Re: Linux - open design??
From: P.O. Gaillard
Date: Tue Dec 14 2004 - 04:03:29 EST
Kyle Moffett wrote:
for that kind of thing to be useful. Oh, and BTW, concerning a
traceability matrix,
generally it doesn't really exist except for proprietary software.
Linux design is
not "requirements-based" as commercial software is, it's
"I-want-this-feature-bad-
-enough-to-code-it-and-get-it-included-based". I suspect that companies
like
IBM internally have requirements-based systems to organize their employees
into various tasks, but publicly there is no such system, aside from
"It's broken
and I fixed it with this patch:".
Hi, some of the APIs of Linux do get tested with full traceability. For
instance, there is the Open Posix Test Suite. It tests the combination of Linux
and libraries to check that they conform to Posix specifications.
This seems to be sponsored by Intel as far as I remember.
The OSDL also is writing specifications for Linux (e.g. Carrier Grade Linux) or
ways to integrate components from the Linux world (e.g. kernel.org sources +
high res timers from Montavista) to achieve some kind of performance.
I would therefore say that there are in fact roadmaps and specifications for
Linux (note that this is my opinion as a user). And more seem to be emerging
even though most of the development is probably driven by the process that Kyle
just described.
these were my 2 cents as a user,
P.O. Gaillard
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