Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Linux Developers Look At Upping The GCC Requirements For Building The Kernel

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by indepe View Post
    So that's to help RH with backporting a few things from 4.9 to 2.6... and without updating GCC ?
    Nothing. RH has their own dev teams to do that.

    And even in RHEL 6... they are now at RHEL 7.3.
    In whatever RHEL. That's a server, if they were working fine 5 years ago they will still be fine now. They only need security/stability patches.

    Leave a comment:


  • indepe
    replied
    Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
    I somewhat doubt that many people (mostly IT admins) want to run a more recent kernel in RHEL.
    And even in RHEL 6... they are now at RHEL 7.3.

    Leave a comment:


  • indepe
    replied
    So that's to help RH with backporting a few things from 4.9 to 2.6... and without updating GCC ?

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by Xelix View Post
    You are forgetting about people who want to run a more recent kernel on RH6/7. This sounds like a rather common use case to me.
    I somewhat doubt that many people (mostly IT admins) want to run a more recent kernel in RHEL.

    Leave a comment:


  • rubdos
    replied
    Originally posted by indepe View Post
    According to https://access.redhat.com/articles/3078, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is still using Linux kernels from the 2.x era, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 is using kernels from the 3.x era.

    So why add patches to Linux 4.9 or 4.10 in thought of RH6 still using GCC 4.4? Or are kernels 2.x still being updated, and these patches are for kernel 2.x ?

    Or does RH have their own kernel numbering scheme, and these are actually newer kernels?
    To elaborate on @starshipeleven's answer: Red Hat uses a kernel from the 2.X era's and backports bugfixes to it. Same for RHEL 7; they're on Linux 3.10.xxx, which is 3.10 with some btrfs backports and bugfixes.

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Originally posted by indepe View Post
    According to https://access.redhat.com/articles/3078, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is still using Linux kernels from the 2.x era, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 is using kernels from the 3.x era.
    RH has its own fork of the kernel and is responsible of its maintenance.

    Leave a comment:


  • Xelix
    replied
    Originally posted by indepe View Post
    According to https://access.redhat.com/articles/3078, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is still using Linux kernels from the 2.x era, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 is using kernels from the 3.x era.

    So why add patches to Linux 4.9 or 4.10 in thought of RH6 still using GCC 4.4? Or are kernels 2.x still being updated, and these patches are for kernel 2.x ?

    Or does RH have their own kernel numbering scheme, and these are actually newer kernels?
    You are forgetting about people who want to run a more recent kernel on RH6/7. This sounds like a rather common use case to me.

    Leave a comment:


  • indepe
    replied
    According to https://access.redhat.com/articles/3078, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 is still using Linux kernels from the 2.x era, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 is using kernels from the 3.x era.

    So why add patches to Linux 4.9 or 4.10 in thought of RH6 still using GCC 4.4? Or are kernels 2.x still being updated, and these patches are for kernel 2.x ?

    Or does RH have their own kernel numbering scheme, and these are actually newer kernels?
    Last edited by indepe; 16 December 2016, 09:25 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Linux Developers Look At Upping The GCC Requirements For Building The Kernel

    Phoronix: Linux Developers Look At Upping The GCC Requirements For Building The Kernel

    Kernel developer Arnd Bergmann has started a discussion over upping the minimum GCC version that's supported for building the Linux kernel. He's been testing every GCC compiler release from 4.0 through GCC 7 to see the results when building the Linux kernel...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
Working...
X