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Oracle Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel R6U1 Prepares For AMD Milan, Adds WireGuard

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  • skeevy420
    replied
    Originally posted by Volta View Post

    Probably I wasn't clear enough. I meant: to any non Linux kernel. Oracle is one of the last companies I would praise.
    You were. The second time I got it, but the first time I didn't. I wasn't being very clear when I didn't say that.

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  • Volta
    replied
    Originally posted by skeevy420 View Post

    It didn't seem that way since you started with "In comparison to every other kernel." To me that implied Oracle's implementation of the Linux kernel.
    Probably I wasn't clear enough. I meant: to any non Linux kernel. Oracle is one of the last companies I would praise.

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  • skeevy420
    replied
    Originally posted by Volta View Post

    I meant the Linux kernel as a whole, not the Oracle one. I'm aware Oracle is leeching on RHEL.
    It didn't seem that way since you started with "In comparison to every other kernel." To me that implied Oracle's implementation of the Linux kernel. That now has me curious if stability tests have been done against different implementations of the Linux kernel and if one distribution offers a more stable kernel than another in regards to demanding or oddball workloads.

    Everyone leeches on RHEL; at least Oracle contributes back meaningful things to the community from time to time...I'm not defending them because they still have twice as many reasons to be disliked.

    Vistaus
    FriendlyUnicornCompatibleKernel

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  • Volta
    replied
    Originally posted by RahulSundaram View Post

    I am curious as to why you consider this more tested than say RHEL or SLES kernels. Oracle is largely selling OEL to existing Oracle customers and their environments aren't as broad as the market that other enterprise distributions serve.
    I meant the Linux kernel as a whole, not the Oracle one. I'm aware Oracle is leeching on RHEL.

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  • tildearrow
    replied
    Originally posted by Vistaus View Post

    First Reiser, now Unbreakable... what name *is* allowed these days?
    It is just "Unbreakable" is a huge lie. It's like if I were to release KWin-lowlatency as "Zero Stutter Gaming Compositor" (obviously not true)

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  • Vistaus
    replied
    Originally posted by tildearrow View Post
    Change the name already...
    First Reiser, now Unbreakable... what name *is* allowed these days?

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  • mether
    replied
    Originally posted by Volta View Post

    In comparison to every other kernel it can be easily described as unbreakable. There's no other kernel tested in so many environments and scenarios. It seems your brain is broken.
    I am curious as to why you consider this more tested than say RHEL or SLES kernels. Oracle is largely selling OEL to existing Oracle customers and their environments aren't as broad as the market that other enterprise distributions serve.

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  • Volta
    replied
    Originally posted by saboteaur View Post
    Unbreakable Linux, the biggest lie ever told to mankind. Even worse than the "The Neverending Story" movie...
    In comparison to every other kernel it can be easily described as unbreakable. There's no other kernel tested in so many environments and scenarios. It seems your brain is broken.

    Leave a comment:


  • cl333r
    replied
    Originally posted by saboteaur View Post
    Unbreakable Linux, the biggest lie ever told to mankind. Even worse than the "The Neverending Story" movie...
    It must have really broken your heart since it's the first and only comment since you created your account in 2018.

    Leave a comment:


  • saboteaur
    replied
    Unbreakable Linux, the biggest lie ever told to mankind. Even worse than the "The Neverending Story" movie...

    Leave a comment:

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