Techrights

Linux is Released Too Often, Tested Insufficiently (Same as Chromium, Firefox, and Systemd)

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on May 12, 2024,

updated May 12, 2024

Microsoft Has Lost Malta
In Asia, Baidu Has Become Bigger Than Bing and Yandex is Getting There Too

Driven by schedule, not quality (objective criterion)

Linux 6.9.1; Close enough. Release!

THE new release (6.9) of Linux is now (finally!) officially announced. Expect a follow-up release in days or weeks to come (Linux 6.9.1). Linus Torvalds already speaks of known issues*. We keep track of media coverage about it in the sister site.

↺ HTTPS: new release
↺ HTTPS: now (finally!) officially announced
↺ HTTP: media coverage about it

Quality control when I was a young developer meant that new software releases were rare but thoroughly tested. Before Internet connections were widespread you couldn't just dump some defective program and then update/fix it "on the go" (over the Internet). A lot of that has changed, leaving users with worse quality of programs, often shipped with many known bugs.

One motivating factor here isn't even remotely connected to innovation. It's about making any forks a lot harder to maintain (far more work involved). █

HTTPS: █

_____

Linux 6.9

↺ HTTPS: Linux 6.9
So Thorsten is still reporting a few regression fixes that haven't

made it to me yet, but none of them look big or worrisome enough to

delay the release for another week. We'll have to backport them when

they get resolved and hit upstream.

So 6.9 is now out, and last week has looked quite stable (and the

whole release has felt pretty normal). Below is the shortlog for the

last week, with the changes mostly being dominated by some driver

updates (gpu and networking being the big ones, but "big" is still

pretty small, and there's various other driver noise in there too).

Outside of drivers, it's some filesystem fixes (bcachefs still stands

out, but ksmbd shows up too), some late selftest fixes, and some core

networking fixes.

And I now have a more powerful arm64 machine (thanks to Ampere), so

the last week I've been doing almost as many arm64 builds as I have

x86-64, and that should obviously continue during the upcoming merge

window too. The M2 laptop I have has been more of a "test builds

weekly" rather than "continuously".

Not that I really expect that to really show any issues - the laptop

builds never did - but I feel happier having a bit more coverage.

Anyway, please keep testing, and obviously this means that tomorrow

the merge window for 6.10 opens. I already have a few dozen pull

requests pending, I appreciate the early birds,

Linus

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