So far I have heard nothing but, "if you don't contribute, screw you." All this is fine. Just say so. Make it black and white. Make it perfectly clear what is and isn't legal. If we can't load proprietary modules, then so be it. It will help everybody if this is out in the clear, instead of resorting to stupid half measures like EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL.
On 2/15/07, Theodore Tso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wed, Feb 14, 2007 at 10:27:10PM -0800, v j wrote: > You are right. I have not contributed anything to Linux. Except one > small patch to the MTD code. However, I don't think that is the point > here. I am perfectly willing to live with the way Linux is today. I am > telling you as a user that if Linux continues on the current path it > will become less and less attractive to Embedded Users. But so what? How will that hurt *Linux*? If the Embedded developers don't contribute changes back, it doesn't hurt us any if they go away and start paying $$$ to VxWorks instead of using Linux for free. Contrawise, if Embedded developers do contribute their device driver changes back to the kernel, they will be fine. Note that we don't even force them to do the work to make it be mainline acceptable; they just have to make the sources available. It could be crap code, but it will fulfill the requirements of the the GPL. Others in the community can make the decision about whether they want to clean up the code and get it mainlined, or it ignore it if it truly is a one-off driver. All you have to do is make the driver available. And if you don't, why do you think that it is at all a credible threat, or that we should shed even one tear, if you go away and use some other OS for your embedded product? It's not like in the case of VxWorks where you get to say, "Do X or we take away a million dollars worth of business." And on the flip side, what I think you will find is that if you do contribute to the community and be a good community member, others will cut you some slack when the time comes because you've built up the good karma. But that requires that you be a good community member. If in contrast you find that it's cheaper to pay $$$ to some embedded OS company, please feel free to do this. No one is forcing you to move from Linux 2.4 to Linux 2.6, or even to stay with Linux. - Ted
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