Guys, I went out on a limb to propose this, and need CGL participants to speak up if you want it to happen. (MontaVista and WindRiver, this means you.) The following questions were raised on the LSB list and call: + Is the name "LSB 3.2 CGL Profile" OK, as using the term embedded confuses some folks? + Do the distros that you're LSB 4.0 registering include qt and gtk today? If so, you wouldn't be able to certify under this profile. Could you please confirm that you're shipping non-GUI distros today. + Could you please list some of the most important closed source applications that run on your CGL distros today? We would like to pull them into the LSB process and convince them of the value of LSB certifying. Thanks. -- Dan Kohn <mailto:dan at dankohn.com> COO, The Linux Foundation <http://www.linux-foundation.org> <http://www.dankohn.com/> <tel:+1-415-233-1000> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Dan Kohn <dan@xxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 5:11 PM Subject: LSB 3.2 Embedded Profile To: lsb-discuss at lists.linux-foundation.org, lf_carrier at lists.linux-foundation.org I've covered this verbally with many folks, but I'd like to officially propose to the list an LSB 3.2 Embedded Profile. This is an additional certification profile exactly equal to LSB 3.2, except that no tests need be passed from the X, qt, or gtk libraries. The only distributions that may be certified as LSB 3.2 Embedded are those that ship neither the qt nor gtk libraries. I.e., enterprise distros need to pass the regular the LSB 3.2 certification. The purpose of this new profile is for Carrier Grade Linux distributions, which are required to pass the LSB as part of registering as CGL 4.0 compliant. Otherwise, they are forced to register under LSB 3.0, which is the last version of the LSB without the graphics libraries. The LF would like to only have to actively maintain the LSB 3.2 test infrastructure, plus the LSB 4.0 tools currently under development. Plus, there were a significant number of bugs fixed between LSB 3.0 and LSB 3.2, and 3.2 is able to make use of the dramatic improvement in test infrastructure. For now, LSB 3.2 Embedded Profile Certifications can use the existing Distribution Testkit Manager, and just request waivers on all graphical libraries. In the future, we'll update those tools to choose between 3.2 regular and 3.2 Embedded Certification. The LF is also very open to creating new profiles to match up to the libraries in the current mobile initiatives, including LiMo, Android, and Moblin. Thanks. -- Dan Kohn <mailto:dan at dankohn.com> COO, The Linux Foundation <http://www.linux-foundation.org> <http://www.dankohn.com/> <tel:+1-415-233-1000>