Re: Are we going too fast?

Brian (hiryuu@envisiongames.net)
Mon, 13 Aug 2001 04:52:21 -0400


4:30am here. I'm sure it won't seem quite as diplomatic in the morning.

Back on 2.2, up until ~.12 or so, I could hang an Intel NIC in a day and a
half. A 3Com or a tulip held out for three. Considering I run web
servers and kinda needed network access, that was a problem. I actually
had a burn of FreeBSD sitting on my desk when the bugs finally got swashed.

Around that time, I was in IRC with a couple of *BSDers. One commented
that Linux's eagarness to support anything and everything is exactly what
made Windows the Swiss cheese we know today. I laughed it off at the
time, but it rang brutally true this evening.

I rolled our 2.4.7-based web server back to 2.2.19 tonight. As if I
needed further convincing, 2.4.7 apparently panicked on its way out (I was
logged in from remote, but the symptoms are all too familiar). That
leaves our squid servers as the only 2.4-based servers left; they all run
test12 since the 'stable' 2.4s didn't do very well at the time (of course,
they've been up for 67-140 days, so that may not be the case anymore).

This is about what my situation was when 2.3 branched off. I can't say I
care for it, but at least there's precedent that the wrinkles may iron out.
-- Brian

On Monday 13 August 2001 03:43 am, PinkFreud wrote:
> Please CC me in any replies, I am not subscribed to this list.
>
> Please forgive me if I seem incoherent. It's after 3:30 AM here.
>
>
> I have installed various 2.4.x kernels on 3 seperate systems here.
> *ALL* of them have suffered from one malady or another - from the dual
> PIII with the VIA chipset and Matrox G400 card, which locks up nicely
> when I switch from X to a text console and back to X (but NOT under a
> uniprocessor kernel!), to the system with the NCR 53c810 SCSI board,
> which suffered random kernel panics anywhere from 2 hours to 5 days
> after booting, due to the ncr53c8xx driver, to YET ANOTHER system which
> has shown a penchant for crashing (read: no response on console, can use
> magic sysrq, but fails to emergency sync) when attempting to use 'ls' on
> a mounted QNX filesystem (ls comes up fine, then system crashes -
> nothing sent to syslog, no errors on screen, nothing!) - and this latest
> is with 2.4.8!
>
> I've used Linux for over 5 years now. In all the time I've used it, I
> have never seen this much instability in a single kernel
> series - though I've noticed each successive 'stable' series having
> more bugs than the last (2.2.x crashed once a week with SMP
> until 2.2.10!). Furthermore, I have had a HELL of a time trying
> to get responses to the first two problems (this is the first report for
> the third). It used to be that I could ask a question on this list, and
> receive responses. Not anymore. I can't seem to get the time of day
> from anyone on this list now.
>
> This brings me to the subject of this rant: are we going too fast? New
> drivers are still showing up in each successive kernel, and yet no one
> seems to be able to fix the old bugs that already exist. Are we looking
> to have the reliability of Windows? It's starting to seem so - each
> successive kernel series just seems to crash more and more often. When
> will we reach the point where Windows, on the average, will have greater
> uptime than Linux systems? Perhaps it's time to slow down, and do some
> debugging.
>
> This is supposed to be a 'stable' kernel series? I see nothing stable
> about it.
>
> Should development continue on the latest and supposedly greatest
> drivers? Or should the existing bugs be fixed first? I've got at least
> three up there that need taking care of, and I'm sure others on this
> list have found more. 3 seperate crashes on 3 seperate installs on 3
> seperate boxes - that's 100% failure rate. If I get 100% failure on my
> installs, what are others seeing?
>
> To those of you who would tell me to fix them myself: I am an
> administrator. I know Perl. I am not all that familiar with C, nor
> with kernel programming. They're not my bugs, but I would fix them if I
> were able to. I'd hope the authors of said bugs would be willing to fix
> them - but given the track record I've seen for the first two problems,
> I'm not holding my breath for the third to be fixed any time soon.
>
> I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm going to give up soon and
> switch to NetBSD. I've already done it on the system with the NCR
> 53c810 board - and it's proven to be far more stable than 2.4.x kernels
> have ever managed to be on it. What does that say?
>
> sauron@rivendell:~$ uptime
> 3:17AM up 12 days, 15:20, 2 users, load averages: 1.48, 0.66, 0.31
> sauron@rivendell:~$ uname -a
> NetBSD rivendell 1.5.1 NetBSD 1.5.1 (RIVENDELL) #0: Tue Jul 31 22:58:54
> EDT 2001 root@rivendell:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/RIVENDELL
> i386 sauron@rivendell:~$ dmesg | grep -i sym
> siop0 at pci0 dev 6 function 0: Symbios Logic 53c810 (fast scsi)
>
> (The controller is old - it was made by NCR before it became Symbios
> Logic - hence, why I was using the NCR driver for it, rather than the
> Symbios driver, in Linux.)
>
> Working on 13 days uptime. That's well over twice the uptime for Linux
> on that box. That's what happens when the kernel has bugs.
>
> Take this rant for what you will. Personally, I switched from Windows
> to Linux 5 years ago for the stability. If I need to switch OSs again
> to continue to have stability, I will. Somehow, I suspect, if kernel
> development continues down this path, many others will wind up switching
> to other OSs as well.
>
> I like Linux. I'd like to stick with it. But if it's going to
> continually crash, I'm going to jump ship - and I'll start recommending
> to others that they do the same.
>
>
> Mike Edwards
>
> Brainbench certified Master Linux Administrator
> http://www.brainbench.com/transcript.jsp?pid=158188
> -----------------------------------
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