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Linus Torvalds authored
Ok, there's a fairly large patch out there, but as of 2.1.92 I think we have a real feature-freeze, and we'll try to get a real code-freeze going soon. There are known problems with the sound drivers etc, which is why a code-freeze isn't the best suggestion right now, and there are probably still bugs with some of the new code, but I'll freeze new features for the upcoming 2.2 kernel. Yes, some people will scream bloody murder, but others will be relieved that it finally happened. Thanks especially to David Miller who has been doing a great job of getting the TCP stack from its problems just a few weeks ago to really shining new heights. That was my main worry about 2.2 not all that long ago, and was the main reason for having such a slushy period for a while. 2.1.92 does: - ISDN updates - alpha update (yes, SMP finally works, although not really stable yet) - networking fixes - "getcwd()" system call (not very long, the dcache makes this so trivial it is scary) - the mm responsiveness updates (they were in 2.1.92-pre2, people seemed to have found them very effective) - some other (mainly driver updates) Please do test it all out. Feature-freeze doesn't mean that it is supposed to be bug-free yet, but it does mean that we should be moving into bugfixing mode in quick order. And no, this is not an April 1 thing. But this way I can use April 1 as an excuse if something doesn't actually compile. Linus
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