Linux 7.1 Removes Drivers for Bus Mouse Support

(phoronix.com)

33 points | by speckx 2 hours ago

10 comments

  • midtake 1 minute ago
    Is this due to Mythos and other LLMs finding a bunch of obscure bugs or simply a precaution? If someone (a normie not a gentooman) wanted to run Linux on retro hardware how would they do it? Boot Debian Sarge?
  • xiphias2 1 hour ago
    Microkernels have lost the open kernel wars because of their speed problems, but this is a great example of a driver that should have been running in userspace a long time ago, just like how Windows has been moving in that direction.

    Isn't Linux planning to do the same?

    • augusto-moura 51 minutes ago
      I guess things are going into that direction naturally, but not officially. eBPF is helping with getting deep kernel aspects into userspace. And there's some ressurgence of out-of-tree graphics drivers, specially for gaming.

      I believe userspace drivers are much more powerful and easy to build than 10 years ago, but it is not from a requirement from the kernel.

      Who knows, maybe we will get a smaller (instead of bigger) kernel in 10-20 years

    • e12e 15 minutes ago
      > this is a great example of a driver that should have been running in userspace a long time ago, just like how Windows has been moving in that direction.

      Hasn't windows (nt lineage) moved solidly in the opposite direction? Used to be you could reload/restart the video card ("GPU") driver if the driver crashed?

      • doctorpangloss 5 minutes ago
        No it's the opposite. WDDM and DirectX are constantly being updated and have been improving crash recovery of the GPU, updating its driver, power management, abstracting features like video encoding and storage DMA, among many things. In Linux it is taking ages, the first proposal for DRM to support 2010 era WDDM features was in 2021 and it still does not exist. Graphics is one of the few places some of Microsoft still innovates. Although not in the sense of having great code, they just put in the work to coordinate these changes from the handful of vendors. If only someone hosted more steak dinners for Linux.
  • bastawhiz 1 hour ago
    This is the kind of spring cleaning I crave. Deleting busted drivers that haven't worked in over a decade? Fantastic!

    Some of this hardware likely has exactly zero users because the material it's made from can't possibly have survived. Look at the cord on the mouse in the photo: you might be able to plug it in, but I wouldn't bet money signal can still make it down the wire.

    • trollbridge 1 hour ago
      My bus mouse still works just fine; things built in the 80s tended to be pretty solid.

      However, it would be hard pressed to find a machine with ISA slots with enough resources to run Linux 7.1 acceptably.

      • cestith 58 minutes ago
        There are still ISA slots in new systems with fairly modern processors and plenty of RAM, if you don’t mind buying specific models of industrial PCs for way too much money.

        For $1100 or so you, too, could have a 4th generation Core i3 machine. https://www.rampcsystems.com/product/2-isa-slot

        Or maybe you need 4 PCI and 9 ISA for some reason. DuroPC’s got you, if you can drop $1800 on a system with the same generation of processor. https://duropc.com/product/r810-4p9i-4

        • M95D 51 minutes ago
          ISA slots are all identical. If you have one slot, you can multiply it to 100 slots just by connecting the wires.
          • cestith 41 minutes ago
            That’s one of those facts that’s always good to know, but in practice people tend to put one card in one slot with no expanders.
          • stackghost 21 minutes ago
            I'm pretty sure the host will run out of IRQs long before 100. Don't most systems only have 16?
            • M95D 2 minutes ago
              You don't really need IRQs for most ISA boards. OPL3/Adlib sound cards don't need one, MIDI doesn't, joystick port doesn't. I saw various I/O boards that don't need IRQ. Soundblaster does, but I don't know for what purpose. Maybe someone here can explain?
          • SV_BubbleTime 33 minutes ago
            How were different devices addressed? I assume it’s a master and slave system, but even then were address collisions automatically resolved?
            • tialaramex 17 minutes ago
              In original ISA none of this is managed, the owner of the PC is expected to manually configure both hardware and software appropriately.

              So e.g. [with the PC turned off!] you move a tiny jumper (basically just a piece of conductive metal with a plastic housing) to the "IRQ 8" position and you pick "IRQ 8" in some menu or set it in an environment variable in DOS or whatever.

              By the time PCI is starting to appear there is some level of "Plug and Plug ISA" but it's fairly crazy because of course all the old stuff still exists whereas for PCI the bus always had this intelligence baked in so nobody just assumes they can pick.

            • toast0 19 minutes ago
              > How were different devices addressed?

              There's a shared address bus. Each device responds to the i/o and/or memory addresses it's configured for. Configuration can be static, jumpers, isapnp.

              > I assume it’s a master and slave system, but even then were address collisions automatically resolved?

              No. If two devices want to use the same address space, you'll have problems. isapnp might help you out, but it was added in the second decade of ISA, so ... lots of things don't use it.

            • stackghost 21 minutes ago
              They used 16-bit addresses from 0x0 to 0xffff.
      • estimator7292 57 minutes ago
        Most things.

        Plastics and rubbers tend to not survive well a lot of the time just because of the chemistry. There's really no way around plastic embrittlement and rubber decomposing. You can prolong it with the right storage conditions, but those molecules are gonna break down sooner or later.

    • kube-system 37 minutes ago
      The mouse in the photo was made somewhere between 1987-1993. I have computers older than that which work just fine.
    • FpUser 51 minutes ago
      My Z840 server I use for self hosting has both bus original IBM keyboard and bus mouse attached. Either works just fine.
  • clifflocked 1 hour ago
    If anyone is curious, here is the actual commit that removed the drivers: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...
  • mmooss 10 minutes ago
    > looking to remove old drivers due to the surge of AI/LLM bug reports

    I wonder how OpenBSD's careful code quality and hygiene (maybe there's a better word) has affected its vulnerability to LLM bug finding. Did their approach pay off in this case?

  • mongol 35 minutes ago
    What is a bus mouse? Is it using the old PS/2 port?
  • flohofwoe 1 hour ago
    Raises the question whether a bug in code that's never called actually exists ;)
    • advisedwang 1 hour ago
      Code that is never normally used can sometimes still be gotten to run by an attacker, and therefore can still be a security risk.
      • M95D 42 minutes ago
        But that code would have to be selected in menuconfig, compiled, and the module loaded. I assume that nobody does that for bus mice, and even if someone, by mistake, selects one of the drivers, that's 1 machine in a billion. Who would target that?

        Same argument for any retro-tech. What hacker would spend hours/days to hack my bare-metal DOS box running Arachne + a packet driver just to mine bitcoins on a K6-2 for a couple of hours until I turn it off from the AT power switch (not button).

      • Someone1234 27 minutes ago
        From my understanding, that isn't how drivers in Linux work. Nearly no kernels will have that code compiled into them because kconfig won't call for it. It is "opt-in", and it is so niche few Distros would have done so.

        Linux only ships with a tiny sub-set of the drivers in the source tree.

    • rationalist 1 hour ago
  • shevy-java 33 minutes ago
    This makes me sad.

    Now, most will say "but why, 1995 is ancient history, no such hardware exists anymore". The thing is ... should Linux get rid of what is old? I understand you have a smaller kernel when you have less code, less cost to maintain, I get it. Still, I wonder whether this should be the only allowed opinion. Would it not be better to, kind of, transition into a situation where any hardware built in the future, would be supported? So in 2050, we'd not say "damn, computers from 2026 are obsolete now". We could say "no problem, linux is forever". Everything is supported. I actually would prefer the latter than the "older than 30 years, we no longer support it".

    • bigfishrunning 13 minutes ago
      > Would it not be better to, kind of, transition into a situation where any hardware built in the future, would be supported?

      easier said then done -- the kernel's internal interfaces aren't static, they change often. The project has never committed to stabilizing it's driver api, so every driver takes non-zero work to maintain.

      I would assume computers that are still running these old ISA mouses (mice?) probably are also running an older version of linux; and if they're running a new kernel then it'll be somebodys job to port the drivers forward. There's some likelihood this will end up maintained by someone out-of-tree, which is a nice way of saying "we've sent your dog to a farm upstate..."

    • jamesgeck0 15 minutes ago
      That date feels a little bit late. The PS/2 devices that superseded the bus mouse started appearing around 1987. There were certainly still bus mice around in 1995, but they were thoroughly obsolete.
  • whalesalad 1 hour ago
    that pee stained microsoft mouse is really sending this home
    • thekid314 1 hour ago
      That's the next Apple Neo color for you.
    • cptskippy 39 minutes ago
      I'm sure that photo was chosen rather deliberately to garner support from a wide cross selection of grey beards.
  • hackyhacky 34 minutes ago
    [flagged]