On Sat, 2002-05-25 at 11:05, Erwin Rol wrote:
> Normally I am not subscribed to the kernel list, but after a msg from
> Karim that there was a "fight" going on about RTAI I read the archives
> and decided that it was important enough to join the discussion.
>
> Both Linus and Larry seem to be not very interested in hard-realtime
> Linux additions, this is OK. I mean everybody has his interests and with
> so many Linux users and developers you can't all focus on the same
> thing.
>
> But we (RTAI developers, which include Karim and myself) have decided to
> focus on hard-realtime extensions to Linux. And it is than always very
> motivating to hear nobody gives a f*ck about your work or problems,
> because "hey, you don't have a business model that makes sense anyway"
>
> For example, first there is said that there is no userspace
> hard-realtime, than Karim corrects that, than there is said that a
> userspace program that uses mlockall is actually a module: with other
> words be quiet and go sit in the corner.
> This seems the same as what happened with FSMLabs, first they explain
> why userspace hard-realtime is crap, and now they have implemented it
> them self and explain how good it is.
>
> We have had several discussions with FSMLabs about userspace
> hard-realtime and asked for comments on for example the following
> situation.
>
> -
> When i write a RTAI module, that changes the sched_setparam in such a
> way that SCHED_FIFO and SCHED_RR are now hardrealtime. Than a binary
> program that runs on a computer with the RTAI kernel-module loaded
> violates the patent, and on a computer that doesn't have it loaded it
> doesn't violate the patent.
> -
> needless to say we never even got a reply on questions like these. When
> you have to believe FSMLabbs, you are not allowed to use non-GPL
> software on a system that has a RTAI module loaded, according to Eben Mo
Some how a small piece of the mail is missing here.
... according to Eben Moglen this can't be correct.
- Erwin
>
> There was also asked about the possibility (and even some person on the
> RTAI list started such a project) to have a *BSD version of RTAI, well
> the answer is simply NO. since *BSD will not accept GPL kernel code, and
> the RTLinux patent doesn't allow no GPL implementations there will be no
> free *BSD with this type of hard-realtime. Of course you can buy the
> FSMLab version, but than you can just as well buy a true RTOS, like
> VxWorks.
>
> Also apparently there is the idea that all RTAI developers want to
> become rich by getting the patent out of the way and sell RTAI. I know
> you all know this is simply not true, like most Linux hacker we spend a
> large part of our free time to give the real-time community a usable
> piece of software where they normally have to pay for.
> So please don't stamp us as some money sucking bastards that shouldn't
> be allowed to use Linux in the first place.
>
> I just hope the linux developers are smart enough to not accept the
> RTLinux into the main kernel, cause someday someone might come up with
> the idea to write something that allows to have userspace programs to be
> hard-realtime, and than you have to stop allowing non GPL userspace
> programs, like for example GLIB( which is LGPL).
>
> - Erwin Rol , RTAI Developer
>
>
>
>
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri May 31 2002 - 22:00:15 EST