> On 10. Apr 2017, at 14:59, Todd Lewis <[email protected]> wrote: > > Is there a straightforward way to figure out which pieces of > git://git.openafs.org/openafs.git could be used to test on Linux 4.10.x?
Maybe not really straightforward, but reading cb12420 (Update NEWS for 1.6.20.2) one could in theory find out that the only change for Linux 4.10 is gerrit 12530 and thus commit 34321f7 . Sorry we're late - it's largely my fault. We'll hopefully release 1.6.20.2 this week, and hopefully it will even support Linux 4.11. - Stephan > I know > running Fedora comes with the risk that the kernel gets ahead of out-of-tree > modules, and that the volunteers keeping OpenAFS alive prefer to release > tested > software. So I get that there are times like now when the choice is between > running older kernels or pre-release (or not-yet-written) code. But this is a > personal desktop, not a production service machine, so thin ice is an > acceptable > choice. Besides, if I can help out with some testing I'm glad to do that. > > Having said all that, and having crawled around the repo with my novice level > git foo, I have not found anything like, "Those willing to crash and burn with > the latest kernels could try this, this, and that." I'm willing, but > insufficiently en-clued. > > Thanks. -- Stephan Wiesand DESY -DV- Platanenallee 6 15738 Zeuthen, Germany _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-devel
