From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: valdis.kletnieks@vt.edu (valdis.kletnieks at vt.edu) Date: Fri, 06 Oct 2017 12:34:30 -0400 Subject: help in the MM Area of the Linux Kernel In-Reply-To: <1507220048.1800.7.camel@icloud.com> References: <1507220048.1800.7.camel@icloud.com> Message-ID: <5997.1507307670@turing-police.cc.vt.edu> To: kernelnewbies@lists.kernelnewbies.org List-Id: kernelnewbies.lists.kernelnewbies.org On Thu, 05 Oct 2017 18:14:08 +0200, Damian Tometzki said: > i'am intrested in helping and Bug Fixing in the mm area of the linux > kernel.? > > For driver development is it clear check in the staging area the > TODO's.? > > And what is the process for other areas of the kernel for example mm > (Memory management X86) ?? Rule 1 of kernel hacking: Not every mechanic gets to work on Formula 1 engines. For mm, you'll probably need to show some expertise in other kernel areas, *plus* have a deep understanding of memory management theory. That code has already been worked over by multiple professionals, which means pretty much all the easy stuff has already been done. Oh, and you're probably going to also need knowledge of the kernel instrumentation - perf, tracepoints, and friends. If you manage to find an actual bug in that code, it is most likely going to be some weird corner case, and *much* MM clue will be required to fix it without breaking some *other* more common corner case. Remember that the same code has to Do The Right Thing on everything from an embedded system with 32M of RAM and only one major process running, to large mainframe class boxes with a terabyte of RAM, a large Oracle instance, and several hundred Apache / Tomcat / etc processes flickering in and out of existence, to multi-terabyte systems running HPC (where the use of RDMA over Infiniband by things like MPI creates challenges due to a *lot* of locked pages...) Your best bet? Find a replicable corner case (this may require access to a variety of systems), create a test-case that can cause the corner case on demand. Figure out what the mm code is doing, and how it could do it better. Write a patch, test, and then double-check on other systems that you didn't cause a regression. Submit the patch. Good luck. :) -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 486 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/pipermail/kernelnewbies/attachments/20171006/0ce54c2d/attachment.bin