On 06/06/2011 09:17 PM, Yaro Kasear wrote:
On Monday, June 06, 2011 11:34:53 Thomas Dziedzic wrote:
On Mon, Jun 6, 2011 at 11:22 AM, Tavian Barnes

<taviana...@tavianator.com>  wrote:
On 6 June 2011 10:02, KESHAV P.R.<skodab...@gmail.com>  wrote:
Hi all,
         Since the next kernel will be 3.0 , the kernel26 naming is
meaningless from the next kernel. I think this is also a good time to
consider implementing versioned kernel install. Agreed arch has a
policy of 1 package per software in the official repos. While this
attitude is acceptable for Xorg or windows managers or even some low
level utilities, problems with those can be corrected if the system
can boot to a shell atleast (init 1 or 3). But if the kernel fails to
boot and under the assumption that the user hdoes not have any rescue
system/distro handy he/she cannot boot into the system (atleast not at
that moment). Without a working kernel it is not possible to boot to a
shell to run any damn command.
        While this topic has already been discussed at [1] the
discussion was slow and has not lead to any fruitful result. This post
is mainly to reach out to a larger audience and decide on how to go
about since the upsteam version change provides the right time for
Arch to reconsider the same. Another discussion at [2] is about
removing the word kernel from the initramfs image. If in case
versioned kernel proposal is accepted then the initramfs also
(automatically) becomes versioned to match the kernel. Atleast Dave
Reisner (falconindy) took the first step by making the change in his
geninit program. I understand this might require changes in the way
mkinitcpio (or geninit if at all it becomes default) and the way
pacman handles different versions of same packages. Please join in.

[1] https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/16702
[2] https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/18719

Regards.

keshav
I have kernel26-lts installed as a backup kernel, and this is all
that's really necessary for rolling back broken kernel updates.  I've
been bitten by a BTRFS bug once and rolled back with -lts no problem.
-1 from me on keeping multiple kernel versions installed; I really
like that arch doesn't keep 6 old kernels around.

While we're at it, +1 for calling the kernel package "linux" for version
3.0.

--
Tavian Barnes
Agreed with Tavian Barnes.
Also, don't call it "linux30" just call it "linux"
Or just 'kernel.'

And yes, -1 on multiple kernels. That was one of the more idiotic brain-
damaged practices of Ubuntu that drove me away in the first place.
I don't see how kernel naming is on topic with this discussion, anyway i wouldn't see like to see a preserved kernel on archlinux we already have kernel26-lts and the fallback image. Keeping more kernels would cost a) more time, b) more bugs on the tracker and wouldn't in my point of view be the vision of rolling release. You can always revert back a kernel version via pacman -U or chrooting into your install.

--
Jelle van der Waa

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