
The Linux Kernel Archives
4 days ago · This site is operated by the Linux Kernel Organization, a 501 (c)3 nonprofit corporation, with support from the following sponsors.
The Linux Kernel Archives - Releases
Dec 3, 2025 · Unless you downloaded, compiled and installed your own version of kernel from kernel.org, you are running a distribution kernel. To find out the version of your kernel, run …
The Linux Kernel documentation
The following manuals are written for users of the kernel — those who are trying to get it to work optimally on a given system and application developers seeking information on the kernel’s …
1. Introduction — The Linux Kernel documentation
There are a great many reasons why kernel code should be merged into the official (“mainline”) kernel, including automatic availability to users, community support in many forms, and the …
HOWTO do Linux kernel development
Documentation The Linux kernel source tree has a large range of documents that are invaluable for learning how to interact with the kernel community. When new features are added to the …
Welcome to The Linux Kernel’s documentation
These manuals contain overall information about how to develop the kernel. The kernel community is quite large, with thousands of developers contributing over the course of a year.
The Linux Kernel Archives - About
Aug 6, 2024 · The Linux Kernel Organization is managed by The Linux Foundation, which provides full technical, financial and staffing support for running and maintaining the kernel.org …
CPU Architectures — The Linux Kernel documentation
Linux kernel for ARC processors Feature status on arc architecture ARM Architecture ARM Linux 2.6 and upper Booting ARM Linux Cluster-wide Power-up/power-down race avoidance …
2. How the development process works - Kernel
The kernel code base is logically broken down into a set of subsystems: networking, specific architecture support, memory management, video devices, etc. Most subsystems have a …
Tainted kernels — The Linux Kernel documentation
Note the kernel will remain tainted even after you undo what caused the taint (i.e. unload a proprietary kernel module), to indicate the kernel remains not trustworthy.