      2. Backport the chage to the current version.
      Debian developers have decided to go with the latter plan. This is by far the safest route. If they simply upgraded to the "current" version there could be other unforseen consequences which might be worse than the original vulnerability.

      When I do a 'perl -v', I expect the stated version to actually be the version listed, not the version + some unknown patches.

      I don't understand this. These are not "some unknown patches." If you download the source .deb you will see that it is packaged as the original sources plus a number of patches which are applied at compile time. If you don't want these patches (or you want different ones) it is a simple matter to make your own changes and make your own custom package. Furthermore every package has a changelog.Debian.gz file in /usr/share/doc/$packagename/ which describes pretty well these mysterious patches with cross-references to the debian bug tracker no less!

      --
      2^5
  35. Re:memo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Memo
    To: Concerned FS user
    From: Suse CTO

    Thank you for your considerate correspondance. We will certainly take your concerns under advisment in our future dealings with the free software movement. It is now clear that voicing any sort of concern about the behavior of a contributor to the free software movement will be construed as an attack motivated by marketing concerns. We will refrain from any constructive critisim from this point forward, as we certainly would not want to offend your delicate sensibilities.

    Sincerly,
    Suse CTO

  36. slackware by gumpish · · Score: 4, Funny
    "None of the major distributors ship a pure Linus kernel"
    actually, slackware does ship vanilla kernel.

    In the grandparent's defense, they did say none of the major distributors.
    1. Re:slackware by gl4ss · · Score: 5, Informative

      slackware is 'major' and it's 'commercial' to boot.

      so it's a major commercial distro shipping vanilla kernel.

      (however small in terms of people working, it's still regarded 'commercial' even by themselfs iirc).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:slackware by w9ofa · · Score: 4, Funny

      Dude, 1996 called, they want their linux distro back.

  37. Kernel API changes by _Eric · · Score: 5, Informative
    As a kernel module developer, I saw that those backports included API changes in the kernel. The API seen from a module is not the same in RH's kernel and the vanilla one (with the same version number). This is not something that one cannot overcome, but code gets bloated by this kind of constructs:
    #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE > KERNEL_VERSION(2,4,18) && RED_HAT_LINUX_KERNEL
    if (remap_page_range (vma, start, offset, len, vma_page_prot)) {
    return -EAGAIN;
    }
    #else
    if (remap_page_range (start, offset, len, vma_page_prot)) {
    return -EAGAIN;
    }
    #endif
    And it got even worse with RHEL3.
    1. Re:Kernel API changes by _Eric · · Score: 2, Informative
      This is not a piece of code from RH, it's mine.

      About the symbol:
      #define RED_HAT_LINUX_KERNEL 1
      is at the end of linux/rhconfig.h, which is included from linux/{autoconf.h,modversions.h,version.h}

      And compare the function prototype of remap_page_range in linux/mm.h from a redhat kernel strictly older than 2.4.18 and from the corresponding vanilla one. (Vanilla source can be found here to save some kernel.org bandwidth).

      This is very real. An for redhat 9, I even had to parse the /etc/redhat_release in my makefile to have something portable between RH7.3 and RH9. The trick mentioned in the previous post becoming insufficient.
  38. Stability by crlf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Both Red Hat and SuSE have been backporting fixes into older kernel versions and shipping 'older' versions of kernels is primarily due to stability requirements.

    Distributions elect to use a given kernel version every once in a while. By not keeping up to date with the latest kernel.org tree, they gain the advantage that their codebase is much slower moving and they are less likely to have new bugs introduced from outside sources. Doing so also gives them the ability to accrue intimate knowledge of the inner workings of that specific kernel revision.

    As distributions support a kernel, new bugs, vulnerabilities, hardware incompatibilities, and scalability issues arise. By selectively culling those single bits and pieces and patching their supported kernel, they are able to easily test the fixes without the larger risk of regressing in other areas.

    At first, this practice may appear to make the distributions look 'unfriendly' towards the opensource development nature of the Linux kernel, however this is far from the truth. As issues arise in the distro-supported kernel, fixes are also created which are later pushed upstream to the Linux kernel proper (as long as they aren't considered gross hacks that is).

    In essence, distributions settling on supporting specific kernel versions and patching them is very much in the open source spirit. OSS has the advantage that you may use any code drop you want, and if you fix something, the neighborly thing to do is to share the fix (which under certain license is enforced by law under some conditions).

  39. Gentoo by mhesseltine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    emerge vanilla-sources

    --
    Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
  40. using RedHat fails security audits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work for the Dept of Defense. 3 years after I say we should go Linux, the shop has abandoned Windoze for our production (web, jakarta, Oracle) sites. Before we were running OpenBSD for firewalls and such but I was FT then and we could get away with patching and recompiling stuff.

    Now that I'm off-site and PT the responsible thing was to use a package system that was commercially supported. Enter Redhat. We run v2.1AS and v3ES/WS.

    This backporting stuff in kernel-land is nothing. It's WAY WORSE when it's userland stuff. eg. Apache. RedHat updates to 1.3.29 because of a security bug but they don't actually upgrade to .29. They backport the changes to .26 and leave all their package information, banners, the whole kit-kaboodle the SAME! Just a very minor build number gets cranked. Not even the Changelog bothers to specify what CVN was addressed or that it's even a security update. Ditto OpenSSL, Mod_SSL and everything else. The *ONLY* way I have of confirming the security patch is there is to download the SRPM and diff it against .29 and see if it's there.

    Naturally all the security check software is looking at banners and falls all over itself giving me warnings about vulnerable software when I know it's all patched. It makes a lot of work for me when our network minders run probes against our boxes and come up with all the errors and they run screaming to the dept heads with "hundreds of vulnerabilities!" and I have to go PROVE my boxes are up to date.

    THANKS a FREAKIN' LOT Redhat!!! How come the rest of your enterprise customers haven't tarred and feathered you over this STUPID practice? Track the damn source revisions, would you? It's one thing to want to provide "stability" but point releases are just that, fixes for broken features or security updates. The damn package should be clearly labeled 1.3.29 everywhere. It's one thing to force customers to go from 1.3 family to say 1.4 family (yes, I know, doesn't exist) and I can appreciate not being put down that path, but the current setup is just a disaster.

    According to my machines I'm runing OpenSSL 0.6.9b though the code is actually 9m.

  41. And they want to make Java open source? by deanj · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OK, so I sit here and read many postings about why OSS Java would be a "good thing", and then I run across something like this.

    I have to say, the uproar over this doesn't make any of the "oh, it'll be fine" arguments that pro-OSS Java folks have been throwing around sound all that great.

    I mean, if the Linux kernel itself has this happening to it, what sort of chance does Java have from preventing it, if it goes OSS?

  42. inevitable by ignavusincognitus · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Let's face it. If linux is really to be widely adopted, the big players will push their own features. Someone like Red Hat or SuSE wants a unified look and feel, with no interoperability problems. Think about having the printer config tool from one open-source project, and the print deamon from another. If they want them to work together, they have to exert a lot of control over the individual components.

    This is something the SuSE does as well. And so will IBM - just wait until a patch they write for mainframes isn't accepted by linus for some reason.

  43. 2.4 vs 2.6.. Yes, real work is still being done by marz007 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Folks,

    2.4 Kernals are still being widely used in applications that are doing real work for real world applications. Just because the bleeding edge is well into 2.6 doesn't mean the rest of us who have better things to do besides compile kernals on a nightly basis need to upgrade. A lot of applications require stability, long periods of time that you can't make major changes so as to not upset the development or even production envionment.

    RedHat is just trying to keep their Enterprise customers happy and patched with security fixes and some minor feature enhancements. Like it or not, they are a real company and have to make real $$ which means they have to listen to their customers who pay that $$$. The customers can't or won't upgrade to the new 2.6 kernals right away, they need to bring it in-house, test and redo their programs that are running production databases, programs,etc.

    Hell, RedHat 8.0 to RedHat 9.0 is painful enough for most folks. Now going to RedHat Enterprise or SUSE or Mandrake..etc. That's painful, read expensive in time and money.

    Get over yourselves.. I can compile customer kernals, but frankly I have a lot more better things to do with my time. RedHat knows this..and they're helping their customers do the job of actually getting business done.

    I'm thinking of starting the process of going to a 2.6 based distro probably sometime in the Fall. This means it probably won't be in any production server until after New Years at the earliest.

    -=TekMage

  44. Yast is GPL, redhat-config-* isnt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So suse's yast is gpl and is 'inviting others to join in'? Its about freakin time! They have no right to talk about wether other people should gpl thiers or not. Redhat's has ALWAYS been opensource and it was one of the main reasons for me to choose Redhat over Suse (if I want a non-gpl server I can always use sun, or bsd).

    Also, Redhat's 'forked' 2.4 is the reason companies pay Redhat big bucks! That way buisnesses can get some important functionality (like ntpl, which is a huge leap for threaded applciations) while keeping away from the other, not-so-stable features, and not having to upgrade the whole kernel. Sheesh, this sounds more like a flame then anything else...

  45. This is what their customers want. by -tji · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Enterprise customers are generally very careful about making significant upgrades to their servers. Security patches and application fixes are expected, but a new kernel throws them into a huge process of integration, compatibility, and stability testing that they don't want to be forced into. The same thing applies to application vendors.

    So, RedHat backports desired pieces from the 2.6 kernel, so they can give their customers a more manageable update process.

    While fast paced updates are great from the hobbyist perspective, enterprise customers have a whole different set of prioritites. This is one of the big things they touted for the RH Enterprise Edition.. it is supposed to have a more manageable update process, sticking with the same core kernel for longer periods of time to ease support and management.

  46. This is a good thing by Mike+McTernan · · Score: 2, Informative

    RedHat explain it here, and as a paying user of RHES3.0 in an enterprise environment, I think this is a good approach for them to have. The features they have left out feel to me to be the more risky sounding things that aren't essential like the new IO sub-system and scheduler tuning, while the things they have taken seem to be more applicable to the apps they may expect users to run e.g. O(1) scheduler, native POSIX library and Huge TLBFS

    Interestingly on their page they also list 2.6 as not having Hyperthreading support, while their 2.4 does.

    --
    -- Mike
  47. Backporting != Forking by jaylee7877 · · Score: 5, Informative

    RedHat backports 2.6 features (actually they'd be 2.5 features) to provide the most powerful kernel that they can support (i.e. make it run stable). If RedHat was planning on taking 2.4 and moving in a different direction that would be a fork and it would be a problem. But RedHat has already announced that RHEL 4 will use the 2.6 kernel. Any vendor who builds an app that depends on backport patches and won't run on 2.4 or 2.6 vanilla is just plain stupid. Yeah, it can be done, heck you can lock yourself into pretty much any platform you want as a developer, but why? RedHat has made it clear that 2.6 is the future. That's good enough for me

  48. Ximian/SuSE by noda132 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it just me, or does Novell really have a problem with the images of these two companies? It seems to me they're trying to give the impression that Ximian and SuSE are in competition....

    First that weird article about adopting QT across the board, now this. And I'm sure I'm forgetting some other such issues too. It gives me the impression that SuSE people and Ximian people have never even had a conversation with each other.

    1. Re:Ximian/SuSE by MenTaLguY · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think Slashdot holds a lot of responsibility in this case for publishing unverified sources like the Qt article (and others).

      I might say that Slashdot also bears a lot of responsbility for publishing a summary that miscasts the SuSE CEO's argument -- he's more concerned about an extreme level of backporting (and discouraging adoption of 2.6 to stay on 2.4 with backported features) than about backporting in general. SuSE backports stuff too.

      Not sure if I agree with him or not, but that's a separate issue.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
  49. FUD by RichiP · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm surprised that someone from an opensource-supporting company would sling FUD like that. This statement sounds something an old-school business practitioner would say to sell their product and discredit their competition.

    First of all, forking is not a bad thing per se. In fact, it sometimes leads to better code. In this case, Red Hat is not doing anything divisive. They're merely maintaining their old code.

    As for interfering with standardization, RedHat has done nothing but push for standardizing on the latest stable code to come out. They pushed gcc 3 back when people were bullish about it. They pushed for kernel 2.4 when people were saying nothing's wrong with 2.2. Even now in their Fedora product, they're pushing 2.6 early in the game.

    If anything, they're bringing the 2.4 crowd slowly into the 2.6 world by backporting features.

    Who is this CTO of SuSE? Sounds old-school to me.

    That said, I also noticed that there were no quotes in the article from Juergen Geck. I've become wary of news articles that try to capitalize on sensationalizing news stories. Perhaps this is just the author's interpration, eh?

  50. Re:Uhh, they do, sort of... by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > Personally I feel it's a big mistake. Linux 2.6.x is stable now, so
    > use it. It's also much faster.

    2.6 wasn't here last summer when RHEL3 was being built. But RH wanted several of the features for the new version, since it was going to be around for five years and all that jazz.

    RHEL4 is looking like it will be 2.6 based, but they are adding in SELINUX. RedHat is usually out near the bleeding edge, but just far enough back that they don't get cut up too bad.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  51. Good for RedHat by BobaFett · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, redhat backported tons of code from development 2.5 series, and later from 2.6, into their 2.4 kernels. And as far as I am concerned, it was a good thing. For example, for a long time RedHat kernel supported USB2 hard disks reliably, while stock and -ac kernels would hang after transferring few hundred megabytes. USB1 worked fine, USB2 would hang the machine. Yes, I could move to 2.5 kernels, but I don't want to. I want a stable kernel on a production system. And I'm not moving to 2.6 yet for the same reason, too many changes. Just the last version changed the API and broke all drivers except the in-tree ones. But RedHat ports most of the stuff I want back into their kernel, so I don't have to choose between not having the features I want and getting more features than I bargained for.

  52. It's just an opinion, not a revocation of right by bonch · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The article didn't argue that nobody had the right to fork anything or that the GPL wasn't about freedom.

    He merely said it wasn't a good idea to be backporting. Freedom also includes having opinions on the choices people make.

    I love when someone criticizes something, and people jump on it claiming, "but they have the RIGHT to do that!" Nobody was saying they didn't have the right--they were just criticizing the choice they made with that right. Free opinion, man.

  53. Re:Red Hat?` by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I always favored Red Hat over all other distros for a very long time. I tried Debian, Slackware, and Mandrake, but always found myself back with Red Hat. Not to long ago, I upgraded to an AMD64 CPU and heard that SuSE 9 for AMD64 was the best for that platform and gave it a shot. I liked it so much that I went with SuSE on my other systems. Recently, our company FINALLY started to replace some Sun systems with Linux machines and RH Enterprise was the chosen distro. So far, I am very satisfied with RH EL and see nothing wrong with backporting features.

    Its not like they're closing the source to the kernel and preventing others from either removing them or copying them. In my opinion this is a non-story.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  54. Forking RedHat by blueZ3 · · Score: 3, Funny

    We've used forking RedHat here for quite a while, but things just keep getting more and more forked up. If this doesn't forking stop soon, we're going to switch to some other, less forked-up distro.

    --
    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
  55. Are you blind? by Cramer · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is not new by any stretch. Redhat has been dicking with the kernel and almost every package they ship for nearly a decade (possibly longer.) That's why it has always been a matter of policy on my part to build my own kernel from the "blessed" tree the instant a redhat machine is installed. Never, EVER, use the hacked-to-hell Redhat kernel. Kernel developers will generally ignore your bug reports, and redhat will ignore them too without a support contract.

  56. Re:Red Hat?` by 110010001000 · · Score: 2, Funny

    No, almost everyone here on Slashdot runs Windows actually.

  57. Re:Uhh, they do, sort of... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 3, Informative

    RHEL is designed for enterprise use. RH just can't go and change the kernel. There are tons of software like Oracle and Peoplesoft that were coded against the 2.4.x kernel. Back porting allows Red Hat to add features without breaking those large enterprise packages. Even backporting has issues. Oracle had some install issues when NPTL came into REHL. Red Hat is using Fedora for testing. So the next version of Fedora Cora (2) will have the 2.6 kernel. Then Red Hat can take what they learned and put that into RHEL 4. RHEL is a much slower moving target then your typical Linux distro and that is exactly what the big enterprise software developers need/want.

    --
    If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
    it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  58. Re:Uhh, they do, sort of... by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Furthermore, Oracle and IBM will not support their RDBMS's on the 2.6 kernel. Therefore, RH customers running either Oracle or DB2 on RHEL3 will not be moving to 2.6 until Oracle and IBM give it the green light for their products.

    I can't fathom how so many people fail to grasp...

    a.) Red Hat isn't doing anything that hasn't been done before.
    b.) Its still open source, so if you don't like it don't use it.
    c.) Red Hat is doing the right thing for their customers.

    --
    "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
  59. disc 3 of your Redhat install... by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

    contains the kernel-blahblah.src.rpm. The vanilla sources are in there and end up in /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES after installing.

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  60. Since When? by EXTomar · · Score: 4, Informative

    You don't have to take my word for it. There are plenty of posts already that claim there is compatibility between distributed RPMs and the vanillia kernel found straight from places like kernel.org.

    So where is the lock in? You can choose to abandon the prepackaged (and tested) build and build your own version of the 2.4 on your RHE system. You just have to patch it by hand when you come across a piece of software that needs a kernel feature. If this isn't what FOSS is supposed to give customers I don't know what FOSS is supposed to be doing for buisnesses!

    It would be one thing if Red Hat was just dumping kernels out there but this is far from the truth. They back port and support it. This is entirely misleading: it isn't forking but kernel customizing.

  61. Redhat backports what's already accepted upstream by jkixonia · · Score: 3, Informative

    One cannot fork unless the upstream kernel is will not contain the backported functionality... Redhat claims they verify that the backports are accepted upstream before they backport. However, managing this could be complicated.

  62. Re:Red Hat?` by Znork · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "2.6 kernel performance with MySql should prompt many to upgrade, but it doesn't."

    That's because a lot of us enterprise users frankly dont really care that much if there's improved preformance with MySql. One doesnt get called in to work in the middle of the night because they need a speed increase. One gets called in to work because the server is down. That means we tend to have as priority that the server is up. Which tends to cause a certain reluctance as far as installing 'new' code goes. If there's a performance problem on the scale where a new kernel might make a difference, I'd suggest throwing hardware at the problem. It's much easier, far cheaper, and offers much more peaceful sleeptime.

    2.6 will get deployed in production when hardware is certified with it, when distributions are certified with it, when Oracle is certified with those distributions, when backup and monitoring software are certified with them, when we've run it ourselves in labs, and internal utilities are ported and/or recompiled and ready for deployment.

    That'll take at least a year. Until then I'll play with it on my free time, and on my workstation. But hell, while I might be running my own driver code in my kernel at home, I wouldnt even be compiling a new kernel for a production machine unless there were _serious_ issues with the one from the vendor. It's just not worth the potential hassle.

  63. And gentoo is not a major distro? by /dev/trash · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gentoo has vanilla 2.4 and 2.6 kernels.

  64. Yes and no by SteelX · · Score: 2, Informative
    Slackware does.

    Well, yes and no.

    Patrick Volkerding's notes on building the Linux kernel for Slackware says:
    I do not patch the official kernel sources, but it's not exactly a virgin either.
    See the URL for Patrick's procedures on how he builds the kernel.
  65. 2.6 on RH9 is not hard at all! by aussersterne · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's not trivial, but it's not all that hard either. After all, the Red Hat file structure hasn't changed and each version of Red Hat or Fedora Core is closely related to the last.

    I'm using kernel-2.6.3-1.116 (from Fedora Core) in RH9. Here's how to do it:

    1. Download a 2.6.x kernel RPM from the Fedora repository. Try to install in in RH9 with rpm -U. You'll get a list of failed dependencies.

    2. Download the needed/depended-upon RPMs from the same Fedora repository.

    3. rpm -U *.rpm.

    4. Reboot.

    I think I had to download/upgrade maybe a total 12 packages or so to get a 2.6.x kernel package to install into Red Hat 9. Then, once I had confirmed that I had a working 2.6.x-ready system, I proceeded to immediately download vanilla 2.6.5 and roll my own. ;-)

    The only speed bumps that I ran into were:

    1. The X config, in which I had to change my mouse from /dev/psaux to /dev/input/mice, but this is now well-documented (i.e. search for "kernel 2.6 mouse" in google and you'll get the same answer).

    2. My own hack-ugly kludge to sr_mod.c to enable my USB DVD-RAM drive no longer works in 2.6.x. I haven't yet dug into sr_mod.c to fix it in 2.6. But most people won't have this problem (i.e. their own patches that will need to be rewritten).

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  66. Pot calling the Kettle black? by MeBadMagic · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am an avid SuSE users. SuSE rules!
    SuSE however, has also back-ported a number of features from later kernels. like the i2c stuff from 2.5 in SuSE 9.0
    He is right in that it makes it much more dificult to deviate from stock install
    Hope they can take some of their own medicine

    --
    A friend will come and bail you out of jail, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "damn that was fun!"