Well, the problem is that the people working on this code don't have a variety of older hardware to test things on. Developers of free software rely on users to do testing of releases on the hardware they care about. It may not sound very good but it's the best that can be done with the given resources :)
This is why developers ask for testing to be done on -HEAD before it becomes a RC. Otherwise the alternative is to build a huge regression testing lab and have volunteers staff it.. guess what the chances are of that happening right at the present? :) So what I can only suggest is that you build and boot a variety of -HEAD kernels. Start with HEAD from say, Jan 1 2011. Boot it, see if it works. If it doesn't, go back 3 months at a time. If it does, go forward three months until it breaks. Post the SVN revision numbers of the kernel versions that work and don't work. You don't have to do anything other than boot the kernel to see if it works, so you don't need to try and build an entire release. Thankfully. If you can spend a few hours doing that, you'll be helping out the pci/cardbus/acpi guys a _lot_. Chances are that they updated something that looked wrong, and broke some legacy thing. This happened with Atheros NICs and caused no end of heartache until someone actually did the above. John fixed it quick-smart. :) Good luck! Adrian _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"