It's been long known that Canonicals contributions to linux has been far and inbetween. Greg Kroah breaks it down into numbers.
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Greg Kroah puts Canonical contributions in perspective.
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I thought the bite on Canonical was that it mostly re-packages Debian and does very little original code for anything. How does that get them into the kernel development business?
Or is GK's arguement that if you write for Linux you have to be a kernel dev, too?
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Originally posted by rbmorse View PostI thought the bite on Canonical was that it mostly re-packages Debian and does very little original code for anything. How does that get them into the kernel development business?
Or is GK's arguement that if you write for Linux you have to be a kernel dev, too?
I think his gripe is about how Canonical seems to get all the press about how much they have contributed to the linux, when in reality they have done very little to actually forward the development of the linux OS code wise. The same could be said of debian, although they do contribute more then Canonical, their contributions seem to be scarce as well although Greg does point out it is difficult to track Debs contributiions.
As he points out, even nvidia has contributed more then Canonical.Last edited by deanjo; 22 September 2008, 03:43 PM.
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Well many ubuntu patches are for adding extra drivers to the ubuntu folder, you see those added modules simple with this code (8.04 used linux-ubuntu-modules, 7.10 and 8.10 this way)
/sbin/modprobe -l|grep ubuntu
It is unlikely that those patches go upstream although they are usefull. I use a slighly (vesafb enabled) mod of the kernel for my distro. It is nice to have lots of extra modules included and libata for the harddisk - Debian lenny uses CONFIG_IDE still for most drivers.
The other patches are marked as SAUCE when you look there:
Not sure from where they got those from - a few (maybe 10-15) have been from me too, before they went upstream. Maybe some of em have been their creation.
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Originally posted by deanjo View PostI think his gripe is about how Canonical seems to get all the press about how much they have contributed to the linux, when in reality they have done very little to actually forward the development of the linux OS code wise. The same could be said of debian, although they do contribute more then Canonical, their contributions seem to be scarce as well although Greg does point out it is difficult to track Debs contributiions.
As he points out, even nvidia has contributed more then Canonical.
Though i don't care especially for Ubuntu, the goodwill (?) they have generated for Linux is worth something more than you're average kernel hacker will acknowledge, or even know about. Though kernel contribs are nice too.
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