Dear Margarita, Thanks, please help include our driver in etch-n-half.
Please find Latest HighPoint Source files in 2.6.24 are located at: drivers\scsi\hptiop.c drivers\scsi\hptiop.h Documentation\scsi\hptiop.txt 2.6.24-rc8-mm1 built-in it, you can get it from www.kernel.org. FYI, HighPoint do have validation program with most of main vendors in the market- Seagate, Western Digital, Hitachi, Supermicro, Tyan, Asus, clustersoftware vendor, Storage software vendors, AIC, CI-design and etc. In regards of source package guideline, I will check with my firmware group if they have any questions. Thanks for the quick response! Best Regards, May Hwang HighPoint Technologies,Inc. Tel:408-240-6118/6112 Fax-408-942-5800 www.highpoint-tech.com www.hptmac.com Distribution Partners: ASI, BellMicro, D&H, Malabs "RocketRAID - Terabyte Storage Technologies" -----Original Message----- From: Wouter Verhelst [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 12:56 PM To: May Hwang Cc: 'Margarita Manterola'; debian-kernel@lists.debian.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: HighPoint- GPL Licensed Controller wants To be Include InDebian Distribution On Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 11:24:55AM -0800, May Hwang wrote: > Dear Margarita, > > Can you resend Sean's email because I didn't receive his email? > > Up to this point, we are offering binary package based on customer request, > because binary driver package only support one specific kernel version. > Hence it is inconvenience for customer and time consuming. > > Please advice when is the next release update and which kernel version? There is an "etch-n-half" planned pretty soon, which is to include a new kernel with new drivers (at present, it is likely that this new kernel will be 2.6.24). It would appear to me (though my opinion is in no way authoritative in this matter) that a package with new HighPoint drivers would be suitable for inclusion in etch-n-half, too. I'm sure people on debian-kernel will be able to provide more insight into that matter. Having said that: while a package with drivers for a hard drive controller would easily allow a Debian user to *use* the system with those drivers, it would not provide them with a way to actually *install* the system yet. If your hardware cannot be used in a "compatible" way, wherein the hardware will work, even if not at the highest performance which it would support with those drivers, then this is a problem that would need to be addressed by providing an updated debian-installer image. Luckily, this is not very hard; once you have a modules package with your drivers, what you would need to do would include: - creating a "udeb" (a debian-installer module) containing your additional drivers (this can be easily done with the "kernel-wedge" package and your modules package) - building a custom debian-installer image which would include your udeb. Your customers could then download the debian-installer image from your website (or wherever), boot from that, and then install Debian as usual. You might also want to modify your installer image so that it would, if your hardware is detected, install the modules package; the debian-installer environment contains sufficient software to make this possible. > Can I send you and Sean our Linux open source driver? It's probably best if you put them online somewhere, and post a link. Then those who are interested could, at the very least, help you get started, or do the work. Thanks again for your support of Debian, -- <Lo-lan-do> Home is where you have to wash the dishes. -- #debian-devel, Freenode, 2004-09-22 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]