Alpha Relegated To FreeBSD's Tier 2 70
"Being Tier-2 does not mean that Alpha support will actively be removed from the tree. It does, however, mean that ISO images might not be produced for upcoming releases, pre-compiled packages might not be produced and more (in fact, this already stopped several weeks ago), and future security advisories might not be issued for it. This only applies to FreeBSD 5.3 and beyond; existing alpha releases are still supported by the security team according to their schedule, and future 4.x erratas and releases will still support it also. Demotion is also not a terminal condition. If in the future there is an renewed interest and the existing problems can be fixed, it can be re-considered for tier-1.
Alpha was a very important platform for FreeBSD. It paved the way both for 64-bit cleanliness and for being able to support multiple architectures. It was also a nice and refreshing architecture in a world of bland and hackish i386 systems. Thanks to Doug Rabson for porting to it in the first place and thanks to everyone who supported it afterwards.
The Release Engineering Team"
This is a good thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Alpha is as dead as a doornail. While RISC may still be flourishing, this pioneer is dead.
Keeping Alpha support around is like keeping Lenin's pickled corpse in a mausoleum. It may invoke feelings of nostalgia, but he's not coming back no matter how hard we wish he would.
Re:This is a good thing (Score:3, Interesting)
alpha is dead (Score:3)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:5, Funny)
Re:alpha is dead *FALSE TROLL MOD* (Score:2)
And back on topic in response, a 27gb RAID-5 is still not a bad file server, even if I wouldn't throw too many computers at it. It reminds me of the story of the 733 p3 desktop IDE, slow hard drive, and Windows 98 running as a psuedo-server, compared to the 60MHZ P1 with a SCSI drive and Novell. My friend (a junior sysadmin) was amazed to see how fast, relatively, that old box was.
Apples to Oranges? Of course! However, the lesson is that CPU speed is a poor judgement on many servers.
Re:alpha is dead (Score:5, Informative)
We had a situation where a cooling unit failed and a couple of RAID cards, drives, RAM, and what not fried in some of our i386 boxes, but the Alphas (knock wood) have never missed a beat even after that.
I SOOO wish there was a bigger call for 'em in the marketplace, these two servers are among the finest pieces of engineering I've ever encountered. Really. They're great. But, alas! Alphas got trounced by Intel.
Sigh. Sad day.
Re:alpha is dead (Score:1)
As for the fans, that's acutally (somewhat) true. I think the fans on the older of the two may've actually come from the same assembly line as a '96 Ford. (Suffice it to say, IT'S VERY LOUD! [Shudders.])
FWIW: The fans on the i386 boxes were all good fans, too, as far as I can gauge (no Pricewatch or BestBuy specials! [grin]), it just so happened the Alphas survived the harsh conditions. That's my story, and I'm stickin' with it.
Re:alpha is dead (Score:2)
Aside from that, i had an alpha where the fans failed and the machine just kept running for weeks.. it was however INCREDIBLY hot
Re:alpha is dead (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:1)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:2)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:2)
If alpha was in intels posistion now, computers in general would have been much better.
too bad.
Re:alpha is dead (Score:2)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:5, Interesting)
I've always said, if DEC had hired quality marketing people in addition to quality engineers, the company would still be in business. They designed and built rock-solid stuff.
Re:alpha is dead (Score:3, Interesting)
timothy
(http://www.bitworm.com/detail/0809245590/The_U l ti mate_Entrepreneur_The_Story_
Re:24 x 7 x 365 (Score:2)
Re:alpha is dead (Score:2)
Dying, but not dead yet. (Score:2)
Lots of people still do. There is one more clock increased Alpha chip to be released yet and people are still buying them. I should know, I'm a contractor and I specialize in integration of Tru64/TruCluster's on Alpha. All my business involves new systems and new projects, and this years Alpha business for me has been better than last year, so far.
Re:Dying, but not dead yet. (Score:2)
welcome back ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Bread from the bakery,
meat from the butcher,
and multiplatform operating systems from The NetBSD Foundation.
- Hubert
Re:welcome back ... (Score:3)
Bright Side of Things (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:1)
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:1, Troll)
"UNIX is a simple language" FALSE UNIX is an operating system not a language. The rest is just too mind numbingly stupid to comment on.
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:5, Informative)
I thought it was pretty funny and relevant, personally.
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:2)
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:1)
What he got wrong (maybe intentionally) was how much UNIX can do. It's modular and extensible enough to do anything. But what it does happens in the UNIX way.
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:2)
My bad. Dooohhh
Re:Bright Side of Things (Score:1)
glorious jihad
praise allah
we will be victorious
amen
This doesn't mean it's dead (Score:5, Interesting)
It is by no means dead, if you have an Alpha, you can try to help them out
when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:2)
Gentoo works as well (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Gentoo works as well (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Gentoo works as well (Score:2)
Re:Gentoo works as well (Score:2)
I've been looking into getting XFCE built by hand on my powerbook, because it's not supported by Fink (beyond the 3.x branch). It's caused me so much grief that I've temporarily ditched it in favour of IceWM.
However, simply for a server, there's very few "cuttting edge" programs you'd need to manually build. So in that situation I'd advocate one of the BSD's.
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe eventually, but there is strong support for Sparc64 on Free/Net/OpenBSD. With regular Sparc, you're relegated to Net and OpenBSD [in BSD world], which again still has strong support.
What's cool about the Sparc64 support, is that the support for different things amongst the BSD's is very different, so you have to really get to know the OS, and choose based upon what you intend to use the machine for.
For example, I run OpenBSD on both an Ultra1 and an Ultra2, as these are 'desktop' machines [and do some minor fileserving]. I run OpenBSD not for the security, but because they have the best framebuffer support for X. I run FreeBSD on a headless E250 that I use as a workstation file backup machine, because it has more ported applications from which to choose.
Then there is my lowly mailserver, running NetBSD on a dual CPU SS 20.
They all perform flawlessly, and are more stable with their respective OS's than with Slowlaris.
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:2)
Wow! This just might be the first comment I've ever seen on
You're in the company of around a dozen of people on
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:2)
Shocker!
Here's a hint kid: if I own a Sun, the thing I *want* to run on it is... SOLARIS!
Golly, Daddy, why is it when I run XSun on Solaris, it eats up all my real memory, eventually crashing X? Gets awful fucking annoying when it happens *every time*!
This has never happened with X on any of the flavors of BSD I run on my Sun machines. I'll stick with BSD. . .
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:1)
Have you considered that you might have fucked up something yourself ?
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:2)
Have you considered that you might have fucked up something yourself ?
Known flaw in Slowlaris 8. I'd already converted everything to OpenBSD, so no reason to even try 9.
Re:when will this happen to sun/sparc hardware? (Score:1)
Is Alpha still current technology? (Score:2)
I don't to relegate Alpha users to second class citizenship, but neither should FreeBSD releases be held up because of bugs on "legacy" hardware.
Re:Is Alpha still current technology? (Score:2)
In the very low power risc space they have the X-Scale.
In the low power the have the Pentium-M
For the eat all the electrons you want and double as a pizza oven you have Xeon and IA-64.
No real place for the Alpha. Really is a shame it was sold out. DEC Could have been very interesting with the ALPHA they might have been abile to scale from the desktop up to SMP s
Re:Is Alpha still current technology? (Score:2, Informative)
Tier-1 loss not that big a deal (Score:2)
Losing Tier-1 status may not be that big a deal. AMD64 is tier-1, and there's no gdb or loadable module support (at least not in 5.2.1, I don't know about -CURRENT).