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Kexec

Main Topics Index

Issue #319, Section #1 (28 Aug 2005: Status Of -mm Tree Merging Into 2.6.13)
Issue #314, Section #1 (8 Jun 2005: Linux 2.6.12-rc5-mm1 Released)
Issue #298, Section #1 (6 Mar 2005: kexec And crashdump)
Issue #296, Section #4 (12 Feb 2005: Linux 2.6.11-rc1-mm2 Released)
Issue #283, Section #5 (6 Nov 2004: Linux 2.6.9-mm1 Released)
Issue #281, Section #1 (30 Oct 2004: Linux 2.6.9-rc2-mm2 Released; Various Config Options Break ia64 In Various Kernels)
Issue #277, Section #4 (17 Oct 2004: Linux 2.6.9-rc1-mm3 Released)
Issue #275, Section #12 (2 Oct 2004: Linux 2.6.8.1-mm4 Released; Andrew Describes Some Patch Submission Policy)
Issue #273, Section #2 (6 Sep 2004: New DumpFS API For RAS Components)
Issue #270, Section #11 (7 Aug 2004: kexec Update For 2.6 x86 And PowerPC)
Issue #264, Section #26 (25 Jun 2004: Linux 2.6.7-rc1-mm1 Released)
Issue #261, Section #14 (9 Jun 2004: kexec Updates For 2.6.4 And 2.6.5)
Issue #251, Section #35 (9 Feb 2004: Cooperative Linux: Running Linux Under Windows And Other Systems)
Issue #250, Section #12 (4 Feb 2004: kexec Updated For 2.6.1)
Issue #244, Section #9 (8 Dec 2003: kexec Updated For 2.6)
Issue #237, Section #4 (26 Oct 2003: Status Of kexec)
Issue #228, Section #1 (17 Aug 2003: Kernel 2.6 Size Increase Troubling For Embedded Developers)
Issue #222, Section #13 (10 Jul 2003: kexec For 2.5.74 Released)
Issue #221, Section #5 (30 Jun 2003: kexec For 2.5.72 Released)
Issue #215, Section #17 (9 May 2003: Speeding Up Boot-Time)
Issue #209, Section #4 (16 Mar 2003: Kernel Boot Speed)
Issue #208, Section #5 (7 Mar 2003: kexec Updates Ready For 2.5)
Issue #195, Section #21 (9 Dec 2002: kexec-tools 1.8 Released)
Issue #193, Section #4 (25 Nov 2002: Status Of Module Support In 2.5)
Issue #190, Section #8 (28 Oct 2002: kexec Update For 2.5)
Issue #190, Section #21 (28 Oct 2002: Preparing For Final Merge Before 2.5 Feature Freeze)
Issue #153, Section #10 (11 Feb 2002: Booting Multiple OSes From Linux)

 

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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.