On Mon, Jul 09, 2007 at 01:27:55PM -0400, Bill Davidsen wrote:
For how many years do you know that there's a new and actively maintained e100 driver for your hardware?Nothing is a "big issue" if you can force someone else to do the work. And if you have no impact from a production outage if some new driver works for hours and then does something unexpected.
And if you don't follow a stable line like the 2.6.16 kernel or a distribution kernel it's simply a part of the current development model that some kernel parts change. If changing one driver results in a big problem in your setup you should reconsider your setup. And every new kernel except for -stable kernels will anyway require a revalidation, so changing the network driver as part of this shouldn't be a big issue.
Why didn't _you_ try the e100 driver when you validated your systems after you upgraded them to kernel 2.6, and if you did and it didn't work, where is your bug report?Is that a joke, or subtle irony? Do you generally validate drivers you don't use just because your hardware might be able to support them? I don't validate various accelerated video drivers on systems running mostly text console, never check sound options on systems with an audio application, etc. After I tried the e100 driver on the first few systems and found issues (which may be resolved by now) I went back to eepro100 and used what worked. And used the driver for any new systems in other installs.
And exactly this is the reason why the eepro100 driver has to be removed, and that this will result in a better hardware support for everyone in the long term.