Re: [RFC] kernel traczilla: tracking active kernel development

From: Guennadi Liakhovetski
Date: Mon Apr 07 2008 - 16:51:30 EST


On Mon, 17 Mar 2008, Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote:

> The first thing one normally does before starting a new development is
> research whether and what has already been done in this area. Unless, of
> course, one knows it beforehand:-)
>
> This research might sometimes be quite time-consuming and might not always
> deliver expected results. Wouldn't it be good to have a central page for
> tracking such hot kernel projects _before_ they get submitted into
> mainline. One would just decide "now I am prepared to tell the world about
> my work", go to this site, register, enter a description of his project in
> an appropriate section with some contact information (a mailing list that
> the developer is regularly reading should be enough). The site could be
> just organized in a hierarchial manner. For example, to add a new ARM
> XScale port one would go
>
> top -> Processor architectures -> ARM -> XScale -> ...
>
> I am no designer, no web-administrator, and no content-provider, but
> knowing that LKML loves action above words, I put up a sceleton trac wiki
> site at
>
> http://gross-embedded.homelinux.org/trac.fcgi
>
> so everybody could have a look, play with it, and decide if they think
> something like this could be useful. This is not intended as a final
> solution, so, don't take it too seriously. It is hosted on a 500MHz ARM
> system, so, be patient:-)

Ok, in about 3 weeks there have been maybe 100 or 200 connections to the
server, most of them from google and yahoo bots and from other less
pleasant scanners:-) And - not a single new entry. I've modified the
layout a bit to exactly reproduce the kernel tree, so on the top level I
have arch/, block/, drivers/, net/, etc. So it should even be easier to
find a suitable place to enter ones work and to find previous
developments. I'll leave this site for another 2-3 days running, but if
it still doesn't attract any contributors and / or feadback, I'll just
take it down.

I certainly can understand why there wasn't much interest in it. If a
development is payed, one often is not allowed to disclose it before the
completion. I've hoped that "free" developers might get attracted by this
idea, but this seems to be not the case either, or just not many of them
read LKML:-)

Anyway, this is just to document the intention to close the page.

Thanks
Guennadi
---
Guennadi Liakhovetski
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