Hi, Am Samstag, den 07.03.2009, 01:46 +0100 schrieb Guennadi Liakhovetski: > On Fri, 6 Mar 2009, Trent Piepho wrote: > > > On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote: > > > On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Trent Piepho wrote: > > > > ALSA used a partial tree, but their system was much worse than v4l-dvb's. > > > > I think the reason more systems don't do it is that setting up the build > > > > system we have with v4l-dvb was a lot of work. They don't have that. > > > > > > Right, it was a lot of work, it is still quite a bit of work (well, I'm > > > not doing that work directly, but it affetcs me too, when I have to adjust > > > patches, that I generated from a complete kernel tree to fit > > > compatibility-"emhanced" versions), and it is not going to be less work. > > > > Why must you generate your patches from a different tree? One could just > > as well say that the linux kernel indentation style is more work, since > > they use GNU style have to translate their patch from a re-indented tree. > > [snip] > > Hans has already answered your question very well in this thread. I don't > think I can add anything. > > Thanks > Guennadi for me Trent clearly has the better arguments, but I do have of course a different point of view. Let's have this embedded Linux conference and listen to the arguments we hopefully get some links to. There is a lot going on, but you must convince me at least to buy some of this stuff I call gadgets. I don't see any need so far ;) You likely can get still anybody seriously interested to build the always next rc1 and then one close to the final next kernel release too, but I seriously doubt that you can convince anybody at all to give up totally what we have for embedded mixed trees fun on latest git and break all others by will for your latest pleasure. Cheers, Hermann -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html