FreeBSD an officially supported GNOME platform 133
GlockaDe writes: "FreeBSD is now a supported platform for the GNOME project. This means that now, new GNOME releases will not ship unless they successfully build and run on FreeBSD. The actual note is buried in these minutes."
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Er, no. FreeBSD SMP isnt the best in the world (5.0 will fix that) but it works well enough and, coupled with all its other kernel advantages over Linux, an SMP FreeBSD machine is still faster [slashdot.org] than the same machine running Linux. This dovetails quite nicely with my experience as well. Given that there are no other "benchmarks" than those I've linked to, your belief in Linux's superiority remains just that, belief.
Nothing is official until you submit the patch. (Score:1)
Saying any free software is "officially supported on this-or-that-system" is a huge mistake, and it totally jeopardizes the "release early, release often" philosophy.
Free software projects depends on someone building and submitting system specific patches.
Re:Actually (Score:3)
I'll give you half credit though, vmware had problems in prior to 4-STABLE as of the beginning of the year, and won't run at all on anything prior to 4-STABLE.
Rant mode: On
By the way, what is the deal with everybody in Linux using
Rant mode: Off
Down that path lies madness. On the other hand, the road to hell is paved with melting snowballs.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Why would you want to? Linux compatibility is primarily useful for running closed-source apps built to run on Linux. GNOME can simply be compiled for FreeBSD by whoever maintains the FreeBSD packages for GNOME.
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
From assorted remarks I've seen on Slashdot and Linux Today, it seems that a lot of people seem to think of KDE and GNOME as Linux projects rather than Unix projects. Go figure.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
WordPerfect, StarOffice (not the OpenOffice beta), Adobe Acrobat Reader, RealPlayer, Java from Blackdown or Sun.
Some people like to run these.
Re:What's the point (Score:3)
OT: Is Eazel in trouble? (Score:2)
I recently sent an email to Eazel support regarding some problems I was having with Nautilus. The response made it sound like there was something wrong, the email thanked me for my support at this "challenging time", yet I have not heard that Eazel was having any problems.
It is not my intention to start rumours, but it would be a real shame if they were having problems since Nautilus has so much potential, but is still somewhat unusable (too bloated, and too difficult to install).
--
Re:BSD will get more attention (Score:2)
Just thought I'd write a line about my experiences with FreeBSD. I recently ran (up until yesterday, actually) FreeBSD. I was up to 4.3-BETA.
My experience with XFree (and I was using 4.0.3) was that it was actually easier to set up under FreeBSD than it was on the various Linux distributions I've used. Apps ran great, everything worked more or less fine.
In the end, though, I wanted cdparanoia without getting involved in a major porting project (it's in the OpenBSD ports tree, but there are some differences between OpenBSD and FreeBSD) and I was tired of waiting for DRI support. Heck, maybe it was there, but I couldn't find it and anyone I asked was too busy being l33t to help (and hell, while I'm at it, there are just some times when telling someone you used to run Linux is a bad idea.)
I wish the FreeBSD crowd all the luck in the world because they've got a potential Linux killer, but they're going to have to step up the development process' speed.
Re:Good one, Nik. (Score:2)
Re:Help me (Score:2)
I switched my wife to FreeBSD a few months ago. The only thing she noticed was that her system no longer seems to freeze for a few seconds at a time under heavy loading.
This is mainly because FreeBSD was designed from the start with the attitude of "let's do it the Right Way", rather than "let's get this working, and re-write it later". That has the disadvantage that you don't necessarily get nifty new features as quickly as the Linux folks. Linux seems to support every piece of hardware ever made to varying degrees. However, if a feature is including in the current release, then you can bet that it works - I've yet to find an alpha-quality driver or system in FreeBSD.
Anyway, she runs Netscape, Mozilla, Gnome, Enlightenment, ESD, and pretty much all of the other apps that you'd want on a Linux desktop. She can't tell that she's not the Debian system that it replaced, except for the never-freezing difference.
Re:Actually (Score:3)
Yes, it will; this FreeBSDzine article [freebsdzine.org] discusses it. (Hint: just because it requires help from the kernel, that doesn't mean FreeBSD's kernel can't provide that help, even if the kernel modules in question had to be written by somebody other than the people at VMware.)
Re:Err, does that mean... (Score:4)
No, that's not good enough - Wine runs native on FreeBSD.
You want to run Linux VMware on the FreeBSD running on VirtualPC, and then run NT on VMware.
Then you can run Hercules [freeserve.co.uk] on NT (yes, it runs on Linux as well, so you could run Linux on VMware instead)...
...and boot the S/390 version of Linux on that.
No, wait, you do want to run Linux on VMware. Then you'd run the NT version of Hercules under Wine....
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
----
Just one man beneath the sky,
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Unless it's an SMP system, that is... :)
Give the BSD drum a break and just enjoy the article for once; I like BSD as much as the next guy, but you needn't belittle everyone else to promote your "OS of choice" (whatever that is). Heck, Windows is great for many things that neither Linux nor BSD is good at.
The next time someone comes trolling for BSD flames, just ignore them; especially an AC on /. ; Every OS is a hobbiest's system to someone else.
The wheel is turning but the hamster is dead.
Re:OT: Is Eazel in trouble? (Score:2)
Re:Help me (Score:1)
Well, I noticed that current FreeBSD does seem to be a bit more responsive than Linux 2.2.x (haven't tried 2.4.x yet), but 14 times as fast? No way, not even close.
Re:Help me (Score:1)
Be cautious if you dual-boot with Windows, though. Both Open and Net BSD trash your partition table with their "disklabels", making your system unbootable if you later uninstall them and try to boot into Windows. fdisk /mbr doesn't work, I had to delete all partitions and start over.
If there is a way to prevent this please let me know, I'd like to try OpenBSD again.
Re:The future of BSD (Not necessarily dying) (Score:2)
Man, you and the post you replied to must be IT management. One can tell by the way that you just don't get it and probably never will.
Re:BSD (Score:2)
vim builds in DOS, but I don't think gvim (the GUI version) would run there.
Re:BSD (Score:2)
I agree. Slack and FreeBSD are my personal favorites as well. They are both developed in the classical Unix style... KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid).
Re:Help me (Score:2)
I did set the bootable partition back to Windows... "No operating system found".
Didn't try GRUB, but I'm not exactly hopeful enough to go through reinstalling Windows again :P
Thanks for the non-answer Mr. Smartypants.
BTW, I've done this with Linux and FreeBSD dozens of times with no problems.
BSD (Score:2)
There's just so much to explore and so little time.
LoB
That's nothing. (Score:2)
The cursor blinked about once every fifteen seconds.
These days, I could probably do that all that under Plex86 from within Linux. I'm just trying to figure out how to squeeze Wine into there...
Rob
Re:Fuck you cocksucker (Score:1)
BANG BANG.
Hail the sign of the DEVIL!.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
open()
read()
close()
One system call to read a sysctl:
sysctl()
--
Re:BSD (Score:1)
FreeBSD has a certain elegance to it.
I recently installed FreeBSD on my Vaio SuperSlim because it was the only free *nix that would install painlessly. I figured that I'd move it to linux once the distributions stabilized on 2.4, but it works nice, and feels nice, so I really don't think that I'll put linux on it.
Of course linux has certain benefits like greater hardware support, but FreeBSD is definetly catching up.
domc
Re:BSD (Score:1)
I've used Redhat, Debian, etc, but I always come home to Slack.
I can see myself moving in the direction of using Slackware for my dektop, and FreeBSD for servers. Two very elegant platforms!
domc
gnome for BSD? Hah! (Score:1)
It's faster, more stable, and inherently superior. It's also authentic NOME, not some piddly work-a-like. It's also way more obscure, which makes it very 31337.
-lx
Re:Actually (Score:1)
(jfb)
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Peace,
(jfb)
Re:about friggin time (Score:1)
Re:Good one, Nik. (Score:2)
Also, there hasn't been a "schedule" until recently (i.e. the last couple of months). There were goals and rough dates to shoot at, but no hard and fast schedule--you can't schedule that far in advance, you can only set goals. But in the last few months we have set a schedule and have done a pretty good job of sticking to our primary goal which was to release Gnome 1.4 before GUADEC. Barring any major issues this should happen.
----
Re:What's the point (Score:3)
----
But its not right in Linux yet! (Score:2)
"Please note: Ximian GNOME is not currently available for Mandrake 7.2. Users of Mandrake 7.2 are cautioned not to try to install Ximian GNOME on their systems."
I find it odd and infuriating that they can branch out to FreeBSD - a platform that GNOME was not originally designed to serve - when they haven't even gotten this right in one of the most popular linux distro's (in the US, anyway) yet.
"These are the thoughts that kept me out of the really *good* schools." --George Carlin
Re:What's the point (Score:2)
Re:waste of time with bsd (Score:2)
You spend so much time dissing BSD that it's like you're trying to compensate for some unknown inadequacy. Small dick? Small brain? What?
Re:Good one, Nik. (Score:2)
Re:The future of BSD (Not necessarily dying) (Score:2)
although the source is open, the development team is not.
I seem to recall that only Linus Torvalds gets to bless kernel code with "officialdom". Funny, I heard that GNU operates in a similar way.
Furthermore the license allpws proprietary software to "steal" source code and use it.
The oldest FUD in the book. You cannot steal what is free. Try it sometime if you don't believe me. No matter how hard you try, you cannot take FreeBSD away from the FreeBSD Core Team. No matter how much you close, fold, spindle and mutilate it, it will still be there untouched and as pristine as before!
"Steal" is definitely not the right word.
What must be done is an opening up of the development process OR a GPL-style restriction on redistribution.
So, you're saying that they either need to be LESS restrictive or MORE restrictive? Which one is it!
Recently I became aware of two GPLd projects that are using some of my BSD licensed code. Fantastic! Great! Go Bulldogs! It didn't bother me one bit that my code was being used in alternately licensed projects. However, if the shoes were on the other foot, it could not have happened.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
So you're into using DOS? What a glutton for punishment.
Re:that's two for BSD! (Score:1)
Darwin localhost 1.3 Darwin Kernel Version 1.3: Thu Mar 1 06:56:40 PST 2001; root:xnu/xnu-123.5.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC Power Macintosh powerpc
Great.... (Score:1)
Same goess with kde2.1.... on which kdeinit still hangs on some "QT mutex issues "
These projects need a very strong lesson into wirtting portable code. Portable code's benefits are not only in the portability, but by writting portable code, you're force to write better and cleaner code.
And this, is the unix way...
QT: Woah, by judging by the previous comments, slashdot has really turned into a place of uninformed/fanatic trolls...
there really needs to be a tronger registration system...
heck, even a micropayment slashdot is starting to look good.
Re:Great.... (Score:1)
no more stalls?
i was actually jus rright now reverting to 3.3.6...
this is great news indeed
Re:Great.... (Score:1)
damn... it Rocks... they have com ea long way since i first used them in '97...
Damn, gnome panel+sawfish no more forme...
Plus Konqueror.... damn, the mozilla guys should be ashmed....
Re:Great.... (Score:3)
Things have been fine under X3, and things were even ok under X4 for the first few days after KDE2.1's release.
I stopped using GNOME since KDE2's first release, so I can't comment on that.
--
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Re:about friggin time (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
"Better data" implies a comparison. You've provided no data to compare against. Maybe you should actually post something substantial before you start getting defensive.
Re:Good one, Nik. (Score:2)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Re:Help me (Score:1)
For me, the only thing I miss from Linux is some of the drivers. The nVidia driver would be nice, especially if they would just license the source under the MIT license for inclusion into XFree86. I am not bitter at nVidia! Grrrr!!!
For a true comparison, you would have to try it out yourself as my needs are probably different than yours. I had nothing to hold me on Linux. FreeBSD had everything that I needed. As for you, I don't know your requirements for a Unix system.
Your first step is to check on the FreeBSD website [freebsd.org] for hardware compatibility [freebsd.org]. You should do this for any operating system. I learned that lesson when I first started using Linux during the 0.99.14? days. Anyone else remember the SLS distribution?
Re:a scientific analysis (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:2)
--
Don't you mean... (Score:1)
. [ do some ranting ]
echo 0>
Re:What's the point (Score:2)
Hrm... (Score:1)
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Come on that's pretty much a troll and a mistatement of GNU philosophy. The goal of GNU is to make Free software that is every bit as useful as proprietary software. If everyone just gave up on that vision there wouldn't be any free software. Whenever you give up your freedoms you have to weigh the decision very carefully. Proprietary software is sometimes unavoidable, but the long term goal is to not need it at all.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
That's good and well. This attitude doesn't rule out trying to advance free software. You say you'd use free software if it gets the job done (weighing in of course cost matters and development concernes). But you haven't said if you think the long term goal of the GNU project is good. To give users like yourself a Free alternative to proprietary software. If you're only a user of software (as you imply) then I would encourage you to try to use Free software and help advance it. If the philosophy of free software is something you don't really care about, then I can understand, and call that a difference of opinion. But you really haven't opined on that.
What's the point (Score:1)
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
Since BSD is more of a server operating system is there many people the would even need this. It seems viable for Linux to get a piece of the desktop market but BSD??? I don't think so.
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
Re:Help me (Score:1)
that's two for BSD! (Score:4)
what a co-incidence! Apple recently stated that they wouldn't ship any future version of Aqua until it compiles on Darwin! go BSD! ;)
- j
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Find it all the dishearting you want.
give some quantitative proof of your claim
I was told this by Bob Bruce, the gent who's Walnut Creek was bought by BSDi.
Really, inflammatory remarks are exactly that
Silly me, for thinking the data from a BSDi staffer would be 'inflammatory'. But hey, obviously you have better data. So, post it.
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
I don't agree.
Which of the 180 versions (called distros by others) is more popular?
Simple statistics says the majority of linux distros have less marketshare than FreeBSD.
If you like lumping seperate versions together, then after Mac OS X ships for a year, its volume will outstrip the 180 linux versions.
Re:BSD (Score:1)
Really? You have proof of that? Less informed people like Tiger Software, Comdex and CompUSA have a 'linux section' with BSD placed there. How about Twocows placing BSD under a GPL license.
Why would the garder group be better?
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
http://www.netcraft.com/survey/ BSD isn't even close to Linux.
Really? What page? I see a 404 error.
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Considering of the Open Source OS market, FreeBSD has 20% marketshare, and can run Linux binaries faster than Linux does, I don't consider that marginal.
But, I guess the kool-aide they give out at RedHat is rather good, if you consider 20% marketshare marginal.
Re:BSD (Score:2)
As opposed to what? The majority of
To have the data the 20% number from Bob Bruce is based on, you'd have to post links to IDC, netcraft or other data. Data you pay $$ for. Links from
What is MORE interesting is this:
slashdot post [slashdot.org]
Here a claim of 'falling IDC numbers', yet you have not posted calling THAT into question.
If you don't like "bad data", then why not a post to that reply.
Re:What's the point (Score:3)
Really? Then can you explain this product?
FreeBSD the desktop version [freebsdmall.com]
What? (Score:1)
Uh... huh?
You must have been thinking 'Slackware' and somehow typed 'Debian' instead by accident, right?
"That old saw about the early bird just goes to show that the worm should have stayed in bed."
WOOHOO! (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:1)
geekiness is a worthy goal, and it's no surprise that elitism becomes a problem. but look at it this way: bsd people (hopefully) never need help with their systems, so tech support people won't get any calls from bsd users!
(for the record, i tried installing plan9 over the summer, but it didn't recognize my voodoo3, so i gave up. so much for uber-geekdom.)
jon
BSD will get more attention (Score:3)
Sure the BSD's do not focus on being desktop workstations but that does not mean the Gnome and KDE developers cannot make it work nicely as one. At times it is hard setting up X under BSD, but once it is running it is pretty sweet.
I use FreeBSD since it seems well rounded with tons of ported applications and many performance enhancements for the x86 platform while the other two main branches are happy producing a great server OS which runs on all kinds of hardware. I am unsure how well X and Gnome runs on those systems. I doubt many NetBSD users would feel bad if someone said XFreeBSD is hard to install onto NetBSD. One place that I know is using NetBSD has it running several large printers. I think they manage them through SNMP.
Pick the right OS for the job. I am glad FreeBSD works well as a server and can do the job as a workstation so long as I do not mind tinkering with it till the sound works.
FreeBSD continues to improve nicely. I cannot wait to see when 5.0 is released sometime in the next year or so. The integration of BSDi features like fine grained SMP will be great, even for a single processor. A nicely threaded kernel will be good for everything. Take that along with more development on KQueues and you will have a fine desktop platform and a database/web server.
Re:what about /dev then? (Score:1)
Re:Because it's the UNIX way (Score:1)
Re:what about /dev then? (Score:1)
Re:what about /dev then? (Score:1)
Re:BSD (Score:2)
If you're into FreeBSD because of what it does for you, that's great. If you're into it because Linux isn't "weird" or l33t enough for you, you're a dumbass.
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
I think its more an issue of lack of knowledge.. People are too hyper focused on Linux and not thinking UNIX in general.
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
Mac OS X isn't BSD. Darwin is. (Score:2)
The only BSD that matters now is MacOSX
BSD operating systems have a history of being licensed under free software terms. Mac OS X is not free software; on the contrary, it's proprietary software that runs on proprietary hardware, and you don't know how much copy "protection" is in the hardware and software.
It takes a visionary company like Apple to wash and scrub an awful GUI like X away.
X is only a network-transparent graphics subsystem. The GUI is provided by X toolkits and clients such as GTK+ apps and Qt apps. (The Qt [trolltech.com] (not QT [apple.com]) logo looks too much like a hammer and sickle.) I agree that the GNOME people have a lot to learn from Apple, and vice versa.
Good one, Nik. (Score:4)
The above link is more than a month old, and what's noteworthy now is that Nautilus is not supported on FreeBSD. Nautilus is GNOME 1.4. To complicate matters, GNOME 1.4 is way behind schedule, and before this article on Slashdot, I don't think FreeBSD was a priority at all!
In short, this article should strong-arm the GNOME Foundation into delaying GNOME even more, for better or for worse.
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Re:Actually (Score:2)
Linux supports both, and developers choose to use
There's no reason why any of the BSD's can't support it other than developer inertia, and for the BSD traditionalists, it doesn't have to be the primary kernel config interface, merely a compatibility option. However, believe me, once
Because it's the UNIX way (Score:2)
You misunderstand the AGP files in
The format (and location) of the data does change in
As for cross-platform issues, tell me, does your
And to your most relevant point, that binary to text conversion is slow and memory intensive. Well, this would be a problem if procfs was a real in-memory filesystem... but it isn't. The data inside
Are there any other arguments for sysctl and against procfs? It still seems like a case of favouring tradition over a superior design.
Re:Err, does that mean... (Score:2)
OK, technically I was wrong, but
Life sucks.
:(
about friggin time (Score:2)
Re:Support is useless (Score:2)
maybe you ppl miss the point (Score:2)
--
Tres_Status
Actually (Score:2)
csh-2.04# uname -snrm
FreeBSD ritalin.deficiency.org 4.1-RELEASE i386
Actually... (Score:2)
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Well maybe you're right. I installed fbsd this morning for exactly that reason though. A passion. A hobby. I code at work for money. At home it's for fun. Work can dictate what OS('s) I develop for, but at home it's all about choice, and what _I_ think is fun. The fun seems to have gone out of Linux (for me). Don't get me wrong, Linux is GREAT! But I think that, perhaps, it's heading in the wrong direction.
I first installed linux in 1995 (Yggdrasil Linux) and have used it predominately since. The reason I installed it was because I like hacking. Linux these days seems to have moved away from hacking to "World Domination". I don't give a flying monkey's tail about World Domination. I want to hack, and feel as though I am doing something for the pure passion of it. The fact that compilation on fbsd is now a gnome requirement (if it doesn't compile on fbsd it's considered a serious bug) seems, to me, to confirm that other people think like me.
Hacking is (as you said) a hobby. A labour of love. I get paid for programming. In my spare time I hack.
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Usually I don't respond to trolling but I find it disheartening that people actually believe things without researching them. Please, if you will, give some quantitative proof of your claim. Really, inflammatory remarks are exactly that, no matter which side you choose.
Err, does that mean... (Score:3)