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* [[license|Linux kernel backports license]]
 
* [[license|Linux kernel backports license]]
 
* [[documentation|User documentation:]] [[Documentation/packaging|(package release mode)]] [[Documentation/integration|(kernel integration mode)]]
 
* [[documentation|User documentation:]] [[Documentation/packaging|(package release mode)]] [[Documentation/integration|(kernel integration mode)]]
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* [[Documentation/backports/hacking|Developer documentation]]
 
* [[Bugs|Reporting bugs & security vulnerabilities]]
 
* [[Bugs|Reporting bugs & security vulnerabilities]]
  

Revision as of 17:41, 27 June 2017


The Backports Project enables old kernels to run the latest drivers.

"Backporting" is the process of making new software run on something old. A version of something new that's been modified to run on something old is called a "backport".

The Backports Project develops tools to automate the backporting process. These tools form the backports suite.

History

The Backports Project started in 2007 as compat-wireless. It was renamed to compat-drivers as the project's scope broadened beyond just wireless network drivers. Nowadays, the project is known simply as backports.

As of the 3.10-based release, over 830 device drivers had been backported.

Recent versions of backports support mainline kernels back to version 3.0. The older backports-3.14 supports all kernel versions back to version 2.6.26.

Resources

Documentation

Papers

Videos

Community

88x31.png - This text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

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