James Bottomley

Kernel Janitors Project

"In the early days, the project was conceived as a way of getting fresh blood into kernel development by giving them fairly simple but generally useful tasks and hoping they'd move more into the mainstream," began James Bottomley starting a thread titled Fixing the Kernel Janitors project. He continued, "if we wind forwards to 2008, there's considerable and rising friction being generated by janitorial patches,", references a recent thread complaining about worthless patches hitting the lkml. Later in the thread he added:
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SCSI Targets

"As you probably know there is a trend in enterprise computing towards networked storage. This is illustrated by the emergence during the past few years of standards like SRP (SCSI RDMA Protocol), iSCSI (Internet SCSI) and iSER (iSCSI Extensions for RDMA)," began Bart Van Assche, proposing that SCST be merged into the mainline kernel. He suggested that while similar to the STGT project which has been part of the mainline kernel since 2.6.20, "SCST is superior to STGT with respect to features, performance, maturity, stability, and number of existing target drivers. Unfortunately the SCST kernel code lives outside the kernel tree, which makes SCST harder to use than STGT." SCSI subsystem maintainer, James Bottomley, was not convinced, explaining:
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Tracking Merge Candidates

"Yes, I know ... another tree, just what everyone wants," quipped James Bottomley, announcing his new merge candidate (-mc) tree: "This one has a specific purpose: It's my tree tracking everyone else's git and quilt trees so I get early warning if there are going to be any merge issues. However, it struck me it might be useful to anyone wishing to track what's going upstream more closely."
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