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Ulrich Drepper

Main Quotes Index

Issue #237, Section #1 (26�Oct�2003:�Linux 2.6.0-test6 Released)
Issue #224, Section #4 (30�Jul�2003:�Expected Changes From 2.4 To 2.6)
Issue #224, Section #6 (30�Jul�2003:�File-Time System Calls; Status Of ReiserFS)
Issue #219, Section #1 (16�Jun�2003:�Futex Updates; Backward Compatibility Policy)
Issue #217, Section #9 (23�May�2003:�Linux Test Project 20030508)
Issue #214, Section #4 (28�Apr�2003:�New flink() System Call Shot Down)
Issue #214, Section #12 (28�Apr�2003:�Unwinding vsyscall Code)
Issue #213, Section #1 (13�Apr�2003:�Framebuffer Fixes; Header File Reorganization)
Issue #202, Section #9 (24�Jan�2003:�Support For 'Pending Break Enable' Bit In CPUID Processor Info)
Issue #199, Section #1 (6�Jan�2003:�System Call Handling; Feature Freeze; Code Freeze; BitKeeper Flames)
Issue #199, Section #7 (6�Jan�2003:�Adding sysenter Support To glibc)
Issue #190, Section #9 (28�Oct�2002:�Thread-Aware Coredumps In 2.5)
Issue #189, Section #2 (20�Oct�2002:�BitKeeper Licensing Discussion)
Issue #188, Section #9 (13�Oct�2002:�Native POSIX Thread Library 0.2 Released)
Issue #187, Section #3 (6�Oct�2002:�Native POSIX Thread Library 0.1 Achieves 100,000 Concurrent Threads)
Issue #127, Section #2 (23�Jul�2001:�Adding a HZ entry to /proc/sys/kernel)
Issue #114, Section #1 (16�Apr�2001:�64-Bit Major/Minor Device Numbers And PID Allocations)
Issue #86, Section #7 (25�Sep�2000:�Threading: The Saga Continues)
Issue #84, Section #1 (11�Sep�2000:�Posix Threads (pthreads) In Linux)
Issue #80, Section #4 (14�Aug�2000:�Symlinks In The Kernel; Kernel/Library/etc Interface Dispute)
Issue #73, Section #6 (26�Jun�2000:�Some Debate Over POSIX And Symlinks)
Issue #65, Section #4 (1�May�2000:�Unexplained Memory Overuse In Development Kernels)
Issue #62, Section #4 (10�Apr�2000:�POSIX Threads; Philosophy Of Kernel Development)

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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.