On Feb 17, 2011, at 4:57 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
In message <20110217203639.GA3702@mara.org>, Steve Meuse writes:
George Bonser expunged (gbonser@seven.com):
Considering the amount of linux-based CPE and other network hardware out there (including some Cisco gear), the extent to which it might be usable today could be surprising.
An how many of those embedded linux devices are running a 2.4 kernel? Just lo ok at xx-wrt as an example. If you have a certain chipset, 2.4 is your only o ption.
And the work to patch that kernel is minimal if it doesn't already support it. It would take less time to fix the kernel than to argue over whether to fix it.
-Steve -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka@isc.org
But way way way more time to deploy the patched kernel than to forklift the devices with IPv6 capable ones which don't require patching the kernel, either. The kernel patch is, at best, an expensive stop gap. At worst, it is a counter productive waste of time. At best it's slightly short of break-even. At worst, it's a huge $negative. Owen