Ubuntu Is Planning To Make The ZFS File-System A "Standard" Offering Written by Michael Larabel in Ubuntu on 6 October 2015 at 03:40 PM EDT. 44 Comments While the ZFS file-system isn't supported by the mainline Linux kernel due to the Oracle-owned file-system being under the GPL-incompatible CDDL license, Canonical is making plans to offer ZFS on Ubuntu in some standard way. Through the wonderful
Linux 4.3-rc4 Kernel Released: Adds A New & Better String Copy Function Written by Michael Larabel in Linux Kernel on 4 October 2015 at 12:46 PM EDT. 8 Comments Linus Torvalds has tagged the Linux 4.3-rc4 kernel a few minutes ago in Git. Besides bug-fixing, this new kernel update adds a post-merge-window feature of a new and more secure string copy function for developers to utilize in the future.
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Doing Fedora Snapshots/Rollbacks With Btrfs & Snapper Written by Michael Larabel in Fedora on 20 July 2015 at 12:55 PM EDT. 6 Comments All the way back to Fedora 13 has been work on supporting Btrfs system snapshots / rollbacks using this Linux next-generation file-system's CoW snapshot abilities. Those abilities were tied into a Yum plug-in for making a Btrfs snapshot whenever a Yum transaction w
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BFQ Is One Step Closer To Being Merged Into The Linux Kernel Written by Michael Larabel in Linux Kernel on 8 June 2015 at 08:04 AM EDT. 18 Comments For years the BFQ I/O scheduler has been trying to get in the mainline kernel and it looks like they have an action plan for getting accepted upstream. BFQ is a proportional-share I/O scheduler that shares a lot of code with the CFQ scheduler. The Comp
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Linux Jailhouse Hypervisor 0.5 Adds x86_64 & ARMv7 Support Written by Michael Larabel in Linux Kernel on 11 May 2015 at 12:02 PM EDT. Add A Comment Back in 2013 the Jailhouse Hypervisor was announced as a partitioning hypervisor that's lighter-weight than KVM. Last year saw the release of Jailhouse 0.1 and finally coming out today is the next update: Jailhouse 0.5. In the many months since the pre
Show Your Support: This site is primarily supported by advertisements. Ads are what have allowed this site to be maintained on a daily basis for the past 19+ years. We do our best to ensure only clean, relevant ads are shown, when any nasty ads are detected, we work to remove them ASAP. If you would like to view the site without ads while still supporting our work, please consider our ad-free Phor
Show Your Support: Have you heard of Phoronix Premium? It's what complements advertisements on this site for our premium ad-free service. For less than $4 USD per month, you can help support our site while the funds generated allow us to keep doing Linux hardware reviews, performance benchmarking, maintain our community forums, and much more. Canonical Comes Up With Its Own FUSE Filesystem For Lin
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The Linux Kernel Now Explicitly Uses GNU89, Not Yet C11 Friendly Written by Michael Larabel in Linux Kernel on 16 November 2014 at 12:56 PM EST. 16 Comments While the Linux kernel is constantly improving, it cannot yet be built as C11 code. With this commit to mainline Linux git this weekend for Linux 3.18, the GNU89 C standard is now explicitly set. With GCC 5 that's presently under development,
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