Civil Infrastructure Platform to maintain 6.1 for 10 years: https://lwn.net/Articles/947606/
There are still things I don't understand, like how this is an official LF project, yet the SLTS kernels are not official stable (kernel.org) kernels. And Greg KH who maintains those official stable kernels is also working for LF and simultaneously completely against what CIP is doing: https://lore.kernel.org/all/Yvo2TnrUGoLKEY+v@kroah.com/ ๐คจ
Good questions. :-D
Let me try a bite at one of those aspects:
> are not official stable (kernel.org) kernels
Wild guess: because SLTS doesn't follow the rules outlined in Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst?
@krzk No, that's not surprising. I just think it sends a confusing message to downstream stable/LTS users.
@krzk The CIP press release clearly states that it's from LF (with an LF logo, LF media contact, etc.) and Greg KH also uses his LF email address for all the stable work.
In the past, CIP wanted to continue using the stable tag format and it got NAKed: https://lore.kernel.org/all/Yg8%2FvxWzcc%2Fetxp+@kroah.com/
I personally find it a little confusing.
I'd maybe suggest that CIP have its own section on https://kernel.org/category/releases.html to clarify its status (especially with respect to LTS/stable).
@krzk Both are apparently working for or sponsored in some way by LF... yet you say LF is not involved. That seems contradictory to me.
I do understand that the projects are separate (and with slightly different goals). It's not entirely clear to me WHY they should be separate efforts. I'd have liked to see an open discussion of the rationale to keep the projects separate and pros/cons of tighter collaboration. Maybe that exists and I just haven't seen it, though.
@krzk It's really not obvious to me why this is or why it has to be this way. Maybe it's just me though ๐