On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 04:41:21PM +0100, Thomas Renninger wrote: > > OEMs that really want to modify the BIOS to recognize > > OS interfaces that are in Linux should propose > > new OSI strings that specify interfaces, not broad > > categories of operating sytems; and in Linux we > > shoudl use, or not use, those strings, as appropriate. > > I've recently been in discussion with OEMs on exactly > > this topic -- I'm sorry it didn't happen a year ago. > So you mean "SLED 10 SP2", "UBUNTU supported version XY" strings? No, no, no, no, no! What part of "specify interfaces, not broad category of operating sytems" didn't you understand? So for example, if we if some vendor decides for some silly reason that they must the Nvidia graphics chipsets, and Nvidia is the one holdout which is lame about providing information so we can program the video hardware correctly after a suspend/resume, maybe there is a feature flag, OSI(LameNvidiaSuspendResume). The suppose 6 months later, someone manages to disassemble the Nvidia driver in some legal jurisdiction where there is no DMCA nonsense, and so Linux is now capable of dealing with the video card itself. Now future kernels can simply omit that very specific OSI string. Just because we are saying that OSI(Linux) is bad, does not mean that people are saying that OSI("SLED 10 SP2") is the right answer. Hell, no! The right thing is something like OSI(LameNvidiaSusependResume). - Ted - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html