> > Note that 2.6.32 has been designated a LTS (Long Term Support) kernel > by the powers that be. > > So that kernel would be good one to focus training resources on. ÂIt > will likely be supported for several years by Redhat, Suse, Canonical, > etc. ÂThus testing all the LDD3 examples with it would be very > beneficial. > > ie. It is the basis of SLES 11.1 SP1, etc. so these firms are > contractually obligated to support a LTS kernel for years. ÂTo lighten > the load, they got together and chose the 2.6.32 kernel as one they > would support together. ÂI think this is the first time they have > tried this approach. ÂI suspect they will do it again a couple years > from now. > > Greg > I totally agree with Greg. 2.6.35 could also be a good version to focus because people in the embedded world agreed that to reduce fragmentation they will define kernels "Embedded Flag Versions". A flag version will be a specific kernel version that vendors will based their products on. Many big players (Sony, Google, Meego, and Linaro) will be using 2.6.35 in its upcoming products so it seems that this version will be declare as a "flag version" for embedded use. We can for example have three branches: 2.6.32, 2.6.35 and linux-next. -- Best regards, ----------------------------------------- Javier MartÃnez Canillas (+34) 682 39 81 69 _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies