Boom in requests for Linux drivers

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS

A steady stream of manufacturers are requesting Linux drivers for their hardware, suggesting growing adoption of Linux operating systems among enterprises.

According to Greg Kroah-Hartman, Novell programmer and Linux Driver Project lead, the group of some 400 programmers at the project receive requests to port existing closed-source drivers to open-source drivers for Linux "all the time", and has been "doing a lot of work on this over the past few years".

In an email exchange with ZDNet UK's sister site, ZDNet Asia, he pointed to his blog post of June this year, which said the Linux Driver Project receives, on average, two requests a month from manufacturers to have drivers written.

The initiative works with hardware makers to code Linux drivers for their products for free, on the makers' request.

Such drivers have been written "for a wide range of different hardware devices" and been included into the main kernel tree, he said.

Back in 2007, Kroah-Hartman requested help finding more hardware for which to write device drivers. Some reports online suggested this was because businesses were holding back from opening their drivers up to the community.

Today, this "problem" has been "solved quite thoroughly", he said.

"All of the major hardware manufacturers told me that there is no problem that needs to be solved in relation to device support on Linux.

"Everything they ship worked just fine with Linux back then, and continues to do so today," he said.

Several hardware makers ZDNet Asia spoke to said they were working on maintaining Linux compatibility.

Jeff Morris, director of client product management large enterprise and public for Asia-Pacific and Japan at Dell, said in an email that the company provides full Linux support for its enterprise servers.

He gave examples of several Dell consumer-oriented desktops, as well as a corporate PC line which is offered without an installed OS so companies can install their own.

"We also worked very closely with our hardware partners and encourage them to create driver support for the Linux distributions we support," he added.

Dennis Mark, head of marketing at HP's personal systems group, also pointed to several examples of the PC-maker's products which support Linux. He said HP would continue looking into ways to provide Linux support.

Kroah-Hartman said Linux has reached mainstream status on the desktop, at least on the enterprise space. "There are very large companies that are well-known users of Linux in this manner: all of the movie companies, Ford, Peugeot, all of the Wall Street companies, almost all banks [and] the stock exchanges," he said.

In spite of this, Linux has gained a bad rap within some consumer circles for being difficult to use or, to some, a new ground that consumers are not interested in venturing into.

Both Red Hat and Novell last year pulled away from the consumer desktop space.

Red Hat last month reiterated its stance that the desktop space does not pose a viable business option.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

SPM

The 2 million number quoted is shipments not sales, an exact repeat of last year's dire sales of WP7. Sales to customers are likely to number only...

3 hours ago by SPM on Nokia earnings fail to shine despite Lumia
apexwm

It sounds like this is just another variable in the complex equation of Microsoft licensing, which often results in customers overpaying as it is....

5 hours ago by apexwm on UK customers to lose out in Microsoft licensing change
chonzchor

I am really thankful to you for this nice and beautiful information.I really like this. cable ties

5 hours ago by chonzchor on Currys £16.99 USB cable rip-off.
Brian Jones

What would be nice would be if Microsoft practiced consistent pricing between the US and Europe.

11 hours ago by Brian Jones via Facebook on UK customers to lose out in Microsoft licensing change
Karen Friar

@Scott Deagan: Ofcom dedicated a section to upload speeds - see page 19 onward of its full report:...

11 hours ago by Karen Friar on UK broadband speed climbs 22 percent
EUDataProtection

The EU proposals can all be read in full on the reform website: http://ec.europa.eu/justice/data-protection/minisite/index.html

12 hours ago by EUDataProtection on Firms face tough new EU fines for data breaches
Jake Rayson

Found out that Taskwarrior stores all data in plain text files: "Task writes all pending tasks to the file ~/.task/pending.data and all completed...

14 hours ago by Jake Rayson on Taskwarrior: command line task manager
ians1

"...based 6,000 miles away..." Indeed, so who do you complain to when things go wrong? I would not buy shares in Faecebook even if I could...

15 hours ago by ians1 on Facebook plans to raise $5bn via share launch
servermanagement

These are really very useful tips of backing up the system. Each tips are important and essential to prevent loosing all the data that we have....

17 hours ago by servermanagement on Ten ways to take the sting out of IT disasters
Scott Deagan

Why is the upstream never discussed? I'd like to see Ofcom explain to Internet users why people in the UK can only get a maximum of 10Mb/s upstream...

1 day ago by Scott Deagan via Facebook on UK broadband speed climbs 22 percent
Moley

Seemingly a very strange decision, even perverse. Mind you, the basis of the decision is hardly explained here or in Cnet. Perhaps we will hear...

1 day ago by Moley on Free Maps costs Google £400K in damages in France
Jake Rayson

@OccupyACAT: I had heard mention of the Emacs extension but not the Ubiquity project. Interesting to see an idea spread almost simultaneously! Re....

1 day ago by Jake Rayson on Ubuntu HUD Intenterface? Sublime already there!
markhumphryes

With no Flash support on LoveFilm, mobile devices running Android will not be able to use it - I presume - I tried a trial via my Galaxy Tab 10.1...

1 day ago by markhumphryes on Lovefilm drops Flash, kills Linux support
manek

And people wonder why there is caution about doing business with large, consumer-focused technology companies, most of which are based 6,000 miles...

2 days ago by manek on Facebook plans to raise $5bn via share launch
manek

Yes, frameworks and smarter compilers - but I suspect a lot of the code will have to be written with parallel processing as one of its fundamental...

2 days ago by manek on Parallel computing takes a step forward
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

Well, this is why I'm both fascinated and slightly worried; parallel computing and concurrency and complex architectures don't seem to be something...

2 days ago by Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe on Parallel computing takes a step forward
ians1

Let's hope that they take more notice of their shareholders than they do of their poor customers! I have never experienced customer service as bad...

2 days ago by ians1 on Facebook plans to raise $5bn via share launch
servermanagement

Thanks for the heads up. Will definitely check this HUD Intenterface.

2 days ago by servermanagement on Linux Minterface
Will A

Some more observations by an extremely frustrated user in Canada (apparently every country has a different set of "issues"): The web interfaces...

2 days ago by Will A on Cambridge researchers knock Verified by Visa
Jake Rayson

@zdnetukuser: I hope there's more conciliation and less bitterness in the graphical shell camps, I'd like to Ubuntu to succeed, I *want* to have a...

2 days ago by Jake Rayson on Linux Minterface