follow
Contact us at lund-linuxcon-crew-AT-googlegroups.com or on #lundlc at libera.chat
Also, checkout more information about Lund at the volontary tourist information Destination Lund or Visit Lund.
follow
Contact us at lund-linuxcon-crew-AT-googlegroups.com or on #lundlc at libera.chat
Also, checkout more information about Lund at the volontary tourist information Destination Lund or Visit Lund.
We're looking forward to seeing you all, soo very soon! Have a read of the program while you wait.
Check the lightning talk slots, have something you want to bring up? discuss? air?
2026 -- Here we go again! Lets have a carnival of a time!Day one - 2026-05-21 |
||
| Time | Presenter | Presentation |
|---|---|---|
| 9:30 | The doors are open. Grab your badge and a t-shirt! Bring your ID! | |
| 10:00 | The Organizers | Introduction |
| 10:15 | Toke Høiland-Jørgensen | TCP in (way too much) detail |
| 11:10 | Krister Walfridsson | Detecting GCC miscompilations |
| 12:00 | Photos and lunch (not sponsored) | |
| 13:00 | Pankaj Raghav | Block Atomic writes in Linux |
| 13:45 | Vitaly Wool | ngZRAM in Rust: steady as it goes |
| 14:30 | Break | |
| 15:00 | Johannes Thumshirn | Here be drgns - Kernel debugging with drgn |
| 15:45 | Bogdan Tanasa | The Intel Processor Trace |
| 16:30 | Wrap up | |
| 17:00 | Building needs to be cleared | |
| ~18:00-~21:00 | Social activity sponsored by AFRY: Dinner at Shady Burgers downtown Lund. A separate registration required | |
Day two - 2025-05-22 |
||
| Time | Presenter | Presentation |
| 9:30 | The doors are open, bring your badge. | |
| 10:00 | Michael Cardell Widerkrantz | Creating secrets with measured & verified boot |
| 10:45 | Andy Shevchenko | Typical mistakes when submitting a new code to Linux kernel: Ten years later. |
| 11:30 | Lunch (not sponsored) | |
| 13:00 | Hannes Reinecke | Sheepdog as a distributed NVMe storage |
| 13:45 | Daniel Wagner | nvme-cli 3.x and nvme-fabrics at scale |
| 14:30 | Break (cinnamon buns) | |
| 15:00 | Gerhard de Clercq | Litterbox: Somewhat Isolated Development Environments |
| 15:25 | Lightning talks | Magnus Glantz - Creating Red Hat Enterprise Linux You - with your talk, contact us! |
| 16:45- | Finishing up, social activity: self-organized | |
Tries to add structure to chaos, atleast during our meetings!
Is on a quest in the blocklayer when he's not teaching about the linux kernel
We've seen him sending patches, but now he seems to have mounted lkml read-only. We are still waiting for more patches :)... oh, and the one responsible/to-blame™ for the webpage and t-shirt designs
building the Open-Channel SSD ecosystem on Linux. Main developer of LightNVM's open source Flash Translation Layer (pblk). Interested in NAND and next generation non-volatile memories
Long time Unix and Linux developer, maintainer of the Axis CRIS port of Linux from 2008 to it's removal in 2018. Working with Linux kernel drivers and debugging for Axis SoC
We claim that it's a really interesting story
Is working on getting things upstream!
Linux promoter at Volvo Cars, previously Linux Kernel Gfx developer at Intel Open Source Technology Center, and before that driving the "Linuxification" of mobile platforms at Ericsson and ST-Ericsson from a multimedia perspective
involved in Linux audio, and formerly employed by Canonical
The first ever LLC
The Lund Linux Conference (LLC) is a small, technical conference with focus on serving and building the local Linux community - a chance for Linux developers to meet, learn and get to know each other.
The community now stretches beyond Lund and we have a good bunch of people from Denmark as regulars, as well as people we’ve met from all over the world.
The idea for a conference in Lund was hatched, like all good conspiracies, over beer in a dungeon, during the 2013 Embedded Linux Conference in Edinburgh. After realizing that surprisingly many people from the Lund region were regularly going to the same Linux conferences all over the world, Hans pitched the idea to the rest of the Lundensians of doing a small, yearly event in Lund. How hard could it be? We did not know how to do this, but saw no real reason why this would not work out beautifully. At least it could cut down on travelling costs.
After meeting up with some old friends at the Linaro office in Lund over glüewine and home baked cookies, the first conference crew was quickly formed with people from Linaro, Intel OTC, Axis and Ericsson, and the first conference was held in May 2014. It turned out we had a lot of kernel developers in the area, gathering 40 people at the event. Afterwards, we immediately decided to do it again, bigger and better the next year... and the rest is history :)
We still really don’t know what we’re doing, but it seems to be working. The community is growing and we now have trouble squeezing in all the awesome content we receive every year. We’re keeping true to the first guidelines we established the first year - a single-track, invite only, kernel-centric, free event focused on (technical) content over form.
LLC is dedicated to providing a harassment-free conference experience for everyone. We do not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form. Conference participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the conference at the discretion of the conference organizers.
Participants asked to stop any harassing behavior are expected to comply immediately
If a participant engages in harassing behaviour, event organisers retain the right to take any actions to keep the event a welcoming environment for all participants. This includes warning the offender or expulsion from the conference.
Event organisers may take action to redress anything designed to, or with the clear impact of, disrupting the event or making the environment hostile for any participants.
We expect participants to follow these rules at all event venues and event-related social activities. We think people should follow these rules outside event activities too!
If someone makes you or anyone else feel unsafe or unwelcome, please report it as soon as possible. Conference staff can be identified by special badges and will introduce the whole conference. Harassment and other code of conduct violations reduce the value of our event for everyone. We want you to be happy at our event. People like you make our event a better place.
You can make a report either personally or anonymously.
You can make an anonymous report using this form.
We can't follow up an anonymous report with you directly, but we will fully investigate it and take whatever action is necessary to prevent a recurrence.
You can make a personal report by:
When taking a personal report, our staff will ensure you are safe and cannot be overheard. They may involve other event staff to ensure your report is managed properly. Once safe, we'll ask you to tell us about what happened. This can be upsetting, but we'll handle it as respectfully as possible, and you can bring someone to support you. You won't be asked to confront anyone and we won't tell anyone who you are.
Our team will be happy to help you contact hotel/venue security, local law enforcement, local support services, provide escorts, or otherwise assist you to feel safe for the duration of the event. We value your attendance.
Based on this anti-harassment policy