Kernel 6.8-rc2 debuts after very robust discussion about 'inodes'
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Kernel 6.8-rc2 debuts after very robust discussion about 'inodes'

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Unknown symbols in GobiSerial LTE driver
Unknown symbols in GobiSerial LTE driver
I was working with the SieraWireless LTE device drivers recently and I got into a strange issue with one of the drivers called GobiSerial. I have compiled this driver code in the same way as described in here. But when I try to insert this in the Pi kernel I get the below error: pi@raspberrypi:~ $ sudo insmod GobiSerial.ko insmod: ERROR: could not insert module GobiSerial.ko: Unknown symbol in…
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Why kernel development still uses email
Good post on why email is ideal for kernel development process:
As Rusty Russell once said, if you want to get smarter, the thing to do is to hang out with smart people. An email-based workflow lets developers hang out with a project's smart people, making them all smarter. Greg wants Linux to last a long time, so wants to see the kernel project use tools that help to bring in new developers. Email, for all its flaws, is still better than anything else in that regard.
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Things are getting clear
thanks to several basic x86 Os, mainly to mike os; Tomorrow coding session begins. Awww dont know weather i may sleep tonight #anxiety #disorder.
Some usefull links, which i seriously took around 9 months to assimilate stuffs on these pages :P
http://wiki.osdev.org/Main_Page
http://mikeos.berlios.de/
http://www.osdever.net/bkerndev/Docs/title.htm
Unearthing
Started to debug my pure dreams on kernel development .. thing shouldn't change pingy pongy

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FUCKING FINALLY. I finally was able to get a GDT set up for my kernel. i was messing things up b/c i was loading my kernel with GRUB which puts it automatically in 32 bit protected mode and i tried to enable it (i think incorrectly but regardless) and it worked okay until i tried to set up a GDT and for some reason it killed QEMU every time. so i took out the part where i enabled 32 protected mode and volia! GDT installed, bitches!
Two Paragraphs of General Remarks about Linux
From what I've encountered "distro-hopping" this past year or so, the most critical barrier to wider adoption for Linux isn't lack of high-end software, marketing, or all that but, rather, hardware compatibility. "It's come a long way, the kernel," is certainly true, but it's also true that for every 30 steps forward, one or two things break. Upgrading to Ubuntu 12.04, for instance, required that I create a .config file for my Intel wireless card which, as far as I can tell, was supported just fine in the 2.6xx kernel line.
Of course, I also think that people who are solely focused on "defeating Microsoft" and "bringing Linux to the masses" are a little misguided. Aggressive proselytizing is annoying and often a little unbalanced in motivation. If Linux is to grow, it will grow, and hopefully at a good pace where healthy innovation continues and the community doesn't being to suck, for lack of a better way of putting it. Think of all the bloating and forking now. Imagine that with 100 times the userbase. Those people who place great import on high-end software are usually professionals, or connected to some. They focus on the software because they, and their circles, need that software to feel comfortable in Linux environments. Pulling in more contributing members to the community will do more to create healthy long-term growth cycles than installing Linux everywhere -- though, certainly, that could work too somewhere down the line.