Arjan van de Ven <arjan@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, 2005-12-22 at 09:17 +0100, Oliver Neukum wrote: > > Am Donnerstag, 22. Dezember 2005 06:34 schrieb Lee Revell: > > > On Wed, 2005-12-21 at 22:20 -0700, Dax Kelson wrote: > > > > I just got a shiny new (for me at least, the card has been out for > > > > months) Areca RAID card. > > > > > > > > The driver (arcmsr) is in the -mm kernel, but hasn't yet made it to the > > > > mainline kernel. I'm curious what remains to be done before this can > > > > happen? > > > > > > Well, often all that's needed are some user reports that the driver > > > works for them. > > > > Is that a reasonable strategy? Why is a _new_ driver present only in -mm? > > It hardly can break anything. It is possible that Andrew is quicker merging > > but still I can't see the advantage if this persists for any length of time. > > afaik that's not the strategy here. > It's more "we're waiting for the structural issues to be resolved" which > sounds quite reasonable. > Yes, there are lots of stylistic and API-usage issues with the driver and it needs someone to fix them all up. Unfortunately the original developer's English is very poor and he's obviously quite unfamiliar with how Linux development happens. This is all resolveable - it just needs someone to get down and work with Erich on knocking the driver into shape. But as yet, nobody has stepped up to do that work. And yes, the driver does apparently work. - : send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html