Arima and Iwill have mobos with IB LOM (Landed on Motherboard).
Glen
On Mar 2, 2005, at 9:30 AM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Speaking of InfiniBand, I presume there are still no motherboards with
IB
ports onboard?
http://www.internetnews.com/dev-news/article.php/3485401
February 24, 2005
Linux Kernel 2.6.11 Supports InfiniBand
By Sean Michael Kerner
The Linux world is bracing for the final release of the new Linux
2.6.11
kernel, which will include a long list of driver updates and patches,
with
InfiniBand support perhaps being one of most interesting new additions.
Late last night, Linux creator Linus Torvalds issued the fifth release
candidate for the 2.6.11 kernel. The first 2.6.11 RC was issued on
Jan. 12;
the second on Jan 21; the third on Feb. 2; and the fourth on Feb. 12.
In the RC5 posting, Torvalds indicated that it was likely the last RC
before
the final release.
"Hey, I hoped -- rc4 was the last one, but we had some laptop resource
conflicts, various ppc TLB flush issues, some possible stack overflows
in
networking and a number of other details warranting a quick -- rc5
before the
final 2.6.11," Torvalds wrote.
"This time it's really supposed to be a quickie, so people who can,
please
check it out, and we'll make the real 2.6.11 asap."
The long list of updates in the 2.6.11 kernel includes architecture
updates
for x86-64, ia64, ppc, arm and mips, as well as updates to ACPI
(define), DRI
(Direct Rendering Infrastructure, which permits direct access to
graphics
hardware for X Window System users), ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound
Architecture,
which provides MIDI and audio functionality to the Linux), SCSI
(define) and
the XFS high-performance journaling filesystem.
The 2.6.11 kernel will also be significant in that it includes driver
support
for the InfiniBand (define) interconnect architecture. InfiniBand,
which is
derived from its underlying concept of "infinite bandwidth," is a
switched
fabric interconnect technology for high-performance network devices
that is
common in a number of supercomputer clusters.
The upcoming inclusion of InfiniBand support in the Linux kernel is a
major
step according to the InfiniBand Trade Association.
"The inclusion of InfiniBand drivers in the upstream Linux kernel is a
significant milestone," Ross Schibler, CTO of InfiniBand vendor Topspin
Communications, told internetnews.com.
InfiniBand support was available previously in various Linux
distributions,
but it wasn't part of the mainstream kernel.org Linux.
"This now means that anyone that downloads a kernel will have automatic
access to the software," explained Schibler. "It also means that any
upcoming
distributions (Red Hat, SUSE, etc.) will have the software included on
their
CDs. Previously SUSE had it on a distribution, but only in the
'unsupported'
directory."
Schibler sees the inclusion of InfiniBand as a testament to the
maturation of
the technology.
"Now that the technology has matured to such a point that Linus has
accepted
it into the kernel, the way is paved for greater distribution of the
code and
accelerated deployment of the technology," Schibler said.
The previous Linux kernel.org release, version 2.6.10 was issued on
Dec. 24
after two release candidates. Linux distribution began including the
2.6.10
thereafter with Red Hat's Fedora Project being one of the first.
Fedora Core 3 initially shipped with the 2.6.9 kernel and then
upgraded to
the 2.6.10 kernel on Jan 13. Mandrakelinux's 10.2 Beta 3 also includes
the
2.6.10 release. SUSE Linux 9.2 currently includes the 2.6.8 kernel.
Including the most recent kernel into a distribution is not a
particularly
easy task. The upcoming Debian, code-named Sarge, will only ship with
the
2.6.8 kernel. In a release update e-mail, Debian Sarge release manager
Andreas Barth related that a meeting was recently held to review the
status
of which kernel they would include.
"The team leads involved eventually decided to stay with kernel 2.6.8
and
2.4.27, rather than bumping the 2.6 kernel to 2.6.10," Barth wrote.
"This
decision was made upon review of the known bugs in each of the 2.6
kernel
versions; despite some significant bugs in the Debian 2.6.8 kernel
tree,
these bugs were weighed against the additional delays that a kernel
version
bump would introduce in the schedule for debian-installer RC3."
"As it happens, preparing 2.4 and 2.6 kernels with the security fixes
for all
architectures took roughly two months from start to finish, during
which time
preparation of the next debian-installer release candidate has been
entirely
stalled," he added.
--
Eugen* Leitl <leitl<
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1B1B,1D1D,2626Glen Otero Ph.D.
Linux Prophet