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:Greg Kroah-Hartman speaks
Greg Kroah-Hartman speaks
Jan 6, 2010, 15 :35 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (3928 reads)

"What’s going on with Microsoft’s drivers for its virtualization stuff? You had blogged about them submitting non-conforming code and then not being available. Has that changed?

"The code they submitted was fine, but needs lots of work to get it into “proper” mergable shape to get it to move out of the drivers/staging/ tree. This is nothing new, it happens to almost all companies when they first get involved in Linux kernel development. Both Intel and Google had this problem as well when they started out. The issue I had was that after the initial submission, we have not see any contributions to the code at all. The community contributed over 200 patches, and I did not get any response to my emails to the Microsoft developers. After I wrote up my status report, they popped back up and contacted me and all is now good. Although they have yet to submit any follow-on patches to the code, I still have hope.

"What development tools do you enjoy using?

"I use mutt as an email client for handling all of the mail I get and send. I use vim for editing code and emails as well as everything else. GCC as the C compiler for the kernel, and of course git and quilt to handle patch management."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
Interview with Greg Kroah-Hartman – Linux Kernel Dev/Maintainer(Nov 29, 2009)
Linux driver chief calls out Microsoft over its driver code submission(Sep 14, 2009)
Microsoft Linux code originally violated GPL(Jul 24, 2009)
Status Report: The Linux Driver Project(Jun 06, 2009)
Driving the Linux drivers(Jun 05, 2009)
Don't Fear Big-Box Linux Development(Nov 04, 2008)



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