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News Linus Torvalds Is "A Good Developer, But...A Terrible Engineer," Says Linux Kernel Maintainer Cox
"Linus Has This Bad Habit of Fixing Security Holes Quietly," Alan Cox Admits
By: Jeremy Geelan
Mar. 2, 2005 12:00 AM
"Linus has this bad habit of fixing security holes quietly," admitted kernel maintainer Alan Cox during a talk given in Brussels last week during this year's FOSDEM (Free & Open Source Software Developer's European Meeting). FOSDEM, which was first organized in 2001, is considered a must-attend event by Linux cognoscenti in Europe. Many of LinuxWorld.com's writers over the years either attend or speak.
In advance of his talk, Cox had said "FOSDEM seems to have a reputation for being a real developer conference so it should be a lot of fun." (He added "I hope the beer is good.") In the talk itself, he discussed how - though there is no highly critical remote hole right now, we improve the way the security fixes are made to the Linux kernel. There is, for example, no official security maintainer for the base kernel, to handle all the security advisories and bugfixes - areas which are not, Cox admitted, Linus Torvalds' strong suit. "Linus is a good developer, but is a terrible engineer," he noted, adding that he was sure Torvalds himself would agree with the observation. Cox went on to reveal that Torvalds "has this bad habit of fixing security holes quietly" - which is not a good idea, in Cox's view. As a Red Hat fellow Alan Cox is in an enviable position, since he says his employer imposes no contraints: "Red Hat primarily pays me to work on the kernel. I'm mostly trusted to use my own judgement on what that means, and guided by the hot issues customers see. There are things I get through Red Hat, such as vendor pre-production systems and documents that are restricted but nobody in Red Hat demands I run Red Hat products for example. Except for the little boxes (running Debian) I do run Red Hat Fedora but that's by choice." Clearly Linux's strength is that it is a building to which many different people have brought a stone. There has been a great improvement between the 2.4 and 2.6 kernel versions, and a lot of developers have been hacking since the first release of the 2.6 kernel. Alastair Mayer, a software developer and UNIX systems administrator, has described Linus Torvalds' role ver succinctly:
So being a "terrible engineer" isn't quite the handicap it might seem. Besides, Cox and he have been working together for a very long time, and each complements the other and together they make the whole of the Linux kernel better. As one developer recently remarked: "Linus's sense of who's a good dev and who fits into his team well is uncanny." Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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