At Wed, 09 Nov 2005 04:45:32 +0100, Sergio Lopez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > El mié, 09-11-2005 a las 02:00 +0100, Marcus Brinkmann escribió: > > Of course, I don't speak for Roland or Thomas. But as far as I know, > > the direction of the Hurd has not changed at all. The Hurd-on-L4 > > efforts are an evaluation of a new design. Until such a design > > emerges as a viable alternative, there is nothing to decide. > > That's the point. Until that evaluation reaches something concrete and > _feasible_, I don't see the need to stop Mach/Hurd development, IMHO > both projects can work and follow its own way.
I fully agree with that. > In fact, I would like to > encourage all people to restart working ("working" means coding, but > also testing and discussing about design issues) again on GNU Mach/GNU > Hurd to make the final effort that it needs to become a production > system (the GNU System). I have a problem with such a strong statement. The implicit promise you make is that there is some certain amount of work that needs to be done, the "final effort", to make the GNU Hurd on Mach a production system. I have a lot of elaborative technical arguments why I think that the story is not so simple. This is however not the place to present them. Instead, it should suffice for me to say the following: I have promised to people before that there is just a relatively small effort necessary to make the GNU/Hurd on Mach become a production system. I have broken this promise by failing to show how this can be done, and likely disappointed a lot of people. This past experience of mine may or may not make you careful about what can be achieved with how much effort. Of course, if you have a good road map how to bring GNU Hurd on Mach to production, I hope you are successful! Alternatively, it may be useful to set the goal a bit lower. There are various ways to improve the GNU Hurd on Mach gradually, by fixing some bugs, or optimizing some paths. Even some architectural changes are possible without too much effort. Such smaller changes would be very interesting, because they give an immediate benefit to the community, and also can some guidance to any redesign effort. Thanks, Marcus _______________________________________________ Bug-hurd mailing list Bug-hurd@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-hurd