Hello !http://rick.vanrein.org/linux/badram/index.html for years now, being
There's some really nice feature-patch named BadRAM at
you can continue using defective modules. Some older article describing
BadRAM let's you tell the kernel to skip certain regions of ram, so
code, so iŽm even more wondering, why it exists for more than 7 years
Basically, this feature is a matter of adding/modifying 200 lines of
Think about that... 200 lines of code which will have to be maintained forever, once it becomes a supported feature, for the benefit of the few people who can't or won't replace bad memory.
This patch is real a ressource-saver - if being a standard Linuxfeature, it will save even more ressources: Saving user's time (because
Consider one technical and one human behavour issue. While memory with "bad spots" was common a decade ago, it's as likely with current memory that the memory will "throw a bad bit" once in a while, on a read or write anywhere in the marginal or bad chip. Depending on how the memory is organized that could be 1/16th of the memory as a block of 32MB on a 512MB part, or every 16th byte in the whole memory.
Please comment if someone sees chances of getting this (after yearsexistance) into mainline and also please jump in to make the good thing
of
I personally think that the patch is at best a balance between benefit and problems. As a patch I have to use deliberately I think it's a good idea. As a permanent and default part of the kernel, I'm not convinced. There are some patches I would love to see in mainline, like suspend2 which includes resume as well as suspend, but this is not one of them, hope I've explained why.
Historical patch collection at:great feature and Linux could really benefit from that.
http://rick.vanrein.org/linux/badram/download.html
Most recent version of BadRAM should be:
http://rick.vanrein.org/linux/badram/software/BadRAM-2.6.19.1.patch
Sorry for being a little bit "noisy" here, but I think BadRAM is a
regards
Roland K.
Sysadmin
List: linux-kernel
Subject: Re: Free Linux Driver Development!
From: devzero () web ! de
Date: 2007-02-04 21:37:33
Message-ID: 1605445807 () web ! de
[Download message RAW]
First off, compliments to this announcement, I liked it very much!
Some comment regarding those "volunteers, waiting to get some real work" :)
OK, but why isn't your army of volunteers fixing them?
They don't know about them, or they don't have the hardware to test?
Seriously, let the kernel-janitor's project know about any issues you
have and they will be glad to jump on it. Those people are just
chomping a the bit to do something a bit bigger than "compiler warning
cleanups" :)
So many times i have seen good ideas brought up, kernel patches being written, posted \
to lkml, being developed outside mainline for a while and then being forgotten some \
time later due to lack of energy of some individual to get this into mainline.
If there is an noticeably number of talented programmers (unfortunately, i`m not) , \
so why not "feeding" them the right way ? Where is those public and transparent and \
moderated Linux-Kernel "ToDo"- or "Keep an eye on"-list, sorted by priorities, with \
sort of a "vote for this feature"-button, so those guys have something they can pick \
up? There is so much great stuff and ideas out there where they could put their work \
onto or getting involved, it just needs to be found or sort of being "managed" a \
little bit better.
For myself, i`m waiting for so quite some things to get "one step further", but they \
are more or less tied to some single individuals, for which you just cannot send some \
"hey, what`s up with your project"-message every second day. The interest in many \
nice projects often is quite low and evolution quite slow, but not only because of \
the fact that they aren`t great, but more because of not getting widely known. It`s \
not always missing specs, it`s also some missing noise/feedback for different \
features or missing of some "driving force" to bring things forward. How should one \
developer know that somebody needs a feature if those who could probably need it \
don`t request it? Maybe just because of the fact that they even imagine that such \
feature would be possible ?
Where is those efforts for fixing/integrating fantastic cowloop?
What about badram/badmem patch ?
Compressed Ccaching ?
Somebody helping with development of dm-loop or extend loop.c to support more than \
256 devices ? Replacement of proprietary, unstable and unelegant vmware-lopp for \
being able to mount vmware .vmdk files ? Internal Spec for this is open, dm-userspace \
could be some infrastructure for this, but the author seems to have other \
priorities.... dm-cow, zfs-fuse - anybody ?
Kernel based target for AoE (Ata over Ethernet) ? (there are two independent \
implementations, but both got stuck at some early experimental stage)
Just my 2 cents.
Roland K.
Sysadmin
ps:
This isn`t meant to criticise any of you kernel developers since you`re doing \
fantastic work!
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