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Linux 2.4 kernel almost soup

Keepers of the Linux kernel deliver the first and only 2.4 prerelease version to testers, meaning the long-awaited 2.4 code is soon to follow.
Written by Mary Jo Foley, Senior Contributing Editor
There was no Linux 2.4 kernel under testers' Christmas trees or Hanukkah bushes in 2000.

Linus Torvalds and the other keepers of the Linux kernel delivered what is anticipated to be the first and only 2.4 prerelease kernel to testers on Dec. 31. The final release of the long-awaited 2.4 code is expected to follow in relatively short order.

In a note sent to testers on New Year's Eve, Torvalds acknowledged that he was unable to make good on his commitment to deliver a final release of 2.4 by December.

"Ok. I didn't make 2.4.0 in 2000. Tough," said Torvalds. "I tried, but we had some last-minute stuff that needed fixing (i.e. the dirty page lists etc), and the best I can do is make a prerelease."

Torvalds offered no guidance as to when Linux enthusiasts might see the final release of the 2.4 kernel. In his Dec. 31 note, Torvalds said simply he wanted to give people time to test the prerelease "for a while."

"But read my lips: no more recounts," Torvalds added. "There is no "prerelease1", to become "prerelease2" and so on."

Linux 2.4 is running about a year behind schedule.

Torvalds said in June of 1999 that Linux 2.4 would be done by last fall. In May 2000, Torvalds acknowledged that it would likely be October 2000 before 2.4 saw the light of day, since developers were attempting to cram more new, high-end features into the final release. Then, on Oct. 6, at Frankfurt's LinuxWorld, Torvalds was quoted as saying Linux 2.4 wouldn't roll out the FTP server doors until December at the earliest.

Linux distributors have been counting on incorporating the 2.4 kernel in versions of their products starting in the first half of 2001.

Red Hat Inc. (rhat) has been planning to make the 2.4 kernel the heart of its next release, code-named Florence, due out in the first quarter of 2001.

Caldera Systems (cald), for its part, has been planning an upgrade to the 2.4 kernel for both its eDesktop and eServer Linux releases in the second quarter of 2001.

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