Garzik: An Andre To Remember

From: Jeff Garzik <jeff-AT-garzik.org> To: linux-ide-AT-vger.kernel.org Subject: An Andre To Remember Date: Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:56:55 -0400 Message-ID: <20120727175655.GA23784@havoc.gtf.org> Cc: LKML <linux-kernel-AT-vger.kernel.org>, lwn-AT-lwn.net Archive-link: Article, Thread

An Andre To Remember July 2012 Linux lost a friend and advocate this month. Though never a household name, Andre Hedrick had a positive impact on everyone today running Linux, or using a website, with any form of IDE (ATA) or SCSI storage -- that means millions upon millions of users today. For a time, Andre interacted with practically every relevant IDE drive and controller manufacturer, as well as the T13 standards committee through which IDE changes were made. He helped ensure Linux had near-universal IDE support in a hardware era when Linux support was a second thought if at all. As the Register article[1] noted, with CPRM and other efforts, Andre worked to keep storage a more open platform than it might otherwise have been. [1] http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/07/26/andre_hedrick/ Andre also played a role in IDE technology coalescing around the idea of a "taskfile", which is IDE-speak for an RPC command issued to a disk drive, and the RPC response returned from the drive. It was very important to Andre that the kernel have a "taskfile ioctl", an API enabling full programmable access to the disk drive. At the time, a more limited "cmd ioctl" API was the best option available, but Linux's cmd ioctl did not give users full and complete access to their own disk drive. Andre's taskfile concept was a central component of the current, rewritten-from-scratch Linux IDE driver "libata." libata uses an "ata_taskfile" to communicate with all IDE drives, whether from a decade ago or built yesterday. The taskfile concept modernized IDE software, by forcing the industry to move away from a slow, signals-originated register API to a modern, packetized RPC messaging API, similar to where SCSI storage had already been moving. I spent many hours on the phone with Andre, circa 2003, learning all there was to know about ATA storage, while writing libata. Andre could be considered one of the grandfathers of libata, along with Alan Cox. I became friends with Andre during this time, and we talked a lot. Andre was unquestionably smart, driven and an advocate for Linux user freedom. Andre was also mentally ill. Some of those hours spent on the phone with him were not geeky discussions, but me patiently listening to paranoid thoughts about kernel developer conspiracies, and even more patiently describing how he was simply misunderstanding and misapplying the development process and/or basic code details. Andre would receive engineering feedback on some of his changes, and wonder why the engineer reviewing his changes was conspiring to shoot down his obviously-needed changes. At some point, paranoia and mental illness makes you difficult to work with, which starts a nasty feedback loop feeding further paranoia and stress. Perhaps it is the nature of intelligence itself, or just the nature of computer science, but our profession seems to have a higher than average rate of bipolar disorder and other mental illnesses. A Beautiful Mind comes to mind, as does my own purely anecdotal observations of others as a kernel developer and maintainer. Whatever the reason, Andre is not the only developer I've encountered who sees conspiracies, wheels-within-wheels in the feedback they receive. Although I was truly shocked by the news of Andre's suicide, it always seemed like Andre was continually stressed out, when I knew him. When spending long hours discussing kernel and storage industry politics over the phone with Andre, I found myself constantly advising him to relax, to take a break from computing. This is a time for grief and a time for celebration of Andre's accomplishments, but also it is a time to look around at our fellow geeks and offer our support, if similar behavioral signs appear. There is no computing project that is worth your life. Turn off the computer. Seek help. Get outside, enjoy the green grass, the birds in the trees. Talk to people you know. Talk to strangers! Drive to Wisconsin, and find out whatever it is they do there. Build a treehouse. Park on a parkway and drive on a driveway. Make a macaroni necklace. Visit a dairy. Climb a rock. Seek life. Life is so much more than code. Rest in peace Andre, Jeff Garzik friend and libata author PS. Remembering Andre website: http://hedrick4419.blogspot.com/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/