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From: Kay Diederichs <Kay.Diederichs@uni-konstanz.de>
To: Theodore Tso <tytso@MIT.EDU>
Cc: Greg Freemyer <greg.freemyer@gmail.com>,
	"Jayson R. King" <dev@jaysonking.com>,
	Stable team <stable@kernel.org>,
	LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
	Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>,
	"Aneesh Kumar K.V" <aneesh.kumar@linux.vnet.ibm.com>,
	Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>,
	Ext4 Developers List <linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2.6.27.y 1/3] ext4: Use our own write_cache_pages()
Date: Tue, 01 Jun 2010 17:23:07 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <4C0525DB.7000103@uni-konstanz.de> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <070DAF41-4DD5-4F20-B9F1-3B472147C499@mit.edu>

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Theodore Tso schrieb:
> On Jun 1, 2010, at 9:54 AM, Greg Freemyer wrote:
>> It has always been marked experimental in 2.6.27, not stable so I'm
>> totally lost about this effort.
>>
>> See http://lxr.linux.no/#linux+v2.6.27.47/fs/Kconfig
> 
> This is one of the things that confuses me, actually.  Why is it that there are a number of people who want to use ext4 on 2.6.27?   Even the enterprise distro's have moved on; SLES 11 SP1 upgraded their users from 2.6.27 to 2.6.32, for example.  I wonder if it's time to start a new "stable anchor point" around 2.6.32, given that Ubuntu's latest Long-Term Stable (Lucid LTS) is based on 2.6.32, as is SLES 11 SP1.  The RHEL 6 beta is also based on 2.6.32.  (And I just spent quite a bit of time over the past week backporting a lot of ext4 bug fixes to 2.6.32.y :-)
> 
> If there are people who want to work on trying to backport more ext4 fixes to 2.6.27, they're of course free to do so.  I am really curious  as to *why*, though.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> -- Ted
> 

The answer is: because 2.6.27.y is supposed to be a _stable_ kernel. If
it were e.g. 2.6.28 or 2.6.29, nobody would care. But as long as there
is a flow of backported fixes (and there have been quite a few ext4
fixes in 2.6.27) I have the expectation that known bugs get fixed sooner
or later.

If a subsystem maintainer says "I'm not going to support this old stable
thing any longer" then things change. But I hear this from you for the
first time - I may have missed earlier announcements to this effect, though.

best,

Kay

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  reply	other threads:[~2010-06-01 15:23 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 20+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2010-05-28 19:24 [PATCH 2.6.27.y 0/3] ext4 fixes Jayson R. King
2010-05-28 19:26 ` [PATCH 2.6.27.y 1/3] ext4: Use our own write_cache_pages() Jayson R. King
2010-05-29  0:49   ` tytso
2010-05-29  1:41     ` Jayson R. King
2010-05-29  2:21       ` Jayson R. King
2010-05-30 21:25       ` tytso
2010-05-31  6:35         ` Kay Diederichs
2010-06-01 13:54           ` Greg Freemyer
2010-06-01 14:49             ` Theodore Tso
2010-06-01 15:23               ` Kay Diederichs [this message]
2010-06-01 20:06               ` Jayson R. King
2010-06-01 22:12                 ` tytso
2010-06-01 20:06         ` Jayson R. King
2010-06-25 23:32   ` Patch "ext4: Use our own write_cache_pages()" has been added to the 2.6.27-stable tree gregkh
2010-05-28 19:26 ` [PATCH 2.6.27.y 2/3] ext4: Fix file fragmentation during large file write Jayson R. King
2010-05-29  1:06   ` tytso
2010-05-29  2:12     ` Jayson R. King
2010-06-25 23:32   ` Patch "ext4: Fix file fragmentation during large file write." has been added to the 2.6.27-stable tree gregkh
2010-05-28 19:27 ` [PATCH 2.6.27.y 3/3] ext4: Implement range_cyclic in ext4_da_writepages instead of write_cache_pages Jayson R. King
2010-06-25 23:32   ` Patch "ext4: Implement range_cyclic in ext4_da_writepages instead of write_cache_pages" has been added to the 2.6.27-stable tree gregkh

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