Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.announce Path: gmd.de!nntp.gmd.de!xlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu! jussieu.fr!univ-lyon1.fr!ghost.dsi.unimi.it!batcomputer!cornell!bounce-bounce From: Alan Cox <iii...@pyr.swan.ac.uk> Subject: Confusion about NET1, NET2, and NET3 Message-ID: <ann-8651.769136216@cs.cornell.edu> Followup-To: comp.os.linux.misc Keywords: NET2, TCP/IP Sender: m...@cs.cornell.edu (Matt Welsh) Reply-To: Alan Cox <iii...@pyr.swan.ac.uk> Organization: None Date: Tue, 17 May 1994 00:57:16 GMT Approved: linux-annou...@tc.cornell.edu (Matt Welsh) Lines: 32 I have had enough email from confused people about Fred van Kempens recent announcement. To clarify: Ross Biro wrote NET1 (0.97.5 - 0.99.9) and for various reasons passed on the job after having done the core work for Linux networking. Fred van Kempen wrote NET2D (0.99.10 - 0.99.13) - remember this far back anyone - in the days when only real men did networking 8). I got fed up with Fred's 'here soon' stuff about NET2E and fixed the networking bugs everyone was getting sick of (NET2Debugged) and Linus chose to use that for the 0.99.14->1.1.5 kernels NET3 is adding the stuff I wanted to put in NET2Debugged but held back because Fred was still desperately trying to deliver some decent code and merge in my changes before 1.0. Just prior to 1.0 Fred basically said 'If NET2E isnt in 1.0 then I quit developing' - which he hasn't. NET2E is Fred's alternative networking set. Its not part of the kernel standard its not compatible with many binaries, it doesn't work with DOSEMU, it doesn't have a proper SOCK_PACKET interface and its got plenty of bugs. Contrary to what a few people have been mislead into thinking (through nobody's fault I can see), its not the next networking code, its nothing to do with the standard Linux kernel networking (and as I understand it never will be (*)) and its _NOTHING_ to do with me. Alan (*) Ask Linus if you want that definitively answered -- Mail submissions for comp.os.linux.announce to: linux-annou...@tc.cornell.edu Be sure to include Keywords: and a short description of your software.