== What are the various kernel trees for ? == ''-ac'' Maintainer: Alan Cox Ultra-stable tree for 2.6 series with fixes (security, functionality) for the last stable version. Some of the fixes have already been merged in Linus's tree (the 'official' development tree - at kernel.org), while some others are pending. ''-mm'' Maintainer: Andrew Morton Fancy new features and fixes with a focus on VM hacks. ''-aa'' Maintainer: Andrea Arcangeli VM updates, a multitude of fixes and various improvements from Andrea. ''-dj'' Maintainer: Dave Jones Forward ports of 2.4 bugfixes to 2.5 series, plus some other bits. (a slightly less bloody bleeding edge) ''-ck'' Maintainer: Con Kolivas A stable 2.6 based patchset with a focus on performance tweaks to the scheduler and vm, with specific tuning for the desktop to improve system responsiveness. ''-osdl'' For data center or carrier grade linux, tuning especially for large machines and high database performance. ''-rmap'' Maintainer: Rik van Riel Rmap has a reverse mapping from page frames to virtual mappings mostly in order to make a more predictable VM, to get rid of some worst case VM behaviours and smooth things out. The reverse mappings provide infrastructure to make a more flexible VM possible ... which means that VM strategies in -rmap often change. ''-rt'' Maintainer: Ingo Molnar Realtime-preempt is a set of patches for the latest version of the Linux kernel. They bring the pre-emption capability to the next level. It's goal is to make the full fledged Linux kernel have as close to real-time response as possible. (As a warning, though, the realtime preempt patches are under going heavy development and have been for some times. It's not unusual for Ingo to update the realtime-preempt patch several times a day, or even within hours of each other. ) You can also browse the available git trees here: http://www.kernel.org/git/