About Driver Backport Workgroup
The Driver Backport workgroup creates distribution-independent means
to create, distribute, maintain and support backports of current
upstream drivers on the older kernels of Linux distributions.
The goal is to make Linux distributions run easily on anything that can run
Linux at the day it comes to market.
Why?
Most Linux users use a distribution, not Linux from scratch. If the
distro is older than the hardware, they hope to find a simple to use
update medium with "new drivers to get it working". They also
expect the system to continue to run after any system update, and
obviously also after system upgrades (to the next distribution
release).
So to keep distribution users happy, the distributors together with
the system and component vendors test each and every kernel and
driver update.
In the past, when the kernel and the drivers were distributed
together, that meant three alternatives for systems that need
drivers newer than what is on the distribution:
- pay the distributor to retest all older systems relying on the driver you need and get a driver update in the distro kernel
- wait for the next distro release (service pack, new release)
- build your own driver, somehow, unsupported by the distro. And fingers crossed it still works after kernel updates or distro upgrades...
In essence the one main hindrance of getting Linux widely supported
with distributions was the retesting effort of the "one kernel for
all" distribution model.
TBD
- Workgroup Charter
- Mailing List
- freenode:#driverbackports
- Running Agenda
- driver backport source management
- driver packaging and build
- driver distribution, installation and status check
Links to work-in-progress




