Re: [PATCH for mm] Remove iBCS support

From: David Newall
Date: Thu Jan 24 2008 - 21:14:31 EST


Adrian Bunk wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 25, 2008 at 04:25:24AM +1030, David Newall wrote:
>
>> The performance benefit is trivial, and the improvement to
>> maintainability is even less.
>>
>
> The effects become bigger when you realize that there are many such
> places in the kernel.
>
> And the benefit of keeping it is zero.
>

The benefit is not zero. Repeating myself: While the code is there, it
encourages either removal or repair. If the option to remove is taken
off the table then it will eventually be repaired.

> What you are doing is not contributing but wasting other people's time.
>
You want to remove the code so you attack me. Sadly for you, your
personal taste is irrelevant to the benefit that I bring. What kind of
a person considers robust debate to be a waste of time? A bit
pathetic, sadly.

> The only thing you could ever achieve with this kind of "contribution"
> is to end up in some killfiles.
>

I'm comfortable with that. I'm also comfortable that consensus might go
against me. This childish threat of kill-files is not going to stop me.

>>>> At one stage iBCS2 support DID work. Now it doesn't. Now there's an
>>>> argument that the remaining infrastructure should be removed. This is
>>>> the wrong direction to take.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> When did iBCS2 support work in a plain ftp.kernel.org kernel?
>>>
>>>
>> I don't know when. Are you disputing that it ever did? I think it's a
>> given that once it worked.
>>
>
> AFAIK the kernel never shipped with iBCS2 support.
>

Are you claiming that it never did? Is that even important? Clearly
there was support for it in the mainline kernel. Anecdotally the
support worked.

...
> The point is that ideas do not turn themselves into code.
>
This discussion is about removing code. That's a bit like tearing down
the pergola because the vine has shrivelled. Easy to do, but
counter-productive. LIkewise, removing iBCS2 code would be
unproductive. It would achieve no benefit, whilst simultaneously
leading Linux in the wrong direction. This is a point you have
consistently failed to address.

> And there are far too many people who want to see their great ideas
> implemented without implementing it themselves.
>
This is not about a great idea. It's about a pointless idea. Even
allowing what you say to be true, and it probably is, there is nothing
wrong with somebody having a great idea and leaving it to others to
implement. If the only people allowed to have great ideas were those
who could implement them then the world would be a much poorer place.
You demonstrate a twisted view of value.

> Talking about a feature without having anyone willing to implement it
> simply has no value.

Who said nobody is willing to implement it? We've all recently learned
that there is a patch. From there to implementation is much closer than
you or I thought last week. So already this discussion has prompted
tangible benefit.
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