Donald Becker wrote:
I've been actively developing Linux drivers for over a decade, and run
about two dozen mailing lists for specific drivers. I write diagnostic
routines for every released driver. I thoroughly test and frequently
update the driver set I maintain. And since about 2000, my patches were
ignored while the first notice I've have gotten to changes in my drivers
is the bug reports. And the response: "submit a patch to fix those
newly introduced bugs". I've even had patches ignore in favor of people
that wrote "I don't have the NIC, but here is a change".
A good example is the tulip driver. You repeatedly restructured my
driver in the kernel, splitting into different files. It was still 90+%
my code, but the changes made it impossible to track the modification
history. The kernel driver was long-broken with 21143-SYM cards, but no
one took the responsibility for fixing it.
For what it's worth, I have yet to find a tulip driver that works with
all of my 4-port NICs. Becker's fails with the Phobos 4-port NIC,
a very recent kernel driver fails to negotiate correctly (sometimes)
with the DFE-570tx NIC. Both of them failed a while back when I tried
to put 3 DFE-570tx's into a single machine.
On average, I've had better luck with the kernel driver than with
Becker's, and since it is quite a pain to compile and test it, I
have been ignoring it more and more.
Mr Becker: Perhaps you could rename your tulip driver becker_tulip and have
it separately buildable and configurable in the kernel config options? If
it was back into the kernel proper it would be much easier to experiment with.
Thanks,
Ben
--
Ben Greear <greearb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <Ben_Greear AT excite.com>
President of Candela Technologies Inc http://www.candelatech.com
ScryMUD: http://scry.wanfear.com http://scry.wanfear.com/~greear
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