Linux Kernel Moves To Github
An anonymous reader writes "Linus Torvalds has announced that he will be distributing the Linux kernel via Github until kernel.org servers are fully operational following the recent server compromise. From the announcement: 'But hey, the whole point (well, *one* of the points) of distributed development is that no single place is really any different from any other, so since I did a github account for my divelog thing, why not see how well it holds up to me just putting my whole kernel repo there too?'"
I clicked the link and here's what I got: "Server Error 500 - An unexpected error seems to have occurred. Why not try refreshing your page? Or you can contact us if the problem persists." with a cute parallax scrolling animation of GitHub logo falling down the Grand Canion. I've never seen 500 error on GitHub before.
Linus writes: "since I did a github account for my divelog thing, why not see how well it holds up to me just putting my whole kernel repo there too?"
Why not? Because you just broke GitHub! That's why!
And now let's all remain silent while the instant, distributed, cpu-intensive, encrypted https slashdotting of GitHub starts in 3... 2... 1...
Karma: Positive (probably because of superiour intellect)
Because it's gonna bite :) Its working now btw...
And now let's all remain silent while the instant, distributed, cpu-intensive, encrypted https slashdotting of GitHub starts in 3... 2... 1...
AND FORK!
Can we just agree that both are awesome and ClearCase _really_ sucks?
*frustrated user*
pfft...this is clearly a slashvertisement for Linus' divelog!
The basic sleazeware produced in a drunken fury by a bunch of UCBerkeley grad students was still the core of BIND. --PV
Has Linus changed his mind in the last week? http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.file-systems.ext4/27628
Sourceforge is quite obnoxious these days; most modern open source projects seem to use github instead. The Linux kernel is hardly the first big project they've hosted...
Linux kernel is very mature at this point, but some basic functionalities like HAL (hardware abstraction layer) are not present and not even planned. Linus is perhaps happy with the current 3.x state of Linux, but lots of people demand more.. I recently ventured to ReactOS website and have seen lots of activity in the SVN. This is maybe thanks to Google Summer of Code 2011 ReactOS involvement, lots of commits on daily basis in the trunk now, the project seams to be getting in motion again.
Its working now btw...
Wasn't that the understatement of the hour, to say the least. ;)
First, Github has been around for quite some time now and is just hosting for Git - hardly "vague" (is that the word you were looking for even?) and by your argument shouldn't sourceforge also cost money now? You know that massive load also comes with massive numbers of visitors and publicity and bandwidth is cheap now right? They are getting free direct advertising to programmers all over the net. How is that bad for them exactly?
Get a web developer
Here is an overview of hosting facilities.
Others do seem more capable.
Here's my prediction: right now this site is "free for OSS". kernel.org will raise a massive load (so will slashdot). How long before policies change and people will need to cough up in order to reach kernel source code?
And how long before every OSS project just moves to a different host as soon as those policies change? Somehow I don't think the policy is going to change.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
My "pre linux kernel" vintage Github account is going up on ebay to the highest bidder!
Anybody? ...anybody?
moox. for a new generation.
Linus has said that when kernel.org is back up the github repo will be turned into a mirror.
Part of this is because there seems to be far fewer Slashdot readers than in the past. The stupider ones have moved to Digg, reddit and Hacker News, apparently
While I will admit there have been many Slashdot readers who have moved to other websites, I think the issue here is more that as a percentage of the web community Slashdot no longer is the dominate community of discussion. This is more because there simply are fewer geeks running around on the web any more as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and other "social media" sites have more ordinary non-geek people.... any one of which can also post a link going viral that will dwarf anything Slashdot would ever produce. Many of the larger websites routinely expect a large number of visitors for some things they post, and can more than compensate for what happens when they become the focus of a lot of people at once.
Slashdot will still bring a huge number of visitors to a site and for somebody doing a homebrew website it can be a big deal, but I'd agree that due to improvements in hardware and better software management there isn't nearly so much of a problem any more.
Exactly which capable version control system are you referring? cvs or its step child svn? haha, they're all brittle garbage that don't scale up. Sourceforge gives you a cvs or subversion account (or you can link to your own system, oop that's back to square one)
oh, those commercial unix implementations or freebsd scale from a handheld device to a supercomputer the size of a city block? FreeBSD is still trying to figure out how to run on 8-way or more SMP without seizing up under high load (check the warning on their web site). Whatever cool things from the past it has, Solaris is going down the tubes under Oracle, to be a one trick pony to run Oracle on their (well, Fujitsu's actually) hardware only. Wail and weep, commercial unix boy, your world is collapsing, and Big Blue and a Penguin are stomping it.
Sure it did. I tried booting Windows 7 32bit installation on different machine after laptop died. Both were Fujitsu-Siemens laptops with Intel cpus bought about 2 years apart, but Windows did not boot even in safe mode. Installation CD has some 'boot repair' mode, but it did not manage to do anything useful.
We had some Windows and Linux (CentOS) servers that were running on real hardware. We consolidated them to a VMware ESXi host. The windows images moved over seamlessly and without issue. The core linux box with svn, wiki, bug tracker, ... would not migrate properly so we ended up reinstalling the OS and migrating the apps and data by hand. Overall the windows box took the time to copy the data + 15 minutes and Linux took time to copy the data twice and half a day to troubleshoot and reinstall.
Nothing was particularly special in the configurations of either that I recall. I suppose we used the wrong version of linux or something. Also not sure if a HAL would help or hurt here or if it was something with vmware but it wasn't as easy as you pointed out above.
Maybe if one of the Windows images had trouble it would have been 1+ days instead of .5 days or something but then again they didn't.
I'll have to metoo on that. No luck moving installations were it 2k/XP or Win7. But I've moved same linux installation (originally installed debian/potato(?), then repo-shifted to ubuntu/warty) from a HP Vectra (PPro 200) to self-built AMD 1800MP then to current Intel Q6600. And every single time, even though all underlying devices changed, linux just booted up. Sure I did copying from HD to HD to move from older media, but system itself didn't need major hear surgery.
fucktard is a tenderhearted description
It does, but you have to explicitly tell Windows before you shut it down "Look out, I'm going to be booting on different hardware next time around".
The purpose of this is to aid deploying to dissimilar hardware, and it works just fine. But the scenario you describe, it wouldn't work at all because you wouldn't get the opportunity to shut Windows down in this fashion.
There's this little project called Firefox that uses Mercurial. You might have heard of them.
It would be a lot more useful if you could select it from boot menu instead.
offline
factor 966971: 966971
Or single point of failure. You be the judge.
I wouldn't find this surprising at all. I don't see this as temporary by any means, but more of a 'loosing-faith' factor; I'd do the same with my life's prized work as well. I bet from now on, github is the main pickup for latest/stable/greatest kernel releases. I personally hope it doesn't, and perhaps becomes another avenue to get the kernel source.
Not to mention that slashdot's interface has progressively gotten worse, making it a real pain to use. Although, it did get better recently. I boycotted until it got usable again. It seems a lot faster recently.
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
Github: Your center for decentralized version control!
Or
Github: Your hub for RCS without a hub!
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
Not really.
It doesn't work that way with niche products that are so closely related. Pretty much anyone that uses Linux and a revision control system knew what Github was a year ago. If they were going to be customers, they would be.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
I guess Moore's Law doesn't apply to slashdotting. :P
So why isn't BSD used on the stock exchanges? It simply can't pass messages as quickly. In terms of stability, security, and backwards compatibility, the Unix'es may still be better, but in terms of raw performance and the pace of development Linux wins, and has been winning for a long time.
Actually, most of the normal people who want actual discussion left for those sites, leaving hardcore fanboys here who either troll anonymously or post obvious karma whoring posts that just repeat some obvious belief that the community has (Microsoft is evil, Google is great, piracy is awesome, etc.). Finding insightful posts has gotten more difficult than ever before, and the bizarre moderation trends don't help--everyone is using Underrated/Overrated modifiers like crazy, which don't show up in meta-moderation.
I think you're underestimating sites like Digg, Reddit, and Hacker News, which drive enormous amounts of traffic. Slashdot just isn't as relevant anymore. It is fast becoming a sounding board for fanboys and trolls who think and act a certain way, and the accepted news submissions reflect this. There used to be programming links on the front page and discussions of technical issues.
These days, Slashdot's news cycle is:
* Google is great
* MS/Apple is evil
* Piracy is great
* Capitalism is evil
* Here's a video game or superhero movie review.
* Random Linux kernel news due solely to historical tradition.
Um, yes.
It's also really weird how you associate FreeBSD with "commercial unix."
This is 100% false.
"Linux is unstable, insecure, and breaks compatibility all the time, but it releases new kernel versions all the time!"
Never mind changing motherboards... just try changing the mode of your SATA controller in bios settings (without doing registry changes before rebooting to change the bios setting). You'll be lucky if changing it BACK allows Windows to boot normally again without having broken itself. Windows Vista and Windows 7 are a regression in this respect, because they don't probe for storage controllers during boot anymore. (To shave a few precious seconds from the illusory fast startup times)
I shit you not... I had to redo a Vista installation because I changed to AHCI mode. Changing back to IDE mode (that the system was installed with) still resulted in endless blue screen reboots. I was livid. That kind of fragility is retarded.
That said, my own Linux kernel builds would not survive a hardware change at all because I disable everything I don't need. It would just fail to boot, or panic at worst and the remedy is simple though... boot with other media and jump start with the root= parameter and fix the kernel.
It amazes me how Torvalds always manages to direct his attention to vague stuff for Linux and never seemingly attempts to try stuff out which has been around for ages.
Yeah really, for example, Minix.
This is 100% false.
Alright there are millions or even billions to be made for system that can pass messages even a small fraction better than the competitors. This is why I'm sure it's 100% true.
It's stable and secure enough. If you absolutely need stability and and security go look at the microkernels (which have their own set of issues). Linux adopts more features and does it more quickly than anyone else, this of course comes because they are willing to break things if necessary, and if something is good enough to let it be.
The BSD, particularly focus on keeping stability, security, and backward compatibility, but it means that the pace of development is going to be slower and the approach to new features is going to be more conservative.
Nothing wrong with either choice, its just a matter of knowing the trade-offs and acting accordingly.
OT for this post, but the original one regarding kernel.org may be stale for /. readers.
Other items hosted on kernel.org, like Cygwin, are also impacted.
"What luck for the rulers that men do not think." - Adolph Hitler
Or if you didn't have to select it in the first place, like on Linux.
Windows gained fingerprinting the hardware for activation/DRM. Any major hardware changes automatically broke it. You're not supposed to migrate an existing Windows deployment to new hardware.
Sysprep ?
It is fast becoming a sounding board for fanboys and trolls who think and act a certain way, and the accepted news submissions reflect this.
bonch's Achievements
Submitted a Story That Was Posted
Congratulations! ;-)
Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
Bah, people have been saying the same thing about Slashdot since the JonKatz era. Say what you will, but Digg and Redditt cover a far, far larger variety of topics than Slashdot and thus garner more users (and links) by nature. Slashdot has tried to stay a crystallized, topical board and as such its traffic and influence have remained static while the Web has grown around it.
Slashdot's real draw is the discussion system[s]. With great ease, I can restrict an article's comments to a few high-ranked ones and enjoy those nuggets (often from real experts, not just some gushing layperson) and their children and never have to read about hot grits and whatnot.
$0.02USD,
-l
Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!