feature-removal-schedule.txt 22 KB

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  1. The following is a list of files and features that are going to be
  2. removed in the kernel source tree. Every entry should contain what
  3. exactly is going away, why it is happening, and who is going to be doing
  4. the work. When the feature is removed from the kernel, it should also
  5. be removed from this file.
  6. ---------------------------
  7. What: PRISM54
  8. When: 2.6.34
  9. Why: prism54 FullMAC PCI / Cardbus devices used to be supported only by the
  10. prism54 wireless driver. After Intersil stopped selling these
  11. devices in preference for the newer more flexible SoftMAC devices
  12. a SoftMAC device driver was required and prism54 did not support
  13. them. The p54pci driver now exists and has been present in the kernel for
  14. a while. This driver supports both SoftMAC devices and FullMAC devices.
  15. The main difference between these devices was the amount of memory which
  16. could be used for the firmware. The SoftMAC devices support a smaller
  17. amount of memory. Because of this the SoftMAC firmware fits into FullMAC
  18. devices's memory. p54pci supports not only PCI / Cardbus but also USB
  19. and SPI. Since p54pci supports all devices prism54 supports
  20. you will have a conflict. I'm not quite sure how distributions are
  21. handling this conflict right now. prism54 was kept around due to
  22. claims users may experience issues when using the SoftMAC driver.
  23. Time has passed users have not reported issues. If you use prism54
  24. and for whatever reason you cannot use p54pci please let us know!
  25. E-mail us at: linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org
  26. For more information see the p54 wiki page:
  27. http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/p54
  28. Who: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com>
  29. ---------------------------
  30. What: AR9170USB
  31. When: 2.6.40
  32. Why: This driver is deprecated and the firmware is no longer
  33. maintained. The replacement driver "carl9170" has been
  34. around for a while, so the devices are still supported.
  35. Who: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com>
  36. ---------------------------
  37. What: IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM
  38. Check: IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM
  39. When: July 2009
  40. Why: Many of IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM users are technically bogus as entropy
  41. sources in the kernel's current entropy model. To resolve this, every
  42. input point to the kernel's entropy pool needs to better document the
  43. type of entropy source it actually is. This will be replaced with
  44. additional add_*_randomness functions in drivers/char/random.c
  45. Who: Robin Getz <rgetz@blackfin.uclinux.org> & Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
  46. ---------------------------
  47. What: Deprecated snapshot ioctls
  48. When: 2.6.36
  49. Why: The ioctls in kernel/power/user.c were marked as deprecated long time
  50. ago. Now they notify users about that so that they need to replace
  51. their userspace. After some more time, remove them completely.
  52. Who: Jiri Slaby <jirislaby@gmail.com>
  53. ---------------------------
  54. What: The ieee80211_regdom module parameter
  55. When: March 2010 / desktop catchup
  56. Why: This was inherited by the CONFIG_WIRELESS_OLD_REGULATORY code,
  57. and currently serves as an option for users to define an
  58. ISO / IEC 3166 alpha2 code for the country they are currently
  59. present in. Although there are userspace API replacements for this
  60. through nl80211 distributions haven't yet caught up with implementing
  61. decent alternatives through standard GUIs. Although available as an
  62. option through iw or wpa_supplicant its just a matter of time before
  63. distributions pick up good GUI options for this. The ideal solution
  64. would actually consist of intelligent designs which would do this for
  65. the user automatically even when travelling through different countries.
  66. Until then we leave this module parameter as a compromise.
  67. When userspace improves with reasonable widely-available alternatives for
  68. this we will no longer need this module parameter. This entry hopes that
  69. by the super-futuristically looking date of "March 2010" we will have
  70. such replacements widely available.
  71. Who: Luis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com>
  72. ---------------------------
  73. What: dev->power.power_state
  74. When: July 2007
  75. Why: Broken design for runtime control over driver power states, confusing
  76. driver-internal runtime power management with: mechanisms to support
  77. system-wide sleep state transitions; event codes that distinguish
  78. different phases of swsusp "sleep" transitions; and userspace policy
  79. inputs. This framework was never widely used, and most attempts to
  80. use it were broken. Drivers should instead be exposing domain-specific
  81. interfaces either to kernel or to userspace.
  82. Who: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>
  83. ---------------------------
  84. What: sys_sysctl
  85. When: September 2010
  86. Option: CONFIG_SYSCTL_SYSCALL
  87. Why: The same information is available in a more convenient from
  88. /proc/sys, and none of the sysctl variables appear to be
  89. important performance wise.
  90. Binary sysctls are a long standing source of subtle kernel
  91. bugs and security issues.
  92. When I looked several months ago all I could find after
  93. searching several distributions were 5 user space programs and
  94. glibc (which falls back to /proc/sys) using this syscall.
  95. The man page for sysctl(2) documents it as unusable for user
  96. space programs.
  97. sysctl(2) is not generally ABI compatible to a 32bit user
  98. space application on a 64bit and a 32bit kernel.
  99. For the last several months the policy has been no new binary
  100. sysctls and no one has put forward an argument to use them.
  101. Binary sysctls issues seem to keep happening appearing so
  102. properly deprecating them (with a warning to user space) and a
  103. 2 year grace warning period will mean eventually we can kill
  104. them and end the pain.
  105. In the mean time individual binary sysctls can be dealt with
  106. in a piecewise fashion.
  107. Who: Eric Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
  108. ---------------------------
  109. What: /proc/<pid>/oom_adj
  110. When: August 2012
  111. Why: /proc/<pid>/oom_adj allows userspace to influence the oom killer's
  112. badness heuristic used to determine which task to kill when the kernel
  113. is out of memory.
  114. The badness heuristic has since been rewritten since the introduction of
  115. this tunable such that its meaning is deprecated. The value was
  116. implemented as a bitshift on a score generated by the badness()
  117. function that did not have any precise units of measure. With the
  118. rewrite, the score is given as a proportion of available memory to the
  119. task allocating pages, so using a bitshift which grows the score
  120. exponentially is, thus, impossible to tune with fine granularity.
  121. A much more powerful interface, /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj, was
  122. introduced with the oom killer rewrite that allows users to increase or
  123. decrease the badness() score linearly. This interface will replace
  124. /proc/<pid>/oom_adj.
  125. A warning will be emitted to the kernel log if an application uses this
  126. deprecated interface. After it is printed once, future warnings will be
  127. suppressed until the kernel is rebooted.
  128. ---------------------------
  129. What: CS5535/CS5536 obsolete GPIO driver
  130. When: June 2011
  131. Files: drivers/staging/cs5535_gpio/*
  132. Check: drivers/staging/cs5535_gpio/cs5535_gpio.c
  133. Why: A newer driver replaces this; it is drivers/gpio/cs5535-gpio.c, and
  134. integrates with the Linux GPIO subsystem. The old driver has been
  135. moved to staging, and will be removed altogether around 2.6.40.
  136. Please test the new driver, and ensure that the functionality you
  137. need and any bugfixes from the old driver are available in the new
  138. one.
  139. Who: Andres Salomon <dilinger@queued.net>
  140. --------------------------
  141. What: remove EXPORT_SYMBOL(kernel_thread)
  142. When: August 2006
  143. Files: arch/*/kernel/*_ksyms.c
  144. Check: kernel_thread
  145. Why: kernel_thread is a low-level implementation detail. Drivers should
  146. use the <linux/kthread.h> API instead which shields them from
  147. implementation details and provides a higherlevel interface that
  148. prevents bugs and code duplication
  149. Who: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
  150. ---------------------------
  151. What: Unused EXPORT_SYMBOL/EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL exports
  152. (temporary transition config option provided until then)
  153. The transition config option will also be removed at the same time.
  154. When: before 2.6.19
  155. Why: Unused symbols are both increasing the size of the kernel binary
  156. and are often a sign of "wrong API"
  157. Who: Arjan van de Ven <arjan@linux.intel.com>
  158. ---------------------------
  159. What: PHYSDEVPATH, PHYSDEVBUS, PHYSDEVDRIVER in the uevent environment
  160. When: October 2008
  161. Why: The stacking of class devices makes these values misleading and
  162. inconsistent.
  163. Class devices should not carry any of these properties, and bus
  164. devices have SUBSYTEM and DRIVER as a replacement.
  165. Who: Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@suse.de>
  166. ---------------------------
  167. What: ACPI procfs interface
  168. When: July 2008
  169. Why: ACPI sysfs conversion should be finished by January 2008.
  170. ACPI procfs interface will be removed in July 2008 so that
  171. there is enough time for the user space to catch up.
  172. Who: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com>
  173. ---------------------------
  174. What: CONFIG_ACPI_PROCFS_POWER
  175. When: 2.6.39
  176. Why: sysfs I/F for ACPI power devices, including AC and Battery,
  177. has been working in upstream kenrel since 2.6.24, Sep 2007.
  178. In 2.6.37, we make the sysfs I/F always built in and this option
  179. disabled by default.
  180. Remove this option and the ACPI power procfs interface in 2.6.39.
  181. Who: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com>
  182. ---------------------------
  183. What: /proc/acpi/event
  184. When: February 2008
  185. Why: /proc/acpi/event has been replaced by events via the input layer
  186. and netlink since 2.6.23.
  187. Who: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com>
  188. ---------------------------
  189. What: i386/x86_64 bzImage symlinks
  190. When: April 2010
  191. Why: The i386/x86_64 merge provides a symlink to the old bzImage
  192. location so not yet updated user space tools, e.g. package
  193. scripts, do not break.
  194. Who: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
  195. ---------------------------
  196. What: GPIO autorequest on gpio_direction_{input,output}() in gpiolib
  197. When: February 2010
  198. Why: All callers should use explicit gpio_request()/gpio_free().
  199. The autorequest mechanism in gpiolib was provided mostly as a
  200. migration aid for legacy GPIO interfaces (for SOC based GPIOs).
  201. Those users have now largely migrated. Platforms implementing
  202. the GPIO interfaces without using gpiolib will see no changes.
  203. Who: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
  204. ---------------------------
  205. What: b43 support for firmware revision < 410
  206. When: The schedule was July 2008, but it was decided that we are going to keep the
  207. code as long as there are no major maintanance headaches.
  208. So it _could_ be removed _any_ time now, if it conflicts with something new.
  209. Why: The support code for the old firmware hurts code readability/maintainability
  210. and slightly hurts runtime performance. Bugfixes for the old firmware
  211. are not provided by Broadcom anymore.
  212. Who: Michael Buesch <mb@bu3sch.de>
  213. ---------------------------
  214. What: /sys/o2cb symlink
  215. When: January 2010
  216. Why: /sys/fs/o2cb is the proper location for this information - /sys/o2cb
  217. exists as a symlink for backwards compatibility for old versions of
  218. ocfs2-tools. 2 years should be sufficient time to phase in new versions
  219. which know to look in /sys/fs/o2cb.
  220. Who: ocfs2-devel@oss.oracle.com
  221. ---------------------------
  222. What: Ability for non root users to shm_get hugetlb pages based on mlock
  223. resource limits
  224. When: 2.6.31
  225. Why: Non root users need to be part of /proc/sys/vm/hugetlb_shm_group or
  226. have CAP_IPC_LOCK to be able to allocate shm segments backed by
  227. huge pages. The mlock based rlimit check to allow shm hugetlb is
  228. inconsistent with mmap based allocations. Hence it is being
  229. deprecated.
  230. Who: Ravikiran Thirumalai <kiran@scalex86.org>
  231. ---------------------------
  232. What: CONFIG_THERMAL_HWMON
  233. When: January 2009
  234. Why: This option was introduced just to allow older lm-sensors userspace
  235. to keep working over the upgrade to 2.6.26. At the scheduled time of
  236. removal fixed lm-sensors (2.x or 3.x) should be readily available.
  237. Who: Rene Herman <rene.herman@gmail.com>
  238. ---------------------------
  239. What: Code that is now under CONFIG_WIRELESS_EXT_SYSFS
  240. (in net/core/net-sysfs.c)
  241. When: After the only user (hal) has seen a release with the patches
  242. for enough time, probably some time in 2010.
  243. Why: Over 1K .text/.data size reduction, data is available in other
  244. ways (ioctls)
  245. Who: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
  246. ---------------------------
  247. What: sysfs ui for changing p4-clockmod parameters
  248. When: September 2009
  249. Why: See commits 129f8ae9b1b5be94517da76009ea956e89104ce8 and
  250. e088e4c9cdb618675874becb91b2fd581ee707e6.
  251. Removal is subject to fixing any remaining bugs in ACPI which may
  252. cause the thermal throttling not to happen at the right time.
  253. Who: Dave Jones <davej@redhat.com>, Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
  254. -----------------------------
  255. What: fakephp and associated sysfs files in /sys/bus/pci/slots/
  256. When: 2011
  257. Why: In 2.6.27, the semantics of /sys/bus/pci/slots was redefined to
  258. represent a machine's physical PCI slots. The change in semantics
  259. had userspace implications, as the hotplug core no longer allowed
  260. drivers to create multiple sysfs files per physical slot (required
  261. for multi-function devices, e.g.). fakephp was seen as a developer's
  262. tool only, and its interface changed. Too late, we learned that
  263. there were some users of the fakephp interface.
  264. In 2.6.30, the original fakephp interface was restored. At the same
  265. time, the PCI core gained the ability that fakephp provided, namely
  266. function-level hot-remove and hot-add.
  267. Since the PCI core now provides the same functionality, exposed in:
  268. /sys/bus/pci/rescan
  269. /sys/bus/pci/devices/.../remove
  270. /sys/bus/pci/devices/.../rescan
  271. there is no functional reason to maintain fakephp as well.
  272. We will keep the existing module so that 'modprobe fakephp' will
  273. present the old /sys/bus/pci/slots/... interface for compatibility,
  274. but users are urged to migrate their applications to the API above.
  275. After a reasonable transition period, we will remove the legacy
  276. fakephp interface.
  277. Who: Alex Chiang <achiang@hp.com>
  278. ---------------------------
  279. What: CONFIG_RFKILL_INPUT
  280. When: 2.6.33
  281. Why: Should be implemented in userspace, policy daemon.
  282. Who: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
  283. ----------------------------
  284. What: sound-slot/service-* module aliases and related clutters in
  285. sound/sound_core.c
  286. When: August 2010
  287. Why: OSS sound_core grabs all legacy minors (0-255) of SOUND_MAJOR
  288. (14) and requests modules using custom sound-slot/service-*
  289. module aliases. The only benefit of doing this is allowing
  290. use of custom module aliases which might as well be considered
  291. a bug at this point. This preemptive claiming prevents
  292. alternative OSS implementations.
  293. Till the feature is removed, the kernel will be requesting
  294. both sound-slot/service-* and the standard char-major-* module
  295. aliases and allow turning off the pre-claiming selectively via
  296. CONFIG_SOUND_OSS_CORE_PRECLAIM and soundcore.preclaim_oss
  297. kernel parameter.
  298. After the transition phase is complete, both the custom module
  299. aliases and switches to disable it will go away. This removal
  300. will also allow making ALSA OSS emulation independent of
  301. sound_core. The dependency will be broken then too.
  302. Who: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
  303. ----------------------------
  304. What: Support for lcd_switch and display_get in asus-laptop driver
  305. When: March 2010
  306. Why: These two features use non-standard interfaces. There are the
  307. only features that really need multiple path to guess what's
  308. the right method name on a specific laptop.
  309. Removing them will allow to remove a lot of code an significantly
  310. clean the drivers.
  311. This will affect the backlight code which won't be able to know
  312. if the backlight is on or off. The platform display file will also be
  313. write only (like the one in eeepc-laptop).
  314. This should'nt affect a lot of user because they usually know
  315. when their display is on or off.
  316. Who: Corentin Chary <corentin.chary@gmail.com>
  317. ----------------------------
  318. What: sysfs-class-rfkill state file
  319. When: Feb 2014
  320. Files: net/rfkill/core.c
  321. Why: Documented as obsolete since Feb 2010. This file is limited to 3
  322. states while the rfkill drivers can have 4 states.
  323. Who: anybody or Florian Mickler <florian@mickler.org>
  324. ----------------------------
  325. What: sysfs-class-rfkill claim file
  326. When: Feb 2012
  327. Files: net/rfkill/core.c
  328. Why: It is not possible to claim an rfkill driver since 2007. This is
  329. Documented as obsolete since Feb 2010.
  330. Who: anybody or Florian Mickler <florian@mickler.org>
  331. ----------------------------
  332. What: capifs
  333. When: February 2011
  334. Files: drivers/isdn/capi/capifs.*
  335. Why: udev fully replaces this special file system that only contains CAPI
  336. NCCI TTY device nodes. User space (pppdcapiplugin) works without
  337. noticing the difference.
  338. Who: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@web.de>
  339. ----------------------------
  340. What: KVM paravirt mmu host support
  341. When: January 2011
  342. Why: The paravirt mmu host support is slower than non-paravirt mmu, both
  343. on newer and older hardware. It is already not exposed to the guest,
  344. and kept only for live migration purposes.
  345. Who: Avi Kivity <avi@redhat.com>
  346. ----------------------------
  347. What: iwlwifi 50XX module parameters
  348. When: 2.6.40
  349. Why: The "..50" modules parameters were used to configure 5000 series and
  350. up devices; different set of module parameters also available for 4965
  351. with same functionalities. Consolidate both set into single place
  352. in drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/iwl-agn.c
  353. Who: Wey-Yi Guy <wey-yi.w.guy@intel.com>
  354. ----------------------------
  355. What: iwl4965 alias support
  356. When: 2.6.40
  357. Why: Internal alias support has been present in module-init-tools for some
  358. time, the MODULE_ALIAS("iwl4965") boilerplate aliases can be removed
  359. with no impact.
  360. Who: Wey-Yi Guy <wey-yi.w.guy@intel.com>
  361. ---------------------------
  362. What: xt_NOTRACK
  363. Files: net/netfilter/xt_NOTRACK.c
  364. When: April 2011
  365. Why: Superseded by xt_CT
  366. Who: Netfilter developer team <netfilter-devel@vger.kernel.org>
  367. ----------------------------
  368. What: IRQF_DISABLED
  369. When: 2.6.36
  370. Why: The flag is a NOOP as we run interrupt handlers with interrupts disabled
  371. Who: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
  372. ----------------------------
  373. What: The acpi_sleep=s4_nonvs command line option
  374. When: 2.6.37
  375. Files: arch/x86/kernel/acpi/sleep.c
  376. Why: superseded by acpi_sleep=nonvs
  377. Who: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>
  378. ----------------------------
  379. What: PCI DMA unmap state API
  380. When: August 2012
  381. Why: PCI DMA unmap state API (include/linux/pci-dma.h) was replaced
  382. with DMA unmap state API (DMA unmap state API can be used for
  383. any bus).
  384. Who: FUJITA Tomonori <fujita.tomonori@lab.ntt.co.jp>
  385. ----------------------------
  386. What: DMA_xxBIT_MASK macros
  387. When: Jun 2011
  388. Why: DMA_xxBIT_MASK macros were replaced with DMA_BIT_MASK() macros.
  389. Who: FUJITA Tomonori <fujita.tomonori@lab.ntt.co.jp>
  390. ----------------------------
  391. What: namespace cgroup (ns_cgroup)
  392. When: 2.6.38
  393. Why: The ns_cgroup leads to some problems:
  394. * cgroup creation is out-of-control
  395. * cgroup name can conflict when pids are looping
  396. * it is not possible to have a single process handling
  397. a lot of namespaces without falling in a exponential creation time
  398. * we may want to create a namespace without creating a cgroup
  399. The ns_cgroup is replaced by a compatibility flag 'clone_children',
  400. where a newly created cgroup will copy the parent cgroup values.
  401. The userspace has to manually create a cgroup and add a task to
  402. the 'tasks' file.
  403. Who: Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@free.fr>
  404. ----------------------------
  405. What: iwlwifi disable_hw_scan module parameters
  406. When: 2.6.40
  407. Why: Hareware scan is the prefer method for iwlwifi devices for
  408. scanning operation. Remove software scan support for all the
  409. iwlwifi devices.
  410. Who: Wey-Yi Guy <wey-yi.w.guy@intel.com>
  411. ----------------------------
  412. What: access to nfsd auth cache through sys_nfsservctl or '.' files
  413. in the 'nfsd' filesystem.
  414. When: 2.6.40
  415. Why: This is a legacy interface which have been replaced by a more
  416. dynamic cache. Continuing to maintain this interface is an
  417. unnecessary burden.
  418. Who: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
  419. ----------------------------
  420. What: cancel_rearming_delayed_work[queue]()
  421. When: 2.6.39
  422. Why: The functions have been superceded by cancel_delayed_work_sync()
  423. quite some time ago. The conversion is trivial and there is no
  424. in-kernel user left.
  425. Who: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
  426. ----------------------------
  427. What: Legacy, non-standard chassis intrusion detection interface.
  428. When: June 2011
  429. Why: The adm9240, w83792d and w83793 hardware monitoring drivers have
  430. legacy interfaces for chassis intrusion detection. A standard
  431. interface has been added to each driver, so the legacy interface
  432. can be removed.
  433. Who: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>
  434. ----------------------------
  435. What: xt_connlimit rev 0
  436. When: 2012
  437. Who: Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@medozas.de>
  438. Files: net/netfilter/xt_connlimit.c
  439. ----------------------------
  440. What: noswapaccount kernel command line parameter
  441. When: 2.6.40
  442. Why: The original implementation of memsw feature enabled by
  443. CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_RES_CTLR_SWAP could be disabled by the noswapaccount
  444. kernel parameter (introduced in 2.6.29-rc1). Later on, this decision
  445. turned out to be not ideal because we cannot have the feature compiled
  446. in and disabled by default and let only interested to enable it
  447. (e.g. general distribution kernels might need it). Therefore we have
  448. added swapaccount[=0|1] parameter (introduced in 2.6.37) which provides
  449. the both possibilities. If we remove noswapaccount we will have
  450. less command line parameters with the same functionality and we
  451. can also cleanup the parameter handling a bit ().
  452. Who: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.cz>
  453. ----------------------------
  454. What: ipt_addrtype match include file
  455. When: 2012
  456. Why: superseded by xt_addrtype
  457. Who: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
  458. Files: include/linux/netfilter_ipv4/ipt_addrtype.h
  459. ----------------------------
  460. What: i2c_driver.attach_adapter
  461. i2c_driver.detach_adapter
  462. When: September 2011
  463. Why: These legacy callbacks should no longer be used as i2c-core offers
  464. a variety of preferable alternative ways to instantiate I2C devices.
  465. Who: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>
  466. ----------------------------