On Tue, 2008-10-28 at 15:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > On Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 07:35:52PM +0100, Johannes Berg wrote: > > On Tue, 2008-10-28 at 10:08 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > > > > > "Work on", or "USE". > > > > > > The problem is, users have this hardware, and they want to run Linux on > > > it. Many distros already support this hardware with the "crap" driver, > > > so we might as well add that to the kernel tree so they at least get the > > > latest "crap" so that users have an easier time of it. > > > > > > Now, the fact that there is a competing driver being developed outside > > > of the tree does make this a bit more complicated. However, as it > > > doesn't work yet, there's not much we can do about including it, right? > > > > > > So adding the driver to the "crap" tree makes users happy in that they > > > can use their hardware. I'll support the "crap" to a point, and no one > > > has to do any API changes to the drivers/staging/ tree either, I can > > > easily handle that. > > > > > > Then, when the "correct" driver is finished, I will drop the crap driver > > > at the same time the "correct" one is added to the tree. > > > > > > This way, everyone wins, right? > > > > Only if the point is "use" rather than "work on". As far as I understood > > about staging, the point was more "work on" which would direct effort to > > the wrong driver. > > I'm not going to turn away patches that people send me to get the stable > drivers cleaned up and in better shape. > > I've now added the rtl2860 driver to the staging tree with a big note > that any comments should be made to me only, and that the wireless > developers would really have people work on their driver instead to get > it into a mergable state. Who's going to support this driver now that you're essentially green-lighting distros to ship it? I seriously disagree with this decision to add rtl2860. Adding drivers like at76_usb is fine because those are the drivers that people should be working on. But adding crap code just because it gets people's hardware working, but that has NO FUTURE in the wireless tree, is misguided at best. If we just wanted to get everyone's hardware "working" [1], why aren't we shipping ndiswrapper? At least add a "TAINT_STAGING" flag so that when people _run_ the crappy code and report errors the wireless developers are aware of it right off the bat. Dan [1] but obviously not very well or else we'd be putting effort where it was needed! -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html