Am Montag, den 29.01.2007, 16:24 +0100 schrieb Phil Knirsch: > Hello everyone. > > We've recently started working on a project called Linux Hardware > Compatibility > Project or in short LHCP. Goals are: > > * Provide a list of working hardware for people wanting to buy a new > computer > * Provide an idea on what hardware our/your distribution in run on > * Provide a list of hardware we need to improve support for > * Provide an interface to all above that allows simple and complicated > queries > * Get the user a list of thing that should work and a way to test that > * Tell the user how good his hardware is supported > > There have been several Hardware Compatibility lists from vendors and > other projects in the past, but most of them were limited in one > aspect or another - so we start our own. > > To achive this we are building a modular framework to generate, collect, > submit > and analyze information about all components of systems running Linux > and how well each component works. > > The project is currently in it's infancy, but following the typical > pragmatic > approach of open source projects ("Release early, release often!") we've > decided to already officially announce it. > > Current status is that the basic GUI application for testing is up and > running > with some test modules. We're now in the process of writing the first real > data collection and test modules and are currently starting to design the > server end of the side. > > The home page of the project can be found here: > > https://hosted.fedoraproject.org/projects/LHCP > > If you want to take a look at the current source code you can checked it out > using Mercurial in read only mode like this: > > hg clone http://hg.fedoraproject.org/hg/hosted/LHCP > > For development discussions a mailing list has been set up here: > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/lhcp-devel > > Although the project is hosted under Fedora we're aiming it to be very > distribution independant, so supporting other distributions should be > easy to > do. We have some basic requirements on what is needed on the system for > it to > simply work, but a lot of things will be optional. > > Happy hacking, > > Read ya, Phil & Fabi > > -- > Philipp Knirsch | Tel.: +49-711-96437-470 > Development | Fax.: +49-711-96437-111 > Red Hat GmbH | Email: Phil Knirsch <phil@xxxxxxxxx> > Hauptstaetterstr. 58 | Web: http://www.redhat.de/ > D-70178 Stuttgart > Motd: You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me. > Looks good. Will this enable a user to link to a specific piece of hardware for bugzilla reporting? Any chance of a yum repo for easy updates (and more likely-to-test ness)? (Dark and dusty weather?) -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list