Patch the Linux Kernel Without Reboots
evanbro writes "ZDNet is reporting on ksplice, a system for applying patches to the Linux kernel without rebooting. ksplice requires no kernel modifications, just the source, the config files, and a patch. Author Jeff Arnold discusses the system in a technical overview paper (PDF). Ted Ts'o comments, 'Users in the carrier grade linux space have been clamoring for this for a while. If you are a carrier in telephony and don't want downtime, this stuff is pure gold.'"
Update: 04/24 10:04 GMT by KD : Tomasz Chmielewsk writes on LKML that the idea seems to be patented by Microsoft.
If you are a carrier in telephony, you should have many load-balanced servers that can be taken offline one at a time and restored after patching. They probably would be taken out of the loop for the in-place patching anyway. So who is "clamoring"?
"Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"