The Driver Nobody Wrote: OpenBSD's ena(4) Works Now — and Can't Go Upstream
Five weeks ago I ended a post about writing OpenBSD's missing ena(4) driver with a confession disguised as a list — every way the thing didn't work yet. This is the post where I cross them all off. The driver does a full disk install now, comes up multiuser with the AWS network card as its only interface, lets me SSH in over it, pushes 3.16 Gbit across multiple queues with receive-side scaling, and runs unchanged on OpenBSD-current. It is, by every technical measure I set for myself, done. And that is exactly when it walked into the one wall effort can't move: code an AI wrote has no human author, so it cannot go into OpenBSD's tree — not for lack of quality, but for lack of a person. This is the story of finishing it, the one bug I never cracked, and what it means to write working systems code that, in the eyes of the thing it was written for, nobody wrote.