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Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0

By | July 22, 2011, 9:05am PDT

Summary: Linus Torvalds has released Linux 3.0 and he wants you to know that there has been no big changes. There have, however, been several small, but significant, improvements.

Linux 3.0 is out and the big changes are… ah… well. Not much.

Linus Torvalds, its creator and lead developer had warned us that this would be the case: “So what are the big changes?

“NOTHING. Absolutely nothing. Sure, we have the usual two thirds driver changes, and a lot of random fixes, but the point is that 3.0 is *just* about renumbering, we are very much *not* doing a KDE-4 or a Gnome-3 here. No breakage, no special scary new features, nothing at all like that. We’ve been doing time-based releases for many years now; this is in no way about features. If you want an excuse for the renumbering, you really should look at the time-based one (”20 years“) instead. So no ABI [application binary interface] changes, no API [application programming interface] changes, no magical new features - just steady plodding progress.”

In case you didn’t get the message first time, when Torvalds finally released Linux 3.0 on July 22nd, he wrote, “As already mentioned several times, there are no special landmark features or incompatibilities related to the version number change, it’s simply a way to drop an inconvenient numbering system in honor of twenty years of Linux. In fact, the 3.0 merge window was calmer than most, and apart from some excitement from RCU [Ready, Copy, Update] I’d have called it really smooth. Which is not to say that there may not be bugs, but if anything, there are hopefully fewer than usual, rather than the normal ‘.0′ problems.”

OK, but surely some things were changed right? Well, yes, there were. The not so big, but significant changes were, in no particular order:

The Xen hypervisor now can run natively with Dom0 (Domain 0) privileges. This gives it, like Linux’s Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM), the ability to work at the lowest possible level of the Linux kernel. In practical terms this means Xen virtual machines should run faster.

There have also been improvements with how the kernel works with the still experimental Btrfs (B-tree file system) and the now standard ext4 file system. This, in turn, should lead to faster and, in the case of Btrfs, more reliable, file systems.

The Linux 3.0 kernel also improves its interoperability with UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface), a replacement for PC’s BIOS. While UEFI has been slow to catch on, it’s beginning to be picked up by major PC and server companies like HP. Since UEFI lends itself well for business desktop and server deployments, you can expect to see more and more UEFI computers entering the market in the next year or two.

3.0 is also bringing in a new implementation of the Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF) The net effect of this improvement will be speed up any application that calls on network services. While this won’t matter that much if you’re just trying to get the most from your Web browser, it can save significant time for Web servers and other network service software.

So, all-in-all, there is good stuff here. Radical? No. Revolutionary? I don’t think so! But, still good, solid improvements. I don’t know about you, but that works just fine for me.

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Twenty Years of Linux according to Linus Torvalds

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Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, aka sjvn, has been writing about technology and the business of technology since CP/M-80 was the cutting edge, PC operating system

Disclosure

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols is a freelance writer. He does not own stocks or other investments in any technology company.

Biography

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, aka sjvn, has been writing about technology and the business of technology since CP/M-80 was the cutting edge, PC operating system; 300bps was a fast Internet connection; WordStar was the state of the art word processor; and we liked it!

His work has been published in everything from highly technical publications (IEEE Computer, ACM NetWorker, Byte) to business publications (eWEEK, InformationWeek, ZDNet) to popular technology (Computer Shopper, PC Magazine, PC World) to the mainstream press (Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, BusinessWeek).

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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
FeRDNYC 11th Aug
And almost as soon as Linus released 3.0, the Fedora team rolled out new kernel packages... renumbered back down to "2.6.40". (I assume they suspect, or know, that there's version-checking logic out in the wild that assumes the kernel version will be in the form 2.x.y. Or worse, 2.6.x.)

Poor Linus must be shaking his head and thinking, "This is why we can't have nice things."

Still, I do see that the packages being built tagged for Fedora 16 or Fedora 17 are properly numbered 3.x (actually, 3.x.y). So it appears this 2.6.40 fiction won't persist beyond Fedora 15.
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Great Job Linus

Hooah!
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
LoverockDavidson 22nd Jul
Gentleman, start your compilers! That's right, you get to spend all day checking and unchecking options in the kernel, bringing up that terminal window, using complicated series of commands to start your gcc with multiple flags on it so you can compile this and wait several hours. I don't know about you but I've got better things to do with my time than having to constantly compile and update a linux box. I choose an option that doesn't require such hassles.
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
Rabid Howler Monkey 22nd Jul
@LoverockDavidson You either used Gentoo, which does actually require compiling (it's pretty much the only Linux distro that does), and/or you hardened Linux by applying grsecurity (or similar) patches to the Linux kernel. The vast majority of Linux users, unless they're Gentoo users, Linux sysadmins applying grsecurity (or other) patches to the kernel or developers, don't do any compiling.

As far as the CLI goes on Linux, it's actually quite handy. As is cmd.exe on Windows.

And updating Linux is generally easier than updating Windows because, for most users, the package manager takes care of all the software on one's system. While Microsoft update does cover more applications than Windows Update, most users (especially consumers, SOHOs and small businesses) are left to their own devices for updating 3rd party software.
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@Rabid Howler Monkey
Loverock is using his same old tired comments to get a rise out of someone. He knows that Linux is very easy to use.
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
LoverockDavidson 22nd Jul
@Rabid Howler Monkey
What does Windows have to do with this? Updating linux is not easy. It prompts you daily for an update. That says a lot about the OS when daily updates are required.
  • Flagged
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@Rabid Howler Monkey New to zdnet? Do you not know about the LD troll?
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@Rabid Howler Monkey

SOHO and small businesses...? What about Enterprise and government...and education...and all the chickens down at the boneless chicken ranch?

Rubbish.

Users with Windows who use software that they purchased will also get easy updates (almost always!) because the app will offer to check for updates.

Nice of you to leave that [not so little] fact out of your comments.
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
Rabid Howler Monkey Updated - 23rd Jul
@Raid6 Enterprises, including governments, have sysadmins that take care of updating for their users. And the users are rarely even aware of it as the process is usually automated and applied after they leave the workplace on evenings and weekends.

While one or two dozen 3rd party apps checking independently for updates is better than not, it is still much more clumsy, time consuming and disruptive than a package manager, especially if one is running Windows XP in their limited user account. Not to mention those 3rd party apps that aren't configured to check for updates and neither have an option setting nor menu item that one can select to check for updates. In this case, one must visit the developer's site on the web and check for, download and install an updated version. This process is much more efficient than a package manager too (not!).
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@Rabid Howler Monkey

Please don't feed the troll.




happy
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An obvious solution to your problems
ego.sum.stig@... 22nd Jul
@LoverockDavidson

Copious amounts of bad beer, forced down until you decide that the beer is good beer. Repeat frequently. Then after a while, seek out an Australian and ask him/her/it/other the meaning of life.
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@ego.sum.stig@...

Aussie here, Meaning of life is 42
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@Nchalada .. nah, that would be
thx-1138_@... Updated - 23rd Jul
@ego.sum.stig@... 6 x 7 .. or 14 x 3 .. or 84 / 2 ...

The Meaning of Life is a Monty Python movie.

... now if the question was "... What's the meaning of life, the Universe and everything? " ... than the answer would obviously be ...

42

" .. First, it is slightly cheaper; and second, it has the words DONT PANIC inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover. "

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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
anothercanuck 22nd Jul
@LoverockDavidson Yes, apparently you enjoy spending your time showing the world your ignorance.
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@LoverockDavidson Kernel compilation takes less than an hour, most people don't build their own kernels and software anyways. Perhaps you should get out of the basement and fine someone of the opposite (or same) sex and have your first intimate relationship rather than posting on ZDNets Linux blogs. Perhaps getting some natural light on that pasty skin...
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@B.O.F.H.
He can't go outside in the daytime.
He always leaves his telnet port open, so he is likely to be apprehended for obscenity if he ventures outside in daylight.
It is just a condition he has.
Please do not be to hard on him.
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@LoverockDavidson
That gives you the flexibility to run the OS on equipment that windows can't hope to. If you use a Linux distribution on a PC, of course none of that is necessary unless you want to. The kernel for my ARM board compiles on a fast PC in under 2 minutes and a full compile is only necessary once.
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@LoverockDavidson

Sounds like someone is jealous that windows doesn't give you the option to compile your own kernel.
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
Rabid Howler Monkey 22nd Jul
@guzz46 Unless you happen to be the Chinese or Russian government as Microsoft has provided them both with the Windows source code.
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@guzz46
Loverock is jealous that Linux continues to improve the computer experience.
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@LoverockDavidson : my god.. are you never going to mature (that means grow up)?
You are so tedious with your polluting of ZDnet with really bad repetitive troll posts. You are a big YAWN
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@deaf_e_kate
He HAS matured.
In the process he had the misfortune to go STALE.
As we know that is pretty much an irreversible state.
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@LoverockDavidson

Yeah, here we go with the compiler fables...

Oh, command line? Really? And have you seen Powershell? Of course, it's GUI... right? Uhhhh, wait a minute....
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
james.vandamme 25th Jul
@LoverockDavidson Damn! Now after clicking a button and putting in my password, I'll even have to reboot. Will the agony never end?
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Linux is plenty mature. It is just cranky and doesn't play well with others for most situations
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Really?
John L. Ries 22nd Jul
@bobiroc
Pray, give some examples. My own experience with Linux suggests exactly the opposite (except in such cases where hardware vendors decline to publish their specs).
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
WozNotWoz Updated - 22nd Jul
@bobiroc
Mature and cranky as in, "Hey you kids! Get off my lawn!"

Really, though, I find the latest mainstream distros like Mint to be well-behaved, stable, and easy to use.

All that's keeping me from using any Linux distro full-time is a good, PROFESSIONAL (powerful, for pay and supported) video editing program. I've tried every video editor for Linux that's out there, and they all stink IMO. Stability is terrible across the board, features are lacking in most, performance is far too slow in all. Cinelerra comes close, but it crashed too often for me and couldn't match the speed of Edius on Windows.

If only Grass Valley would produce Edius for Linux-based machines.
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
kcredden2 Updated - 22nd Jul
@WozNotWoz

Hmm...interesting, WozNotWoz. I have that same problem dealing with web site writing. At the moment, I dual-boot, or (In a month or so) just VMware XP/Dreamweaver 8 when I need to do that, and stay fully in linux.

Dualbooting has only one major problem. I can't get my mail while stuck in winders, unless I want to have 2 copies, which is a royal pain in the rump to keep track of.

I agree with you however. Linux is a grand OS, far superior to Windows. But at times it is frustrating to have some application limitations. I'm still looking for a Dreamweaver quality web page writer although 2 have come out reciently /maybe/ what I've been looking for.



- Kc
(Debian 6/KDE 4.7 full-time user)
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
LiquidLearner 22nd Jul
@kcredden2

I find it amusing you compare XP to Linux. Yes, Linux is superior to XP. I'm not so sure about 7. On par in many cases, yes. Windows is far easier to deal with and users are very happy with Windows 7. Not imprisoned, not held hostage. They're happy.

That said Linux has a myriad of uses that Windows can't/won't fill by design. Linux is absolutely in those situations and I highly recommend its use in the proper situations. But as for Linux desktop everywhere in corporate America? That's insanity. The $150ish/license companies might pay for 7 Pro/Enterprise is a bargain compared to the headache of rolling out desktop Linux to end users. It's not worth the time, money and irritation. Use that energy to do something better, like saving money in the data center using Linux.
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Ok... so the kernel versions are going from 2.6.x to 3.x.x?

And this is news? Why?
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
darylsonnier 22nd Jul
@dougz1 ...technically it isn't significant in and of itself. If you follow Linux, though, a while back Linus publicly stated that there were no plans to increment the version number to 3.0 and he didn't see anything on the horizon that would warrant such a change. Clearly his opinion changed, but it's not terribly significant.
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@dougz1
Or it means they're following Mozilla's new numbering system for Firefox.

You're right - this really isn't news
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@William Pharaoh
No. You are right.
Hence the " No Panic ! ".
The article is actually stating that this new number is of no importance.
Perhaps you missed it. That is easily done, so no need to panic.
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Linux 2.8 would be more appropriate, given that this appears to be a minor release.
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Hasn't Mozilla taught you anything?
William Pharaoh 22nd Jul
@John L. Ries
from now on all releases are in whole numbers for open source software!
@William Pharaoh
Version inflation has become nearly universal, but it's still dishonest.
@William Pharaoh
Seriously, all this was thrashed out week and weeks ago. Please try and keep up, or you'll just appear ignorant.
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Nonsense
CFWhitman 23rd Jul
@William Pharaoh
That's nonsense. This doesn't have anything to do with the idiotic decision Mozilla made with Firefox chasing the idiotic versioning scheme for Chrome. This change was made to clean up versioning to reflect a change in the development process of the Linux kernel that was made a few years ago.
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@Zogg .. it ain't limited to ..
thx-1138_@... Updated - 24th Jul
.. appearances.

" ... Please try and keep up, or you'll just appear ignorant."

For him, it's a natural aura (..state) that most likely originates from his butt then all the way up through his whole person.

.. shame that his keepers, daily, let him out of the compound to subject the world to his retardation.
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@William Pharaoh
You mean as in Win 7 and Win 8 ?
Perhaps as in IE7, IE8, and IE9.
Not so different, is it ?
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It's to Clean Up Versioning
CFWhitman 23rd Jul
@John L. Ries
This is somewhat of a reflection of changes that happened a few years ago. Linux used to have a development branch with an odd minor version number that led to the new stable branch. That is, while Linux 2.2.x was the stable branch, Linux 2.3.x was the development branch until 2.4.x was actually released (or alternatively 3.0.x was theoretically possible if thought warranted). However, with the release of 2.6.x the whole process was changed so that development releases became stable releases in a more conventional way.

This change made it so that a major version release became much more unlikely, and we may have been stuck on 2.x.x forever, while minor and revision releases climbed higher and higher. So it was decided that they would just switch to 3.x.x at some point and start from there.
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Got it
John L. Ries 23rd Jul
@CFWhitman
Thanks for the explanation
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@CFWhitman
Finally something that made sense.
Thank you.
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EFI
FnkPcSyko 22nd Jul
I'm starting to hear more about EFI what's up with it?
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@FnkPcSyko
The link from the article has more info on UEFI.

h-t-t-p://h30565.www3.hp.com/t5/Feature-Articles/The-30-year-long-Reign-of-BIOS-is-Over-Why-UEFI-Will-Rock-Your/ba-p/198
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And the beat goes on...
Dietrich T. Schmitz, *~* Your Linux Advocate 22nd Jul
You can be sure Linux will be here today, tomorrow, and way into the future.

God Bless Linus.
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@Dietrich T. Schmitz, *~* Your Linux Advocate

You can be sure Windows and OS X will be here today, tomorrow, and way into the future, considering their recent quarters.

Why should Linux be any different?

plain
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RE: Don't Panic! It's only Linux 3.0
daikon Updated - 22nd Jul
@Mister Spock
Its not about Windows or Apple for that matter. Not logical for the real Mr. Spock to create issues.
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@Mister Spock

Mr.Schmitz feels compelled to assure people that Linux will be around in the future in some form.

I was just pointing out that he should not act so surprised, as history has proven that where there is a market where people are willing to pay for an item, that there will always be another 'market" where people are interested in free alternatives.

He should not be so surprised.

plain
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@Mister Spock

Why should Linux be any different?

You must not have been around when the FUD was spread about FOSS products being unreliable and could just disappear, and how that was a good reason for enterprises not deploy them.




happy
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@Mister Spock
You are right on all accounts.
Nice feeling, isn't it ?
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And almost as soon as Linus released 3.0, the Fedora team rolled out new kernel packages... renumbered back down to "2.6.40". (I assume they suspect, or know, that there's version-checking logic out in the wild that assumes the kernel version will be in the form 2.x.y. Or worse, 2.6.x.)

Poor Linus must be shaking his head and thinking, "This is why we can't have nice things."

Still, I do see that the packages being built tagged for Fedora 16 or Fedora 17 are properly numbered 3.x (actually, 3.x.y). So it appears this 2.6.40 fiction won't persist beyond Fedora 15.

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