On 2/16/2008 12:16 PM, Alan Stern wrote:(I did not expect to receive any significant response to this part of the message, and any discussion ensuing from it is unquestionably offtopic for the kernel mailing lists. I will respond here for the moment rather than sending a separate, private mail, but I am more than willing to take further responses on this topic offlist or drop the subject entirely as soon as that is requested.) This is indeed why I did not see any way to avoid it in this instance. However, that has no bearing on the question of whether or not it is correct or appropriate to do so, only whether or not it is avoidable. I disagree. (For that matter, I am not in fact getting two copies; in fact, I am not receiving through the list either messages which I send to the list or messages which are sent both to the list and to me. Whether this is the list's fault or Gmail's I don't know, though I suspect the former - but it is very irritating, because it means that I do not see this thread on the mailing list itself and have to carry on list-related discussion from my Inbox.) I keep complete archives of everything I receive except for spam and (in some cases) duplicates. Deleting received mail is a highly unpalatable option, and in any case the ability to delete it is not the point; the important question is whether it should have been there to begin with. When I receive a message sent directly to me in a discussion which is on a list, I expect that it is because someone either considered it important enough to warrant making certain it came to my attention specifically, or wanted to continue the discussion but felt that it should not continue to take place on the mailing list. On the matter of quoting correctly and snipping correctly, you are preaching to the choir where I am concerned. My standards for how much context to leave in before beginning to snip are perhaps a bit looser than those of some people (I leave up to three levels of quote in total unless more is strictly necessary, since I find that fewer than that frequently does not provide enough context if one does not have the discussion in recent memory), but in principle I agree with you completely. In my current testing kernel, which I believe is the one with which I captured the sole successful non-2.6.23.1 dmesg so far, CONFIG_USB_DEBUG is on. The associated dmesg (obtained yesterday from booting with the Flash drive connected) is attached. (The flood of 'no version magic, tainting kernel' messages between line 600 and line 1160 are a side effect of Novell's custom environment which I have not yet made the effort to fix; the boot scripts attempt to detect the network card by modprobing every network driver available until they find one which works. Here, because the correct one fails, they wind up trying each one twice.) I have transcribed the contents of /proc/interrupts both before and after plugging in the Flash drive I have been using for testing, and they are also attached. I have been as careful as I could to be sure that the contents of the attached 'r61-interrupts-[12].txt' files is the same as what was shown on the laptop, but cannot absolutely guarantee that I have not missed something. For the record, the '1' is from before connecting the drive, and the '2' is from after. I did try booting again with the Flash drive attached, in hopes of being able to mount it and dump the contents of /proc/interrupts there to obtain them with guaranteed accuracy, but it was not recognized after being disconnected and reconnected again. That would require me to learn enough of how git works, as distinct from more traditional VCSes, to be able to use it with some confidence. This is not impossible - indeed I want to do it at some point - but for the time being I have no idea where to start, and indeed I am not especially clear on exactly what (from a user's perspective) the differences been git and e.g. CVS or Subversion are. I know that the entire concept relies around a lack of centralization, but I have not been able to get my head around what that means in a practical sense. -- Andrew Buehler
| Christoph Lameter | Re: [RFC 00/15] x86_64: Optimize percpu accesses |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: [Patch v2] Make PCI extended config space (MMCONFIG) a driver opt-in |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 005/196] Chinese: add translation of SubmittingDrivers |
| Bart Van Assche | Integration of SCST in the mainstream Linux kernel |
git: | |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| David Miller | Re: [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Christoph Hellwig | Re: [PATCH 06/32] IGET: Mark iget() and read_inode() as being obsolete [try #2] |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 26/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 1 (socket set... |
