Linux Memory Had One Maintainer for 26 Years. He Just Quit. Now What?

One person held the code that runs every Android phone, cloud server, and supercomputer for 26 years. On April 21, he posted one message and then was silent.

Linux Memory Had One Maintainer for 26 Years. He Just Quit. Now What?
Photo by Jordan Seott on Unsplash

Twenty-six years. One maintainer.

Every Android phone, every cloud server, every supercomputer on the planet depends on a single kernel subsystem to allocate, reclaim, and protect its memory. 164 source files, all interlinked. 17.9% of all Linux kernel security vulnerabilities between 2020 and 2024 came from this code.

One person reviewed the code going into this subsystem for 26 years.

On April 21, 2026, that person posted a message to the kernel mailing list saying he intended to begin stepping away.

Almost no one responded.

Two weeks later, at a developer summit in Zagreb, the memory management team tried to figure out how to replace him. They couldn't.

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