On Sat, 5 Dec 2015 12:53:07 AM Austin S Hemmelgarn wrote: > > The only reason I'm not running Unstable kernels on my Debian systems is > > because I run some Xen servers and upgrading Xen is problemmatic. Linode > > is moving from Xen to KVM so I guess I should consider doing the > > same. If I migrate my Xen servers to KVM I can use newer kernels with > > less risk. > > That's interesting, that must be something with how they do kernel > development in Debian, because I've never had any issues upgrading > either Xen or Linux on any of the systems I've run Xen on, and I > directly track mainline (with a small number of patches) for Linux, and > stay relatively close to mainline with Xen (Gentoo doesn't have all that > many patches on top of the regular release for Xen, aside from XSA > patches).
I don't think that Debian does anything wrong in this regard. It's just that my experience of Xen is that it is fragile at the best of times. The fact that Red Hat packaged the Xen kernel in the Linux kernel package is a major indication of Xen problems IMHO, the concept of Xen is that it shouldn't be tied to a Linux kernel. If you haven't had Xen issues then I think you have been lucky. -- My Main Blog http://etbe.coker.com.au/ My Documents Blog http://doc.coker.com.au/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html