Community
This page is for information about the embedded Linux and open source community.
Contents
Netiquette
Please read Netiquette before interacting with the Open Source Communities
Community sites
General Portals
- Meld - An embedded Linux developer community site, designed to enable developers, ISVs, and hardware manufacturers to share, connect, and design, sponsored by MontaVista Software
- Linux.com - Linux community portal sponsored by the Linux Foundation
- LinuxDevices.com - the canonical (no pun intended) place for news about embedded Linux
- Linux.org - an excellent starting place for all things linux
Hardware-Specific Communities
- ARM Linux - the central place for Linux on ARM, this is where you find Russell Kings patch tracker for example
- Beagle Board community - portal for the Beagle Board Community, sponsored by TI
- OpenSourceMID.org community - portal for the K7 OMAP3530 MID community
- Ultrabook Notebook - portal for the Beagle Board Community
- PandaBoard community - portal for the PandaBoard Community, sponsored by TI
- Snowball Community - Portal for the Snowball Community
Software-Specific Communities
- Moblin community - portal for the Moblin community (merged with Maemo to form Meego - see next item)
- Meego community - portal for the Meego community
- Yocto Project - portal for the Yocto project
Communities for beginners
- http://kernelnewbies.org/ - General site for people getting started developing on the Linux kernel
- http://jp.kernelnewbies.org/webresources - Japanese site for kernel newbies
- Embedded Systems Common Technical Baseline - Although not directly related to Linux this site is an excellent overview of what embedded systems are seen from various angles (hardware, software, design methods, etc...)
- Community Participation Guides - Resources for how to participate in Open Source Communities.
People
This section lists inviduals who are "movers and shakers" in embedded Linux: For more Information be sure to checkout MAINTAINERS
Linux kernel
Important kernel figures
- Linus Torvalds - Linux kernel initiator and head maintainer
- Andrew Morton - maintains an important secondary (staging) tree
- David Woodhouse - Embedded Linux Maintainer
- Matt Mackall - Embedded Linux Maintainer, originator of Linux-tiny patch set (author of SLOB allocator), author of kpagemap and smem
- Greg Kroah-Hartman - Initiator and Maintainer of the Linux Driver Project / Staging Tree and quite a handyman.
- Stephen Rothwell - Maintainer of the Linux-Next-Tree, most stuff goes in there before getting merged into Linus' tree-
Kernel arch maintainers
- Russell King - ARM kernel maintainer
- Paul Mundt - SH kernel maintainer
- Ralf Baechle - MIPS kernel maintainer
- Greg Ungerer - uCLinux kernel maintainer
- Arnd Bergman - CELL kernel maintainer
- Thomas Gleixner - x86 kernel maintainer, author of clock events
- Haavard Skinnemoen - avr32 kernel Maintainer (Atmel)
Feature developers/maintainers
- David Woodhouse - MTD/jffs2 author - Embedded Linux kernel maintainer
- Andi Kleen - author of bloat-o-meter
- Ingo Molnar - author of RT-preempt patch set, kernel scheduler maintainer
- Phillip Lougher - author of Squash FS
Interview candidates
The following page has a list of people we'd like to interview for an eLinux.org feature:
Foundations and Forums
- ARM Development Discussion Forum launched by Embest
- Embest Product User Forum
- CE Linux Forum
- Linux Foundation
Communities for beginners
- http://kernelnewbies.org/ - General site for people getting started developing on the Linux kernel
- http://jp.kernelnewbies.org/webresources - Japanese site for kernel newbies
Linux User Groups
One way to get involved with a bunch of like-minded Linux enthusiasts is to participate in a local Linux users group. The following site has a good database of Linux users groups:
- www.linux.org/groups
- CLUE LUG List - Canadian User Group listing.
- Bangalore Beagle User Group Meet
Development Model
- The Cathedral and the Bazaar
- FIXTHIS - add more links to papers and articles about the development model
Reasons for contributing to open source
- Open Source ROI Model - a page about return on investment from open source contributions
Quality Assurance
This section has links to aspects of the development model designed to provide quality assurance.
Certificate of Origin
Developers who contribute code to the Linux kernel agree to the Developer Certificate Of Origin by signing their code, with a "Signed Off By" line.