kernel pre-emption and software speech
Samuel Thibault
samuel.thibault at ens-lyon.org
Thu Oct 5 02:58:36 EDT 2006
Hi,
Michael Whapples, le Wed 04 Oct 2006 22:47:11 +0100, a écrit :
> In some cases we have to accept less than perfect code. By this I mean that
> it may function correctly with out no problems, but may need tidying up and
> other techniques may be more effecient, but if it is the only software that
> offers those functions then you should accept for what it gives, unless you
> are prepared to sort it out. Just leaving it definitely doesn't resolve the
> issues.
I'm sorry, but that's not how things work with Linux. The Reiser4 code
has been waiting for a long time for instance, and won't be merged
unless the required cleaning up happens.
> The other thing is that speakup seems to be good enough for some distros to
> include speakup in the default kernel and some others have it as an
> optional kernel but still in the main distro, and are they less stable than
> others? (these include slackware, gentoo, grml). I always found it strange
> that Redhat said how good speakup is, but never had it included on the main
> distro media.
The problem is not a stability problem, but a code correctness / style
/ ... You may have code that works, but if it is unmaintainable, some
day it won't work any more.
Samuel
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