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Debian Operating Systems Software

Debian Drops SPARC Platform Support 152

jones_supa writes: SPARC isn't exactly a highly-used architecture anymore, so the Debian operating system is dropping support for the platform, according to Joerg Jaspert last week in the "debian-sparc" mailing list. He noted that this does not block a later comeback as "sparc64." Following that announcement, a new post today tells us that SPARC support was just removed from the unstable, experimental and jessie-updates channels.
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Debian Drops SPARC Platform Support

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  • Sad Day (Score:4, Interesting)

    by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:14PM (#50191215) Journal

    I think the first version of Debian I'd ever used was Hamm on an old Sparcstation IPC.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Debian hamm sucked quite a bit less than SunOS

        We had a couple of those. You should have tried NetBSD. For a very long time, Linux had particularly bad handling of the SPARC TLB and NetBSD was faster to the extent that it was noticeable by the user in the GUI.

        apart from the terrible quality of the CG3 driver in Xfree, which would lock the entire machine up solid after about 30 minutes of use

        When was these? Even after they stopped being useful as stand-alone machines, we used them as dumb X servers and easily had a few weeks of XFree86 uptime.

    • This decision makes sense, since Debian is so dominant on Intel boxes that they can't afford resources to support SPARC - even though the port already exists and it's simply a matter of migrating the same incremental changes that are there on Lintel to SPARC.

      So much for the claim Linux fans make of the OS being 'everywhere' - here is a UNIX only CPU: no version of Windows ever ran on it, only UNIX-like OSs, such as SunOS, Solaris, Linux and *BSD.

      • by virtual_mps ( 62997 ) on Tuesday July 28, 2015 @06:55AM (#50195767)

        If it's so easy, why don't you take over the port and show us how it's done? Debian has been very up front for years now that the sparc port was on its way out due to lack of interest; if anyone really cared, they would have stepped up to maintain it. The problem here isn't that it's impossible, or even a theoretical challenge, the problem is that the sparc hardware in general isn't really all that great and there isn't really a compelling reason to use it when people are literally throwing out higher-spec'd x86 gear. Only on the highest end is the sparc line potentially interesting, and nobody spends that much money to run a research project as an OS; by the time the hardware is available to hobbyist developers it's obsolete--and again, why bother plugging in a really power-hungry system and spend years developing for a platform that, by the time it's usable, will be outperformed by tomorrow's junk?

  • by AndroSyn ( 89960 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:20PM (#50191273) Homepage

    I had a Sun Netra T1 200 for a bit over 10 years that ran Debian on Sparc. The hardware was reliable, the Debian as an OS worked well enough, less of a headache than Solaris IMHO. Occasionally had some weird kernel related quirks, but I generally just kept it tracking Debian sid.

        I think it was just a matter of time that the Debian sparc port went away, the surplus of old sparc boxes has gone away more than anything. I'm not sure anyone used Debian on sparc for anything serious(read business use), though.

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:39PM (#50191449) Homepage

      Used it in comcast to make close to $1,000,000 a day gathering data from the old ad insertion boxes.

      Solaris was a major PITA to deal with so I installed debian and simply rewrote the data harvester in C and it ran that way for 11 years. 4 of which were without any maintenance at all as I had left the company. and 4 years later I started getting notifications of script failures to a private email address I had that interfaced with my MSN watch. (Yes that long ago)

      The funny part is someone recently fired that box back up as last month I had an email that it successfully rebooted and started the cron job but could not find the servers it was trying to harvest data from.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @02:26PM (#50191847) Journal

      I'm not sure anyone used Debian on sparc for anything serious(read business use), though.

      Let's be honest......the day the value of open source software is determined by its "business use," is the day the open source community is dead.

      • You are thinking of GNU software. As Eric Raymond pointed out, the more that Open Source software is used - whether by business or by freeloaders, the more useful it ends up being, as a lot of modifications & improvements are made over time to make it address all that diverse usage
        • Nah. I'm thinking that 'useful' has more than one definition, and "real business use" is not necessarily the most important, unless you are the most rabid capitalist.
      • Someone needs to develop the software. The difference between open source and proprietary software is that open source software is developed by and for people who want to use it, proprietary software is developed by people who want to sell it. Successful projects are ones where the people who want to use it want to use it enough to fund development.
        • Successful projects are ones where the people who want to use it want to use it enough to fund development.

          I'm going to call you a moron right here because you only think of success in terms of monetary value and popularity. Success is not measured by money alone.

          A successful project is one that produces great code, one that makes its creator happy.

  • Mod reversal (Score:3, Informative)

    by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:24PM (#50191323)

    Posting to cancel a 'Troll' mod that I posted to the wrong comment by mistake. And may the AC who posted shit about gay black people, die very slowly in a fire

    .

  • by snkline ( 542610 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:25PM (#50191327)
    I sorta liked SPARC. My assembly language class in college covered MIPS and SPARC programming, and while MIPS was simpler, the SPARC ISA was much more interesting.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • My gods. Dude, those things were slow on the very day they CAME OUT.

      I don't know why Sun even made the SparcClassic. They were absolute garbage, then you look at how expensive they were and it's even more mind blowing.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • My gods. Dude, those things were slow on the very day they CAME OUT.

        I don't know why Sun even made the SparcClassic. They were absolute garbage, then you look at how expensive they were and it's even more mind blowing.

        It was the low cost SPARCstation LX, which itself was not a screamer, but fast enough.

        You have to remember the PCs of the time were mostly i386. This was pre-Pentium, and i486s were still very expensive. All PCs were ISA bus (16-bit at perhaps 20MHz) versus the 32-bit 25MHz SBUS serving the SPARCstations of the time, and it can be seen that anything beyond the CPU was much faster on any SPARCstation. And even CPU wise, SPARC had the legs of even the highest end i486s of the time, especially on FPU performan

  • Wow, end of an era. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aussersterne ( 212916 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @01:39PM (#50191447) Homepage

    For more than just a couple of us here, I suspect, there was a time when "Sparc," "UNIX," "graphics," "Internet," and "science" were all nearly synonymous terms.

    Simpler times. Boy did that hardware last and last and last in comparison to the hardware of today.

    Well, I suppose it can finally no longer be said that the Sparcstation 10 I keep here just for old times' sake can still run "current Linux distributions." But it's still fun to pull it out for people, show them hundreds of megabytes of RAM, 1152x900 24-bit graphics, gigabytes of storage, multiple ethernet channels, and multiple processors, running Firefox happily, and tell them it dates to 1992, when high-end PCs were shipping with mayyybe 16-32GB RAM, a single 486 processor, 640x480x16 graphics, a few dozen megabytes of storage, and no networking.

    It helps people to get a handle on how it was possible to develop the internet and do so much of the science that came out of that period—and why even though I don't know every latest hot language, the late '80s/early '90s computer science program that I went to (entirely UNIX-based, all homework done using the CLI, vi, and gcc, emphasis on theory, classic data structures, and variously networked/parallelized environments, with labs of Sparc and 88k hardware all on a massive campus network) seems to have prepared me for today's real-world needs better than the programs they went to, with lots of Dell boxes running Windows-based Java IDEs.

    • What's amazing is how RELIABLE those things were.

      We have a couple of SparcStation 5 units STILL RUNNING because a professor refuses to let them go. They have 2GB hard drives (yes TWO gigs) and 128MB of RAM. These things were outrageously expensive when they came out; I'm guessing Sun spent a lot of the extra money on overengineering the hell out of everything.

      "Sir this version of Solaris is no longer supported. We can't keep running it unless we block access to it from the Internet."
      "It doesn't need Interne

      • by jbolden ( 176878 )

        Sun wasn't that. The 128 RAM wasn't cheap but the 2G HD meant they were skimping. I bet those systems were around $5-7k or so well under double what an x86 workstation would cost.

        As for getting professors to give up old equipment, start metering the electricity and billing the department.

        • >As for getting professors to give up old equipment, start metering the electricity and billing the department.

          HAH I wish. It's funny because if this junk were x86 we would have simply virtualized it years ago. But it's SPARC and there (still) isn't a good emulator for sun4m. I think one was "getting there" but was still crashy when we tried it last.

          • by jbolden ( 176878 )

            Have you tried: Oracle VM Server for SPARC and Oracle Solaris Zones for virtualization? Anyway Oracle and Cloud Sigma both offer Solaris in the cloud. And of course there is nothing stopping you from upgrading him to a modern Solaris box.

    • For more than just a couple of us here, I suspect, there was a time when "Sparc," "UNIX," "graphics," "Internet," and "science" were all nearly synonymous terms.

      Remember the old Sun slogan: The network is the computer. [wikipedia.org]

      [ Yes, I'm that old. ]

    • I was just thinking about SPARC the other day. My old boss runs this electronics junk shop. He is closing down this month forever but I saw him in the back, taking apart old Sparc 10's and Ultras and pulling out the addon cards to try to sell off eBay. Sad really. He should of done that 10 years ago when they were worth much more:P
    • by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @02:07PM (#50191683)

      For more than just a couple of us here, I suspect, there was a time when "Sparc," "UNIX," "graphics," "Internet," and "science" were all nearly synonymous terms.

      I did a six-month internship at a Fortune 500 company in 1997 where every programmer had a SPARC workstation and a row of UNIX binders on a shelf above their desk. No one actually used the binders for anything, as they were just office decorations like the plastic plants. You couldn't be a SERIOUS ENGINEER without a row of SERIOUS BINDERS above your desk.

    • by DeVilla ( 4563 )

      ...and tell them it dates to 1992, when high-end PCs were shipping with mayyybe 16-32GB RAM, a single 486 processor, 640x480x16 graphics, a few dozen megabytes of storage, and no networking.

      I know I wasn't buying high end at the time, but I didn't think I was I slumming it that much.

    • by dougmc ( 70836 )

      and tell them it dates to 1992, when high-end PCs were shipping with mayyybe 16-32GB RAM, a single 486 processor, 640x480x16 graphics, a few dozen megabytes of storage, and no networking.

      As much as I loved Sun hardware at that time (though I didn't get to touch anything better than a Sparcstation 2 until years later), since you explicitly mention high-end PCs, I'll have to point out that that 1992 hi-end consumer PCs (you did say high end, so I can pick the best of what's available) did have not just networking but ethernet (it was relatively common, and not just found on high end machines), could have 1024x768 with 16 or 24 bit (not color) graphics, perhaps 32 MB of memory (though that is

      • what consumers had access to by walking into a retail computer dealership (there were many independent white box makers at the time) and saying "give me your best."

        You're probably right about me underestimating the graphics, though it's hard to remember back that far. I'm thinking 800x600 was much more common. If you could get 1024x768, it was usually interlaced (i.e. "auto-headache") and rare if I remember correctly to be able to get with 24-bit color—S3's first 16-bit capable chips didn't come out u

        • by dougmc ( 70836 )

          what consumers had access to by walking into a retail computer dealership ... and saying "give me your best"

          Of course, by that metric, Suns weren't available at all.

          SCSI was somewhat rare in a PC in 1992, yes, but not that uncommon. (Anybody remember the Adaptec AHA-1542B? It came out in 1990.)

          800x600 was more common, but 1024x768 was available. I don't recall if it was all interlaced or not, but I do recall how much that interlacing sucked!

          Ethernet (or token ring, that was still somewhat common) was quite common in environments where it made sense. Not in a one computer home of course, but in a business, sur

          • The memory thing was basically "dial-a-pricepoint". I remember machines with a base price on the order of $5k, with $10k+ of memory (which was less than you probably have in your phone).

            I'm also amused whenever one of these sparc nostalgia threads comes up, because the way I remember things the cool kids had the SGIs and DECs and the Suns were kinda the lame/cheap crap, basically the PCs of the UNIX world. They exploded during the .com bubble because you could buy those (honestly, horribly designed internal

        • by jbolden ( 176878 )

          This was exclusively for workstations but in terms of multi processor there definitely were multi-processor 486s sold. I had a buddy with 4x486. SCO was the typical OS for these boxes. OS/2 and Linux were both working on it and would achieve it.

          Also also with SCO the x86/i860 combo was popular (for an exotic workstation). The 486 while having good floating point math sucked at vector math. The i860 while good at vector math was bad at multi-tasking. There were both motherboards and compilers to take a

      • by jbolden ( 176878 )

        No you couldn't. 16mb RAM was out the but was very expensive and many motherboards wouldn't support more than 4MB SIMMs (1 and 2MB SIMMS were still the norm for PCs). Good motherboards (in full tower cases) had at most 8 slots. So I'm going with 128MB as an upper limit.

        • by dougmc ( 70836 )

          I was asking about the Sparcstation 10, not a PC.

          Wikipedia says "The SS10 can hold a maximum of 512 MB RAM in eight slots", so that means we need 64MB modules for it, and I'm not sure they were available yet in 1992.

          I've got a SS20 in my garage, and it's got 208 MB of memory -- which wasn't too bad at all, "back in the day" anyways.

          • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

            You could even get 128mb simms in 1992, they were just horrifically expensive...

            • by dougmc ( 70836 )

              He was saying that the SS10 could handle 512 MB in 1992, at time when the best PCs were maxed out at 32 MB or so.

              The SS10 takes proprietary memory, and I know there was a firmware update that allowed it to use larger (32 MB, I think) sticks at some point. Ultimately, I don't think there was any way to put 512MB into a SS10 in 1992, even if the machine did eventually support it. I think 128 MB was more likely, though even that's very good for a desktop box back then.

              As for 128MB simms in 1992, I have my do

    • by h4ck7h3p14n37 ( 926070 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @03:38PM (#50192369) Homepage

      Well, I suppose it can finally no longer be said that the Sparcstation 10 I keep here just for old times' sake can still run "current Linux distributions."

      NetBSD and OpenBSD both run on the SparcStation 10 and they're actual UNIX operating system. http://wiki.netbsd.org/ports/s... [netbsd.org] http://www.openbsd.org/sparc.h... [openbsd.org]

    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      I still have 3 sparcstation-20 machines in the garage, one of which is maxed out with 512mb ram and 4 cpus... I doubt it would run firefox very smoothly tho.

  • systemd!! (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It's because of systemd. Soon debian will drop linux and support only systemd.

  • by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Monday July 27, 2015 @02:17PM (#50191761) Homepage Journal
    Debian was the last *working* linux for sparc32 platforms
  • The standard desktop at the company I work for used to be a Sun Ultra 5, and when the company imploded I picked an Ultra 5 with a fast processor (400 MHz), put some more memory in it, took it home and put Debian on it. It worked fine. Entirely decent interactive performance, like a fast Pentium 2. Not a box for video editing or other high-CPU/bandwidth activities, but fine otherwise.

    I was amused to note that it wasn't a Windows box, so it was immune to Windows attacks. It wasn't an x86 box, so it was immu

  • How retarded is that?

    Most SUNs I work on are SPARC, actually all SUNs I have worked with during the last 15 years where SPARCs.

    Did they run Linux? Debian? No! Obviously they ran Sun Solaris. And still do. But I guess there are plenty of shops that abuse big iron to run plenty of virtual machines.

    The Debian stance might make sense (for them). Their explanation does not, though.

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