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Re: [Xen-devel] Time Change Issue Xen 4.1
I wasn't expecting anyone to speed up and fix the issue, I just
hoped that one or more of
people who were involved in the original ticket could respond to a
request for an update,
I only asked for an update about once a week, even with busy
schedules I would have
thought that that was possible.
I would look into the problem myself, but kernel hacking and
hardcore XEN development is
not my thing, I did not intend to put anyone's back up about the
issue. I'd love to fix the
problem myself, and am quite willing to test and debug stuff.
For reference the issue is not a massive deal-breaker for me, but it
will be when the hardware
clock drifts next, particularly on the production machines which may
have up to 100 instances
on, it becomes a massive ball-ache to down the server and reboot it
just to get the instances to
boot with the correct time.
Niall Fleming BSc. (Hons)
Systems Administrator
Webanywhere Limited
Phone: 0800 862 0131 Ext: 203
Web: http://www.webanywhere.co.uk
Aire Valley Business Centre, Lawkholme Lane, Keighley, BD21 3BB
Registered in England with company number 4881346
On 01/12/2011 10:28, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
Hello
Niall,
On 12/01/11 10:53, Ian Campbell wrote:
On Thu, 2011-12-01 at 08:55 +0000, Niall
Fleming wrote:
Cheers, at least I know that someone is
still looking at it!
If someone could give me a general timeframe, like it'll be a
month,
before we fix it, or two weeks or whatever, I just need to
give my
line manager something so he gets off my case about it!
I'm afraid OSS software doesn't generally work like that. If you
(or
your boss) wants something fixed on a specific time scale or
priority
you'll have to role your sleeves up and scratch the itch.
Otherwise I'm
sorry but you will just have to wait until someone has the
cycles to
look into this issue.
I shouldn't comment on this, because
- it'll be off-topic, and
- (more importantly) personally I'm not knowledgeable enough to
fix the problem,
but I feel compelled to point out that *in general* it's not about
the various rights accompanying the bits (ie. proprietary / open
source / free software). It's about who gets to allocate whose
resources. Under this aspect it's irrelevant under what rights the
end product will be released, the question is instead who backs
the effort & costs of the end product being hammered into
existence.
Users of FLOSS tend to mix up these two things ("what rights do I
have to the code?" vs. "work on this for my sake!"). For the
second concept, commercial relationships are (and have always
been) the default, even if extremely forthcoming FLOSS developers
used to evoke a different impression.
(To make it abundantly clear, this is not an advertisment, and I'm
speaking *strictly* personally, for myself alone.)
Laszlo
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