LinuxPPC 2000 - First Boxed Product 169
Hacksworth writes "LinuxPPC, Inc. has released their first boxed product of their distribution of Linux for PowerPC computers. " Congrats to the guys working there. A lot of hard work has been put in over at LinuxPPC and it's nice to see the progress.
Re:Here's SOMETHING to run it on (Score:1)
Yeah, please do! (Score:2)
I haven't got around to reinstalling it (which I intend to do for fun, having a definite geek gene), but it is much nicer not having to download for 48 hours or so and take up whole HD partitions :) plus I've already worked out the kernel I need to run, which apparently is "vmlinux.2.2.1-VERY-STABLE". So I have a head start at wrestling '99 into useful shape and playing with it.
The packaging for LinuxPPC 1999 is small but _very_ attractive! And ya gotta love that tripped-out-penguin 'Linux Power' graphic. Yow. It looks stunned to be running on a PPC, but nevertheless getting into it ;)
Re:SSH? (Score:1)
Re:Great for LinuxOne (Score:1)
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
Re:.iso images? (Score:1)
Ordered last night (Score:2)
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
a) The default installation of LinuxPPC has no inetd servers enabled. It doesn't get much more secure...
b) You have now and have always had the option to install with the RedHat installer (rather than the graphical one).
And considering that there were almost no differences at all between LinuxPPC 1999 and YDL CS 1.1, it's hard for YDL to be "more straightforward and easier to use."
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
Re:A q. (Score:2)
Actually, FWB has a semi-solution, their Hard Disk Toolkit program (the personal edition's not too expensive, and it comes with just about every Mac hard drive out there).
It can only shrink partitions, not grow them, unfortunately. Well, it can make a partition bigger if it had been previously shrunk, and there's ways to cheat around this limit. But it's still no PartitionMagic.
Not to mention... (Score:2)
A question... (Score:2)
LinuxPPC much better than the 1999 version (Score:1)
I have installed the 1999 versions and I hope so. I really hate to say it, but it was the most painful Linux install I have ever had to do. (And I have been using Linux since the 0.96 days.)
pdisk is a tool that fits its name. (And just what your dirty mind though of it the first time you saw that name.) It takes all of the power of fdisk and hides it by changing most everything and making the most simple tasks difficult. Want to make a 100 meg partition for swap? Better get out that calculator because you will need to figure out the number of blocks yourself. None of those wimpy shortcuts here!
If it was hard for me to get working, you can imagine what this must be like for the average Mac user. I was brough in to do the install because the normally clued Mac consultant could not get it to work properly.
The PowerPC is almost an afterthought in the Linux world and it should not be. Mac users are just as captive to proprietary OSes as Intel users. Maybe even more so. Hopefully that will change. Hopefully, the LinuxPPC 2000 version is that step.
Re:A q. (Score:2)
Re:A q. (Score:2)
Re:Install (CDs are bootable) (Score:2)
It's sweet. Push the power button, see Tux appear, watch kernel load, log in. Yes!
This works on all supported (PCI) power macs AFAIK. The pre-iMac machines use a system called miBoot, which is a little less flexible than the yaboot program the iMac/BlueG3/G4/iBook/ Lombard PBG3 can use. But it works.
Loving life,
.iso images? (Score:1)
It might almost be worth the $20 just to get them on two bootable CDROMs rather than building my own (which is a piece of cake with RedHat).
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Re:Technical Support (Score:1)
Having complained about them, though, I have to say that both my R5 systems run beautifully, once I got over the install hurdles (160+ days uptime on the server behind me) and that I'm extremely impressed with how productive they are with limited resources. They bit off a tremendous amount for the R4 to R5 transition, which created delays and some growing pains but they've positioned themselves really strongly for the future. I'll keep buying full-price CD's from them because it's a bargain at twice the price.
Re:Technical Support (Score:1)
I don't know about the first poster, but I had misunderstood that to refer to the whole distro. Sorry about that, LinuxPPC...
Re:Nothing to run it on (Score:1)
Re:linux on PTP 225 (Score:2)
I had to configure things in the blind, and probably couldn't tell anyone how to do it, but it CAN be done.
That said, I just use BootX. It's really a nice piece of software.
- Jeff A. Campbell
- VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com [velocinews.com])
Re:Install (Score:2)
Which person would you consider more intelligent? The one who finished nailing stuff in an hour ago, or the guy with a bloody forehead passed out on the floor?
I'm a big fan of intuitive, well designed user interfaces. As long as they don't needlessly sacrifice power and efficiency, then there is no harm - UNLESS of course you have more elitest motives, such as being able to call others stupid and make yourself out to be some sort of uber-geek. In that case, your mileage may vary somewhat. Just please, don't bleed on the floor.
- Jeff A. Campbell
- VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com [velocinews.com])
Re:okay....PPC hardware options? (Score:2)
I'd like to check this out, but I'm not going to use anything with the Apple logo on it.
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Seems like a user issue to me. Apple makes pretty good hardware, albeit for somewhat high prices. Plus, if you ever need it, you are able to run MacOS on it. If that's not a bonus for you that's fine I guess, but I don't imagine you'll get much better of a price on a 3rd party machine simply because they don't sell in volume like Apple does. Why does it matter if it has an Apple logo on it if it's the best supported PPC machine out there?
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Is there any development here? Or can we just drop the pretense and declare that the Mac -IS- the PPC platform, and that's all it'll ever be
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Technically right now, there aren't many options. If you're stuck on not buying Apple hardware, you may be interested in this:
http://www.linuxppc.co m/press/index.php3?archive=totalimpact [linuxppc.com]
You'll have to wait a few months at the very least.
- Jeff A. Campbell
- VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com [velocinews.com])
Re:One interesting thing about this (Score:3)
The first argument was that Apple didn't want to lower sales of MacOS, but that didn't hold water. Apple sells boxes anyhow (running MacOS or Linux), and that's where they make their money.
Then, people said Apple had a past of proprietary hardware and software. More or less true, but then Darwin joined MkLinux and LinuxPPC on the platform. Oddly enough, a certain Jean-Louis Gassee happened to be the main proponent of closed systems at his time at Apple. When he left, Macs started becoming more expandable and began using more standard hardware.
This isn't even mentioning a certain investment by Intel in Be. Did that have anything to do with their current policy regarding PPC? Maybe not. Either way, Be has handled it TERRIBLY. If they didn't find enough marketshare in the PowerPC space, they should have come outright and said so, instead of blaming Apple or letting Be/PPC customers wonder if they would be supported or not.
...of course, now Be is abandoning their desktop market entirely (except as a development platform for their IAs), and the cycle continues, leaving even more desktop users in the cold. Oops.
(note: Be's software is superb, and their coders are anything but incompetant. This is an internal politics issue, not a technical one. I wager they could have BeOS running on a G3/G4 within 2 weeks maximum)
- Jeff A. Campbell
- VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com [velocinews.com])
Yay! (Score:1)
Re:SSH? (Score:1)
Tried it on my 7300/180 and was very impressed. Dying to get it on the G3. Debian has quake-lib-stub packages for PPC, but I thought linux quake was only available for x86 - any ideas?
Re:Great, now if only... (Score:1)
<p>See the linuxppc-user list for were this is found (I have forgetten already).
Re:Install (Score:1)
<p>At any rate, any Mac that can run System 7.5/7.6 (both 3 years+ old) should be able to boot using open firmware / quik, so you really don't have to use BootX at all.
Congrats, and Big/Little endian (Score:1)
This is slightly OT, but I was wondering if somebody has a helpful answer to a question concerning big/little endian. At work, we run a mixture of HP's, SGI's, Sun's, and Intel-based Linux workstations; the linux are a relatively new addition. We also have a lot of our data stored in binary format (shorts, ints, floats, and doubles). Needless to say, the X86 linux computers have had problems with the binary data generated on the other nix boxes. I have mentioned to the pro-x86 crowd that using LinuxPPC on a mac would be nice, but I'm woefully outvoted in this regard.
What is the best solution to this problem? All my code has been converted to use xdr so I don't have any problems. But is there another better solution to this (and no, converting to ascii is not an acceptable solution).
Anyway, congrats to LinuxPPC. Can't wait to see a LinuxoOnePPC in the future.:-)
Re:LinuxPPC much better than the 1999 version (Score:1)
How's that? The PPC is in the kernel tree, there are several commercial and non-commercial distributors. What's missing?
It's even more of a shame that the only released distributions for PowerPC are RedHat derivatives
I thought Debian's port was in full release now. SuSE is on the way. And don't forget NetBSD....
compiler? (Score:3)
Since the compiler is key to speed on a linux platform.. how good is gcc support now with the PPC instructions?
Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:2)
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:2)
Re:Road Apples (Score:1)
Re:Anyone get LinuxPPC to work on sawtooth?(OT) (Score:2)
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Cheech... LPPC2K is here already. :-) (Score:1)
I ordered LinuxPPC 1999Q3 for my 7200/75 and an ADSL line from Bell Atlantic at the same time last year.
Linux came. I installed it (Just make sure that you RTFI TWICE before you think you can install it. There's a "gotcha" for all those who skip the instructions. But apart from that its great.) I hooked it up to my home LAN to my other Macs and the occasional PC Laptop and iBook, got to play with it (its greal BTW), took a course in e-business, found clients, installed shopping carts and the databases to drive them, and now LinuxPPC2K is here and I'm going to buy and install it.
AND I"M STILL WAITING FOR BELL-ATLANTIC TO DELIVER THE #&$^%#& ADSL LINE.
Hey man, I'm Pissed! I should be sucking up pages from an ADSL fat pipe through my Linux server and instead I'm sipping through a 56k modem (HA! Like it ever hits that,) straw on my G3.
But LinuxPPC is just great. I wholeheartedly recommend it over committing your older Macs and iMacs to the landfill.
Mac On Linux pondering... (Score:3)
LK
bootx was never _required_.. (Score:2)
They suggest you use BootX because it is the easiest way, not becuase it is the only one. You could always write a LILOish boot switcher in Forth (very difficult), or choose your OS to boot into through using the Boot Variables app, or typing raw Open Firmware commands at the OF command line. Of course, none of these ways is particularly easy at _all_, and if you are unlucky enough to have one of the early PCI macs-- say, the 7200-- you will have no display drivers in the OF. meaning that you will be typing commands into a command line interface you cannot see. Which is not fun, even though the "commands" are likely to just be a one-line boot command.
The crucial line is, i think, "And you don't have to be a programmer to be able to use the new software." This is a major step-- whatever this new boot process they've come up with is, if it doesn't require you to wait for the macos to boot its basic stuff like bootx does, and it doesn't require you to read ten pages of technically-oriented documentation like the OF methods do, and doesn't vary from machine to machine like the OF methods do.. well, that's a very good thing.
Nothing to run it on (Score:1)
MacOS is .. um .. nice for its intended uses, and I wouldn't dream of flaming it. :-) But the fact is, if you're not going to run MacOS, then it's wasteful to buy a Mac, since MacOS' amortized development cost is certainly factored into the price.
So where the [expletive] is POP?!? How many more years is Motorola going to let x86 keep marketshare uncontested? Sheesh, Motorola! If you build it, they will come!
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Re:Nothing to run it on (Score:1)
Ah, I thought the holdup was over some support chips (memory controller?) from Motorola.
I'll give you a scooby snack if you'll ship me a POP box.
Would you do it for two scooby snacks? Three scooby snacks?
"Rokay!"
That's the spirit!
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Road Apples (Score:3)
I have an old 6300 sitting around, same problem. It used to be in my dad's closet, and I said, "Hey, gimme that dusty PowerMac, I'll stick some Unix on it and use it as a firewall." Everything I've tried to do with this box has resulted in failure. Running Linux or BSD is out of the question because it's so screwed up, and even adding Ethernet (and getting it to work under MacOS) is gonna be a bitch.
Here's a nice list of Mac models to avoid [lowendmac.com], including your 5300 and my 6300. These are the worst boxes Apple ever made. No future at all. Depressing. *sigh*
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Re:Install (Score:1)
And Java 2(tm)? (Score:1)
Re:Install (Score:1)
Ease of use just makes the hard jobs easier to do. This is not a bad thing because it brings home users. With home users come commercial applications (like games) for the rest of us to use. And it also saves some poor souls from having to use Windows. :)
Re:One interesting thing about this (Score:1)
A q. (Score:2)
Support for Firwire / IEEE 1394 / iLink ? (Score:1)
Support for Firwire / IEEE 1394 / iLink ? (Score:1)
Re:My LinuxPPC experiences (Score:1)
I will upgrade, may even spring for the Tee shirt. My wife would look good in it.
Re:Woe unto PB5300 owners (Score:1)
Re:Install (Score:1)
(When you're looking at the chart, version 1.0.5 is the "broken" one. 2.0 should work fine.)
Also, as a general rule, anything after (or at least as recent as) the G3 will boot without problems through OF.
Great, now if only... (Score:2)
I could figure out why both Yellow Dog and LinuxPPC cause my powerbook to forget it has an extra 128 megs of ram... After rebooting, it goes away. I can't explain it, but if I got back to macos for a week or so, it will suddenly recognize it again... This is the only thing that actually keeps me from using linux on my powerbook...
Re:Great, now if only... (Score:2)
Re:My 2 bits (Score:1)
Re:Install (Score:2)
Some Powermacs don't have support for graphics inside Open Firmware, which means you have to configure it through a serial terminal. Others kindly put the Open Firmware framebuffer in the same place that the kernel gets loaded into (I've seen at least one APUS that did this). None of them seem overly happy about booting off floppy (the first 4 times it won't work. Then it'll work. Then it won't work again for three weeks, then it'll work every time you try it over a two month period. Then it'll stop again. No matter how new the disk, or how much it's been tested as being good.).
However, they have the astonishingly wonderful feature that holding down the "N" key during boot causes the Mac to TFTP a file off a server and execute it. If you make this file a second-stage loader of some sort (YaBoot, for instance) then you can boot Linux over the network without having to touch the local hard drive. Grab a root file system over NFS and you have wonderful X terminals that double up as Macs. The main problem once you reach that stage is that the mice Apple ship are absolutely dreadful...
Re:compiler? (Score:1)
Re:compiler? (Score:1)
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
Yellow Dog is directly derived from LinuxPPC... big deal again.
If you want a real Linux on PowerPC, Debian will be ready soon.
Of course, you could bite down and try NetBSD.
Re:One interesting thing about this (Score:1)
Aren't we forgetting NetBSD?
True, you can't buy it off the shelf most places, but it's been running on more different platforms (including PowerPC and Intel) for quite a while now.
Re:Nothing to run it on (Score:1)
1. You have a Mac that's too old to run a recent MacOS.
2. You have a Mac you want to use as a server. This could be any Mac you might already have, or it could be a shiny new G4. G4s make incredible servers.
3. You need to run software that runs on a unix, but not on MacOS.
4. You want to just install an OS and be done with it, instead of having to drive yourself crazy dealing with flakey hardware components that don't like each other.
There are plenty of others, but those are the highlights.
Re:LinuxPPC much better than the 1999 version (Score:1)
Yes, it's a shame that the PowerPC port is a second class citizen. It's even more of a shame that the only released distributions for PowerPC are RedHat derivatives.
Re:macs suck (Score:1)
Re:SSH? (Score:1)
Or was that a different version?
Anyway, some Quake has source code available. From there it's simply a matter of porting.
Re:Great, now if only... (Score:2)
Check out
You may need to monkey with BootX settings as well; I don't have my YDL docs handy, so check yours.
Re:My LinuxPPC experiences (Score:2)
I'd do it anyway just to avoid the damned round mouse. What were they thinking?
Duh (Score:2)
Re:Great, now if only... (Score:2)
And don't discount bad RAM as a possibbility. It does happen.
Good luck.
That's just mac-on-linux (Score:2)
I'm only saying all this because your post was ambiguous as to whether you knew they were just referring to mac-on-linux.
Good point:) [BEOS, that is] (Score:1)
But in truth, I had forgotten about that.
timothy
One interesting thing about this (Score:2)
Remember when (real soon [then]), the Mac OS was going to run on Intel? Remember when Win NT was going to be everyone's multi-platform solution?
Despite announcements and promises by the above-named, a month from now guess which OS Joe Everyman will actually be able to purchase, in real time, in real life? Linux. Interesting that the non-UNIX workalike with dozens of semi-competitive / mostly-friendly distributors manages to pull off that feat of convergence, while centrally planned behemoths faltered in their own giant footsteps.
Just thoughts,
timothy
Questions (Score:1)
first, when will I be able to install it off the net? Also, will I have to download the entire RedHat folder? My setup is currently for YDL, since they had the first support for B&W G3s and they didn't make you dowload the entire RedHat folder, so I didn't allocate the HD space to make installing linuxppc 1999-q3 possible. I hope that all I will need to do is download a kernel file and a ramdisk file, just like old times. The install procedure for 1999-q3 was a step back from the older way, imho. Thanks for your time.
-Dan
Re:Questions (Score:1)
-Dan
Re:Great, now if only... (Score:1)
Did you try flushing parameter ram? (Score:1)
Ok, so you'll probably have to put a bunch of bullshit settings back in the control panel. If this works you will at least have your memory back. If that works then you can use something like Tech Tool Pro to save the contents of your MacOS sane PRAM. After a Linux session just use Tech Tool to put the correct PRAM settings back.
Re:compiler? (Score:1)
Re:compiler? (Score:2)
C and Fortran. No charge for personal use. Cheap for commercial use.
http://www.compaq.com/linux/software
gcc is fine for most things, but if you have an Alpha and you are doing lots of floating point, it behooves you to try the Compaq compilers. There's 8-10 years of optimization in them!
mike
Re:And Java 2(tm)? (Score:1)
Also, I seem to recall (I can't find it now) that LinuxPPC had the IBM VM for download on their site.
Re:And Java 2(tm)? (Score:1)
First of all here is the google search [google.com]
Secondly here [ivey.uwo.ca] is the link from above!
Re:Great for LinuxOne (Score:1)
LinuxOne doesn't need to rip anyone off.. they can just use the Linux/PPC Developers' Reference Release. See www.crashing.org [crashing.org] for more information.
The purpose of the Linux/PPC Developers' Reference Release is to allow any company/individual to make their own distribution based on Red Hat with little work.
--Mark
Re:A q. (Score:1)
Or am I completely off base and I would have to back up, then repartition...
New boot loader? Cool! (Score:1)
It looks like IBM is finally getting their POP board spec finished. With any luck we should be seeing dirt cheap non-Apple branded hardware before too long.
LinuxPPC has been working with IBM on software for the POP systems, so it is not too surprising to see their distro targeted towards these machines. However, YDL has some kind of a contract with IBM, so I would not be surprised to see them supporting the new hardware pretty soon as well.
Well done, LinuxPPC! If I weren't downloading an ISO of mkLinux right now, I'd be grabbing the new release already.
Re:One interesting thing about this (Score:2)
Re:macs suck (Score:1)
1) Poor user base. Hey, it's a good system, but more people with Power PC's use Linux/PPC than NetBSD and that means a lot, especially in terms of support for the macintosh hardware.
2) NetBSD can't read Apple Partition maps. That's right, kiddies! If you want to install NetBSD on your box you need a dedicated drive. No MacOS for you. Compare this to Linux/PPC which even gives you Mac on linux and it becomes obvious which one will get more users to migrate.
3) No support for Linux/PPC binaries. This is just a matter of no one getting around to doing it yet, but it illustrates an important point: There simply isn't as much support for Power PC users in the NetBSD community as there is in the Linux community.
4) 8-bit XServer - Blah.
If I had another drive, I would install NetBSD, but I don't think I am going to give up Linux/PPC any time soon.
--
Lagos - White Rabbit of Linux
Re:Damn...There Goes Yellowdog (Score:1)
Re:.iso images? (Score:1)
ftp://cwrulug.cwru.edu/linuxppc-R5.iso
But I don't know if they're going to post a new one.
--
Lagos - White Rabbit of Linux
Re:My LinuxPPC experiences (Score:1)
Hmm. Well, in the 2.2.6 kernels I have used, I think you can use '=' on the keypad as the right click and 'clear' on the keypad as middle click.
Of course, you can also try these items:
1) Add the line "clear mod2" to your
2) option-click for middle and option-control-click for right. I think this is a KDE thingie, though.
Re:My 2 bits (Score:2)
I for one am going to start buying all my distributions (now that I have a good job
Re:Install (Score:1)
Christ, it saddens me to hear someone who probably considers themselves a "jock" or at least a bully say shit like "Well, I was going to de-pants him, but his belt was fastened too tight...". Do people realize that they are effectively calling themselves wimps and geeks by saying shit like this?
Oh well, not everyone can beat up geeks and get all the girls like me
Re:LinuxPPC much better than the 1999 version (Score:1)
Re:Nothing to run it on (Score:1)
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:bootx was never _required_.. (Score:1)
If you're just bored, playing with this can be fun. Forth is a twisted language.
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:compiler? (Score:1)
Really besides the point, I guess, but asm is not and will never be a dead language.
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:A q. (Score:1)
If you wanna get down+dirty, and you're using a SCSI drive, I know how to rewrite the partition map to do just this (using the MacOS API). Hint: you can't do it through the disk driver.
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:okay....PPC hardware options? (Score:1)
But most importantly, POP. The PowerPC Open Platform is allowing many companies like Prophet Systems [eternalcomputing.com] (they were the first, I can't remember the others...) to develop their own motherboards based on the CHRP standard originally designed to support a wide variety of processors. These are not available yet, but when they are, they will be dirt cheap (especially considering that G4's are less expensive than Pentiums).
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:Anyone get LinuxPPC to work on sawtooth?(OT) (Score:1)
He got it all working a while ago, so it should be included in the friendly GUI install included in this new LinuxPPC distro. Speaking of which, I just ordered it for my G4 Sawtooth!
Where is my mind?
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
My 2 bits (Score:3)
My LinuxPPC experiences (Score:3)
So far I've had no conflicts between the OSes. Upon startup, a dialog comes up asking which OS I want to boot into (Mac is the default, which activates after a few seconds). All I have to do is press the Linux button, and then I'm in Linux as if this were any old '86.
At first I thought that LinuxPPC was sort of a gimmicky thing ("Oh, lets see if we can get it to run on a Mac too"), but so far I've been nothing but impressed with its performance.
The only thing that bugs me is that I only have a single-button mouse. There's supposed to be a key toggle that activates a right-click, but it doesn't work for some reason. I've had several linuxheads try to remap the key combo, but it just doesn't want to go -- thus rendering the Gimp and some windowmanagers useless.
Oh, well. :o)
ZP
Re:Install (Score:3)
Helix Code and sawmill (Score:2)
It is also the first distrib to contain packages from miguel's company Helix Code. The packages are of course of GNOME. The Helix Code crew saw it fit to include my favorite window manager sawmill in with their packages!!