David G. Miller wrote:
John Summerfield debian@herakles.homelinux.org wrote:
David G. Miller wrote:
It wouldn't surprise me if NTFS was encumbered by some sort of
Micro$oft > intellectual property claim. This would be sufficient to cause Red Hat > to not build their kernel with it even if all it takes to make it work > is to enable the feature in the kernel build.
Debian's as paranoid as anyone, but it ships NTFS.
Additionally, I've never heard any claims regarding HPFS, and as I came to Linux from OS/2, I think I'd remember such. And, RH has never, to my recollection, shipped HPFS either.
See one of the many flame wars over MP3 or some other IP
encumbered > technology as to why RH won't include it (and risk getting sued).
Cheers,
Dave
I vaguely recall that IBM wanted to open source HPFS at one time and was told by Microsquish that they wouldn't allow it. Funny that IBM went one better and open sourced JFS instead. I'm in kind of the same boat as you since I was an OS/2 user before I switched to Linux. I think the HPFS information was from a discussion as to why IBM couldn't open source OS/2 as a means of continuing support. Remember, we're talking about the same Microsquish that has attempted to patent the FAT file system. I'd be very surprised if NTFS wasn't IP encumbered. Debian tends to be very paranoid as to technical features and stability but they don't have the financial exposure that Red Hat has when it comes to infringing IP.
Cheers, Dave
Could it be that Red Hat doesn't enable NTFS in their kernels because they simply don't want to support NTFS?
-Greg