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Andrew Keith Paul Morton (born 1959) is an Australian software engineer. He is one of the lead developers of the Linux kernel , and a co-maintainer of the Ext3 file system, the journaling layer for block devices (JBD) and memory management.
Among Linux kernel developers, the -mm tree refers to a version of the kernel source code maintained by Andrew Morton. The -mm kernel tree used to fill the role of Linux kernel development builds, formerly identified by odd version numbers following "2.6." (see this section [broken anchor] on Linux kernel version numbering). New and ...
Andrew Morton (computer programmer) (born 1959), Linux kernel programmer/coordinator Andrew Morton (painter) (1802–1845), English portrait artist Andrew Morton (writer) (born 1953), biographer of Diana, Princess of Wales, Angelina Jolie, Madonna, amongst others
For example, quilt is heavily used by the maintainers of the Linux kernel. [2] Quilt evolved from a set of patch-management scripts originally written by Linux kernel developer Andrew Morton, [3] and was developed by Andreas Grünbacher for maintaining Linux kernel customizations for SuSE Linux. [4]
Paul Berger and Andrew Morton formed the Australian company Applix Pty. Ltd. in approximately 1984 to sell a Z80 card they had developed for the Apple IIc that allowed it to run CP/M. This product was not a commercial success, but Paul later proposed they develop a Motorola 68000-based personal computer for sale in kit form.
Andrew Morton, the preeminent royal biographer, reveals lesser known facts about the late Queen Elizabeth in his new book "Queen Elizabeth: Her Life."
A port to the ext3 filesystem by Christopher Li and Andrew Morton in 2002 during the 2.5 kernel series added journal based crash consistency. With minor improvements, HTree continues to be used in ext4 in the Linux 3.x.x kernel series.
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