Thanks for your thoughts, Bernardo.

I've lost and can't find the links any more, but I previously found
Alberto Milone was communicating with the kernel devs about the problem
where rcu_read_unlock_special is not useable, even though it is
apparently defined in the low latency symbol table. I actually hacked a
lot of the kernel source into my own bcmwl source, but this was my final
sticking point. Given that Alberto knows what he is doing and I'm just
feeling my way, anything I had to say would have just been duplication.

This is a wider issue than just broadcom's proprietary driver. I also
found someone with a similar problem compiling the ati video driver
under the low latency kernel. There was also someone blogging about "gpl
hell" and proprietary drivers.

I think most linux users (including me) are completely unaware of the
politics behind this issue. We bought our hardware and want to run linux
- why deny us that?

Do the linux devs want to drive us back to windoze???? Should I go back
to the 3.5 kernel, which happily co-exists with these drivers, and then
never upgrade? And anyway, what is so special about the low latency
kernel - the generic supports the latest bcmwl driver without a murmer
of disapproval! I don't think this is a case of a conspiracy, just "the
usual" c#*k up alternative theory.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1156138

Title:
  bcmwl-kernel-source fails to build on lowlatency kernel [FATAL:
  modpost: GPL-incompatible module wl.ko uses GPL-only symbol
  '__rcu_read_unlock']

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