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Linux gains new architecture support
Mar. 26, 2008

Dozens of network-attached storage (NAS) servers and other consumer appliances are about to gain mainline kernel and Debian GNU/Linux support. The 2.6.25 kernel, currently in the final stages of testing, will support Marvell's Feroceon micro-architecture and "Orion" SoCs, with Debian support close behind, sources say.

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Yesterday, Linus Torvalds launched release candidate 7 (rc7) for the 2.6.25 kernel, commenting, "Give it a good testing, because we're hopefully now well on our way towards that eventual real 2.6.25 release!" The comment suggests the newest kernel could well launch this week.

The kernel will include patches from the Orion git tree maintained by Nicolas Pitre and Lennert Buytenhek. The two notable ARM Linux hackers were hired by Marvell to add mainline Orion support, according to Martin Michlmayr, an HP engineer who led the Debian project for several years.

After 2.6.25 ships, Debian support will not be far behind, Michlmayr suggested, commenting, "Debian support is mostly waiting for the 2.6.25 kernel release; most of the basic support will be done in time 2.6.25 is out."

Debian support should make it much easier for hobbyists, experimenters, and developers to install Linux on Orion-based devices, including lots of network-attached storage appliances that run Linux, as well as wired and wireless networking equipment and other consumer devices based on other OSes. It should also make the devices easier to maintain, down the road, when commercial support ends.

Learn more about the Feroceon micro-architecture, Orion SoCs, and the many, many NAS devices based on them by reading the full story at LinuxDevices.com, here.



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