File system, power and instrumentation: Can Linux close its technical gaps?
Legal threats may be the high-profile risk for Linux, but the popular open source kernel project is coming face-to-face with key technical shortcomings, too. As the Linux Foundation plans its first Collaboration Summit for June 13 through 15 at the Google campus in Mountain View, Linux contributors are speaking out about kernel gaps that have no solution readily in sight.
Andrew Morton, a kernel developer best known for filtering and testing new kernel submissions in a test kernel called the "-mm tree", listed three major problem areas in a May "State of the Kernel" talk at Google: the file system, power management, and instrumentation. The file system, one of the areas of kernel development requiring the heaviest computer science work, is software that determines how to place and index data on disk or other nonvolatile storage — and Linux's file systems are falling behind the demands of large storage users.
In an e-mail message, project founder Linus Torvalds says he agrees that the file system and power management need to work.
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