SuSE Announces Linux Version For SPARC 102
riggwelter writes: "SuSE has announced a version of their distribution for the Sun SPARC architecture. It's available as four ISO images from their FTP site and mirrors. This mean s that SuSE now supports PowerPC, Alpha and SPARC in addition to i386. Anyone with a SPARC knocking about the place fancy reviewing it?."
This is old news (Score:1)
Re:yay? (Score:1)
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Re:If I had the money.... (Score:1)
Often wrong but never in doubt.
I am Jack9.
Re:Solaris and Linux (Score:2)
Re:SuSE supports more platforms (Score:1)
I know a little bit about AS/400s -- had to work with one a while back. They're pretty good machines (after all, the AS/400 has managed to outlive the VAX, its only real competition in that niche), especially for legacy shops that still use old mainframe apps but need more performance. The only real problem is that they *are* legacy boxes -- IBM updates the hardware, but sandboxes the users in a virtual machine. You can't see the hardware at all, even on the instruction set level. The hardware being actually pretty good, you might find that trusted C/Fortran/Cobol compilers writing to bytecode is maybe a bit too restrictive for your purposes. Thus, Linux/400.
It's about choice, you know? Rock-solid and guaranteed to carry you over? Go out of the box. You actually want to USE your hardware? Linux.
/Brian
Re:SuSE supports more platforms (Score:2)
I keep copies of AS/400 V3R7 'Hardware Troubleshooting and Upgrade' and 'OS/400 Reference' on my desk. Every time I get pissed about the shoddy design of some clone I have in for testing, I'll jerk 'Troubleshooting..' out and read about the right way to do hardware. Or when Windows NT pisses me off, I'll grab 'OS/400' and thank god I don't have to deal with THAT!
Re:Goody (Score:2)
Oh, and it will run on an IPX, and supports the full range of normal IPX hardware.
Um, doesn't SpARC already have a *nix? (Score:1)
you're lucky (Score:1)
Back during kernel 2.0.34 sun4c architecture had a mmu slowdown bug that rendered the machine unusable after one day. Do you know how long a kernel compile took on an IPC with this bug? 6 hours! I installed OpenBSD 2.4 and have never looked back. Linux used to give scsi bus reset errors at least once every bootup,not the case with OpenBSD. Let me just say that OpenBSD has *NEVER* crashed. Not a single lock up or crash of any kind, other than the usual netscape segfault.
SuSE on SPARC (Score:1)
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
it gets the job done, i suppose, but i wouldn't use the word 'excellent' to describe it.
different strokes, i guess.
I just instaled this 2 days ago (Score:1)
Out of all the multi-cd linux installs I've ever seen/used, this is the ONLY one that ever called for the second disk. It was funky.
Once I got it booting, it was pretty much typical suse. I've got it running my web site now (plug, http://www.meatbarn.com) Hopefully I can keep all the bugs ironed out
Oh, and for those interested, its a SparcStation 10 nabbed via ebay. I never thought 50Mhz could go so fast
(Ok ok.. fast is an overstatement... but its cool)
-paul
---------------------------------------
Re:Solaris-linux migration in science. (Score:2)
Scale and fault-tolerance. Solaris can scale from a 4 year old, single-CPU Ultra-1 to a 64-CPU E-10k. Also, with the E3000+ machines, Dynamic Reconfiguration allows for hot-swapable drives, CPU boards and memory. I don't really see Linux making those kind of strides in the next few years.
This is because I in general find Linux much more pleasing to work with. The gnu utilities are in general, far superior. KDE/Gnome beats the crap of CDE any day of the week. The ability of Linux to work in a heterogenous environment (i.e., so easily work with smb shares, nfs, etc.) is great.
I'm writing this on a Solaris 8 machine running Helix Gnome on one monitor and KDE on the other. I have all of the GNU tools I need to use installed, and I'm running Samba....so your argument on lack of applications is groundless. Yes, CDE and Suns compilers suck....so don't use them.
I find Solaris, while not unpleasant to use, definitely not as pleasing on a day to day basis. I am also amazed at how poorly it performs sometimes. I know Solaris is supposed to perform well, and I just don't understand it. I do operations on fairly fast hardware, such as removing many files, etc., that I _know_ my little linux box could do faster. I don't administer the Solaris boxen though, so it could be our sysadmin just doesn't know how to set them up efficiently? I don't know.
Some Sun hardware, (the E3000-E6000 especially) is not designed to run at blazingly fast speeds, but to keep running at repectable sppeds under extreme load. I have a E3500 with 40,000 users which seems to run everything at the same speed if there is 1 user or several hundred logged on at the same time. Linux machines (although, it could be the intel arch.) tend to run very fast with a few users, but lose processing power as load is applied.
I really don't see Sun or Solaris going anywhere for a long time. Current Intel-based machines do not scale and are at nowhere near the level of fault tolerance that is required for most large applications, and Beowulf-type clustering is not satisfactory for many applications.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
hmmmm, such a hard decision
-paul
---------------------------------------
Re:Yay! Will it squeeze into an ancient IPC? (Score:1)
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
A 480MHZ US-II(100-120MHZ Frontside bus) outperforms a 1GHz pentium III(with pc800 800MHz frontside bus RDRAM) in Floating point CFP2000 benchmarks.
-----------------------------------------------
int: base 225 peak 234
Fp: base 274 peak 291
HARDWARE
--------
Hardware Vendor: Sun Microsystems
Model Name: Sun Enterprise 450
CPU: UltraSPARC II
CPU MHz: 480 MHz
FPU: Integrated
CPU(s) enabled: 1
CPU(s) orderable: 1 to 4
Parallel: None
Primary Cache: 16KBI+16KBD on chip
Secondary Cache: 8MB(I+D) off chip
L3 Cache: None
Other Cache: None
Memory: 512MB
Disk Subsystem: 2*9.1GB(7200 RPM)
-----------------------------------------------
int: base 407 peak 410
Fp: base 273 peak 284
HARDWARE
--------
Hardware Vendor: Intel Corporation
Model Name: Intel VC820 (1.0 GHz MHz Pentium III)
CPU: 1.0 GHz Pentium III processor
CPU MHz: 1.0 GHz
FPU: Integrated
CPU(s) enabled: 1
CPU(s) orderable: 1
Parallel: No
Primary Cache: 16KBI + 16KBD on-die
Secondary Cache: 256KB(I+D) on-die ECC
L3 Cache: N/A
Other Cache: N/A
Memory: 256 MB PC800 RDRAM non-ECC
Disk Subsystem: IBM DJNA 371800 ATA-66
Other Hardware: Diamond Multimedia Viper 770 Ultra TNT2 AGP
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
fp base 311 peak 331
HARDWARE
--------
Hardware Vendor: Advanced Micro Devices
Model Name: Gigabyte GA-7ZM motherboard 1.1GHz Athlon processor
CPU: 1.1GHz AMD Athlon Processor A1100AMT3B
CPU MHz: 1100MHz
FPU: Integrated
CPU(s) enabled: 1
CPU(s) orderable: 1
Parallel: No
Primary Cache: 64KBI + 64KBD on chip
Secondary Cache: 256KB(I+D) on chip
L3 Cache: N/A
Other Cache: N/A
Memory: 256MB PC133 SDRAM CL2 Non-ECC
Disk Subsystem: IBM DPTA 372060 ATA-66
Other Hardware: Savage S4 video card
--Shoeboy
SUSE? (Score:2)
[root@sune:~]# uname -a ; uptime
Linux sune 2.2.15 #1 Wed Jun 7 12:30:24 EDT 2000 sparc unknown
8:45pm up 85 days, 7:54, 1 user, load average: 1.00, 1.00, 1.00
--
DEBIAN POTATO POWERED
Yay for SuSE (Score:2)
Nice to seem them supporting Sparc. I'd test it, but my box already runs OpenBSD just fine.
--
Convenience (Score:4)
There are Solaris package archives available, such as the Solaris Package Archive [ibiblio.org] and Freeware4Sun [freeware4sun.com], and Freeware for Solaris [sunfreeware.com]. And if you really want to get something compiled and running, you can do it. But overall, my Linux software install experience has been much more convenient.
On the other hand, if I were in the high-end-server market rather than the geek market, there would probably be many apps I could run better, more conveniently, or only on Solaris. And I guess that's the market Sun is mostly going after.
Another issue is that Solaris is more bloated (in terms of disk usage) than other free Unixes, in my experience.
SPARC kind of expensive (Score:1)
Besides, a lot of the software people buy Sun Workstations to run aren't ported to Linux yet (such as HSPICE and Cadence).
Is running Linux on a Sun really that much better than running it on a PIII?
This is cool, but.... (Score:1)
Isn't it jsut a *little* odd that they eagerly advertise that their Sparc version of 7.0 is posted on their FTP site, where there is no i386 ISO image for 7.0? Does this have anything to do with them offering a Personal and Professional version of the Intel variety?
Just curious.....
Re:What's the point? (Score:3)
--Shoeboy
Yuck, no FTP install (Score:3)
One thing about Sparcs, _bootable_ 512-bytes-per-block scsi cdrom drives are hard to come by. That's why many people with secondhand Sparcstations choose to do FTP or NFS installations, e.g.:
attach monitor + keyboard, or serial terminal, then power on... .
*beep*
Sun SPARCStation OpenPROM 2.x.xx blah blah
insert floppy
>boot floppy booting . . . . welcome to $OS_SETUP. press [space] to configure networking. configuation ensues. . . select FTP site . . . download . .
How simple is that?
--
prices (Score:2)
Re:monitors & sun workstations (Score:1)
Cheap SPARCS are the main merit of this... (Score:3)
Such machines won't be challenging the Distributed.Net "Keys-per-second" benchmarks, but if they allow you to put in place a web server on hardware actually designed for serving rather than the sort of absolute trash you'd get in IA-32 hardware for $100, that's certainly worth something.
I doubt many will be using SPARC Linux on a spanking new E10000 Enterprise Server; but watch out, since as Linux improves, while it may be less featureful than Solaris, the differences are likely diminishing over time.
Re:SuSE supports more platforms. Not! (Score:1)
Re:I'm sorry.. (Score:1)
If your only choice was Solaris, you'd have to just throw those old computers out because you're not going to spend money Sparc 5 memory. Hell, even the Ultra 5's and 10's require memory that costs twice as much as PC memory today. But why throw them away when you can get a free OS that makes your computer useful again?
That's been bothering me for a while.... (Score:1)
I'm not advocating legal action against these people, but it really seems like a violation of the spirit of the GPL. If I weren't a Linux moron I'd start a "Free SuSE" distro that would basically take all the SuSE packages (they do have a list) and put them up on FTP sites in ISOs. Ah well.
-1, Offtopic (Score:1)
Re:wow. (Score:1)
I'll give it a shot (Score:1)
SuSE Sparc mini-review (Score:2)
First off, yast2 is not complete for this port. It evidently isn't using the fbdev X server, as it came up full GUI on one machine, and in some Really Ugly text-based menu system on another. Definately boot yast1.
Second, it gives you all the options for using reiserfs, but as some of us know already, reiserfs only works on x86. I don't see how this one got past the beta-testers.
Third, it ships with kernel source that won't compile. The SuSE modified 2.2.16 will not compile on architectures other then x86. Best idea: upgrade to 2.4.0-test8, which finally seems to work on Sparc again.
Next, one of the big things I was looking forward to, KDE2, seems to be included in spirit alone. Haven't tried Gnome, but kde1 works just fine.
Beyond these issues, it seems pretty solid. They have a couple major updates you should get on thier ftp site, but thats a no-brainer.
I highly reccomend this to any UltraSparc users. SuSE is way more friendly then Solaris, and Linux itself seems much faster on the same hardware.
With Sun selling Ultra5 workstations (fully loaded! on Ebay on the cheap, this is a great way to break free of "lin-tel" and see how good 64bit can feel!
Re:RANT!! ULTRA, ULTRA, ULTRA (Score:1)
Re:Yuck, no FTP install (Score:1)
>one with four (FOUR?!) iso images. Where are the boot floppy images?
SuSE usually has boot floppy images on the installation CDs. So maybe you first have to download the CD images to get the boot floppys
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Re:Linux Features (Score:1)
The main problem with Solaris was its phenomenal memory usage - I've got 256MB and that wasn't enough for it. I agree with others that Solaris is probably great for a server OS but useless as a desktop.
I originally got it for Java work, thinking Sun's JVM on their own OS on their own hardware would probably outperform the Linux/x86 one, and possible even JView/Win32. I was very wrong.
Re:Yay! Will it squeeze into an ancient IPC? (Score:1)
on 4c-class machines is less than optimal -
certainly NetBSD feels more responsive on my SS1/SS2s than RedHat did when I tried it.
Regards,
Tim.
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
Also, and bear in mind this is subjective, the Sparcs I've used feel much more responsive under load than equivalent or even slightly higher spec PeeCees. I don't know if there is some difference in the CPU / supporting chipset design that is better optimised for a task-switching environment than Intel's (any CPU design gurus here?), but a high load average seems to bring my Pentia to a crawl much worse than the Sparcs. I don't generally run just a single benchmark task on machines, so that's quite useful to me
Regards,
Tim.
Catching up with Debian (Score:1)
There is a machine on my network:
firestoneup301+13:34, 0 users,load 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
It's running Debian/Sparc and it's been up continuously for over 300 days.
Debian isn't for beginners. No serious Linux user that I know has ever switched away from Debian, although I have seen several switch to Debian.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:2)
I don't see why not. I used to run Red Hat on an Ultra Enterprise 4000 at work a while back. The E10K has a different internal architecture to the rest of the Sun Ultra Enterprise line, but the support's already there in the Linux kernel. See arch/sparc64/kernel/starfire.c [innominate.org].
Sun Sparc . . . How old? (Score:1)
Hmmm, maybe my old 4/75 will run it. :)
1Alpha7
One question: Why? (Score:4)
Sure! (Score:3)
bah! (Score:1)
*goes back to kicking the big ass paper weight at his house*
Solaris and Linux (Score:1)
Goody (Score:2)
i.e. SparcIPX?
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
cool (Score:4)
wow. (Score:1)
This morning I submitted a story about M$ releasing Win ME and the astoundingly uninterested press coverage even from MSNBC (who called it a waste of time for most people), and it was rejected in minutes.
suse adds a support for a port that has been out for a while and its front page news...
Re:RANT!! ULTRA, ULTRA, ULTRA (Score:2)
Linux Features (Score:2)
Probably the biggest one for me is virtual text consoles. I know the Sparc has *a* console, but it sucks! (furthermore, people generally configure it to write some error messages there even in X! That's really stupid...)
Also, the threading should be slightly faster. At least gcc has improved somewhat as well, 'cause it used to really suck on the Sparc platform. (or, for that matter, most non-x86 platforms....)
Of course, Solaris does have some features of its own; I'd happily stick Linux on an Ultra 10, especially if I could get the 3D acceleration to work. But heck, the Ultra 10 is basically a glorified PC with a Sparc processor in it; you can find them with PCI buses and IDE hard drives!
However, on huge, enterprise-level Sparc boxes, of course I'd keep Solaris on there. Heck, the support contract alone is enough to make you do that, much less the superior multiprocessing support, and any other native hardware support they have...
---
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [ncsu.edu].
when will be a suse version for HP ? (Score:1)
Any chance ?
OverLord
One answer: Speed (Score:3)
yay? (Score:1)
of course, i'd have to pick up one of the sun monitors to go with, the one with the wacky plug that doesn't fit any other computer on the planet.. but i'm used to that - the rest of my network is macs
Solaris-linux migration in science. (Score:3)
I don't see why anyone would want to use Linux for Solaris. In the future I think we will be using mostly big multiprocessor x86 machines running Linux, with workstations being PCs running linux. Solaris boxes will be relagated to the really large multiprocessor machines, and the ocassional one around for legacy apps.
This is because I in general find Linux much more pleasing to work with. The gnu utilities are in general, far superior. KDE/Gnome beats the crap of CDE any day of the week. The ability of Linux to work in a heterogenous environment (i.e., so easily work with smb shares, nfs, etc.) is great.
I find Solaris, while not unpleasant to use, definitely not as pleasing on a day to day basis. I am also amazed at how poorly it performs sometimes. I know Solaris is supposed to perform well, and I just don't understand it. I do operations on fairly fast hardware, such as removing many files, etc., that I _know_ my little linux box could do faster. I don't administer the Solaris boxen though, so it could be our sysadmin just doesn't know how to set them up efficiently? I don't know.
I would greatly look forward to running Linux on them instead. Unfortunately, the only reason I'm not doing research on a x86 box is that many of the programs, libraries etc. I use in my research are Solaris specific. They aren't ported to Linux yet. However, this is changing quickly, and I actually only need one more vendor to support linux and I can drop Solaris. Its ironic, because in every other way, the application base for Linux kicks the crap out of Solaris. Running windows emulators can even get me Windows apps (for those damn word attachments etc.).
I recently set up a little linux farm for a colleague of mine who is starting up a lab at a major university. He had previously used no other Unix except solaris. I set him up personal linux work stations, and a solaris enterprise for the main number crunching. His statement after using it for a week was "I love it. Anybody else who isn't using this setup for research is stupid." He now has colleagues interested in using a similar setups.
My analysis, as far as the world of science is concerned, is that Sun is in big trouble. I can get pretty impressive PCs nowadays. The workstations and servers of the future will be running Linux and fast/big PCs. Sun will be relegated to the very high end, big multiprocessor machines, although people are gradually going beowulf too.....
Sun has a little breating room until Linux can get better SMP support for many processors, the journaling file systems become more robust, PC hardware becomes larger scale (Can you even easily get, say a 4 or 8 processor PC?), and more applications kick in. After that, I forsee Sun and Solaris getting dropped like a hot rock.
Anyway, just my take on it.
I can do a review, you tell me what on.... (Score:1)
If you offer up suggestions about what you'd like to know I'll look into it. If you offer up suggestions - and direct commands to do this all the better... but the question is, what are some general topics that would make a good reivew?
PS, what I usually look for is the KISS - does it work, was it horrible to use.... but I'm sure others would like to hear more and I'm willing to do this.
Re:Yay! Will it squeeze into an ancient IPC? (Score:2)
There are plenty of cool operating systemst that will run on an IPC. I probably haven't thought of them all, but your options (besides Sun) might include:
--
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
On an Ultra, you're better off with Solaris. 64-bit architecture o/s designed for the hardware it's running on UltraPenguin just doesn't have the background that the Sun engineers have put into Solaris. Linux runs well here, its just that you already have a very mature o/s to compete with here.
I have been very impressed with the way Linux performs on IPX's and IPC's, etc. This 32-bit Sun architecture really crawls with Solaris. You really notice the difference with Linux, especially with X and X apps. Good Lord, I could go wash my car waiting for CDE or OpenWindows to fire up on an IPX.
Linux = Great on non-Ultra
Solaris = Great on Ultra
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
At any rate, Linux is nice to have as an option for those of us who don't like to use/admin Solaris.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Price - I bought a used Sun SparcStation 10 that did not come with an OS on it. I was not about to pay big bucks to Sun to get a new copy of an OS when I could get a Debian Sparc CD for $3.00 from CheapBytes.
Re:Sparc now - Transmeta later? (Score:1)
Re:I'll give it a shot (Score:1)
Re:Goody (Score:1)
Re:cool (Score:1)
THAT will be a happy day. My classics will pee themselves.
rojo jones
sheep go to heaven
goats go to hell
Re:That's been bothering me for a while.... (Score:1)
It's not. Everyone they distribute their stuff to gets all the sources and can redistribute under terms of the GPL. So what's your point again?
Re:One question: Why? (Score:2)
ditch that in favour of something else, but if you're in the business
of replacing things, why not move to a distribution that does these
things already.
than anyone elses. I don't know about the recnt OS's, but for the
longest time they were the only commercial UNIX that didn't
automatically come with a C compiler. Sun is the Microsoft of the
UNIX world: always trying to sell you new products that everyone else
bundles for free.
Sun's OSs are a major pain to code for. All of their libraries
come without header definitions.
Sun forced the awful C shell on the UNIX wordl, for which many of
us will never forgive them.
Sure there are nice things about Sun's. For example their hardware ... well, I
is made for SMP, so you get performance to die for. And,
can't think of anything else.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:2)
Solaris = Great on Ultra
Actually, I'd say that Linux is great on UltraSPARCs too. It's just that on large SMP machines, Solaris currently scales better. On a single CPU UltraSPARC, Linux has always been faster than Solaris for me. I suspect that up to 4 CPUs, Linux will hold its own quite well, but above that, Solaris rules (for now).
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Lots of the things Linux has to offer many people take for granted. Right out of the box you have X, Netscape, a C compiler, a Fortran compiler, an up-to-date Make, M4, etc, etc. Compiling from source on an something like an ancient Sparc can be an absolute nightmare. You will wind up compiling EVERY single little package that is required to make the program you wanted originally.
I'll take my Linux on a sparc 2 over SunOS any day.
Re:Solaris-linux migration in science. (Score:2)
architecture, and it's fundamentally much easier to write code for an
SMP target than for a clustered target. There's a lot of work being
done now on trying to make Linux perform better for SMP, but whilst it
is so x86-centric I can't see them providing much of an alternative
for the power hungry Solaris user.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
It all depends on the application. Solaris has much faster networking code, but Linux has much faster task switch/process spawn. If you are running a web server then serving static pages or PHP or pages from builtin apache modules then Solaris is much faster because the networking is the bottleneck, but if you are running lots of external CGI programs then Linux can win because the bottleneck is spawning processes.
On ultra 5s and 10s then Linux can be a better choice because it handles IDE better than Solaris, but when you move up to an Ultra 60 then Solaris is a better choice because its SCSI handling is better than Linux's. The default Solaris install can be pretty bare, compared to Linux and if the person installing it is not familliar with it then it can be daunting, however if you are doing lots of installs then Sun's jumpstart is easier than Redhat's kickstart and creating Solaris packages the way you want them is easyer than creating custom RPMs(YMMV).
In short, know your tools and pick the right one for the job.
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Re:I just instaled this 2 days ago (Score:1)
Not quite true, it's the firmware that can't handle it, not the partition table. Remember how old the SS10s are, if you read the documentation from those days it says things like:
"support for large disks (ie. over 310Mb)"
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
I just did!!!
It didn't really work all that well..... well....ok....it didn't even boot after installation.
Dang they're gonna be pissed
On a completely unrelated note, is anyone hiring?
---CONFLICT!!---
Re:If I had the money.... (Score:1)
No you fool (Score:1)
Re:prices (Score:1)
Re:I'll give it a shot (Score:2)
ftp-master.debian.org is a sparc64 (Score:1)
Re:Catching up with Debian (Score:1)
I'm not
I'm sorry.. (Score:2)
Re:One question: Why? (Score:3)
Plenty. If you're used to developing on / administrating the Linux way, Solaris is different enough to slow things down a bit. Linux also seems to perform quite a bit better than Solaris on most of the older Sparcs (I don't believe this applies to Ultrasparcs, though).
What's the point? (Score:2)
Sparc's are pieces of shit. The USII has the dubious honor of being the only *performance* risc cpu that gets hammered by the IA-32 in both integer and floating point.
The only reason to buy a sparc is to get services, support and software from sun. If you want a decent processor, check out the alpha.
The amazing thing is that instead of using an aggressive OOO design for the USIII, sun decided to stick with an in-order cpu. It's like they aren't even trying to produce a competetive CPU.
The reason sun sells boxes with 64 procs in them is that it takes that many to compete with 32 proc offerings from HP, Compaq and IBM.
--Shoeboy
Re:If I had the money.... (Score:2)
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Re:One question: Why? (Score:2)
Re:Sparc now - Transmeta later? (Score:1)
RANT!! ULTRA, ULTRA, ULTRA (Score:1)
Re:One question: Why? (Score:1)
Because the older Suns don't run Solaris very well anymore. (The whole Linux-runs-well-on-lesser-hardware argument). I for one am considering putting SuSE on my SPARCstation 10, because Solaris 7 *crawls* on it.
I don't think anybody's going to be installing SuSE on an E10K anytime soon, though..
Yay! Will it squeeze into an ancient IPC? (Score:2)
(Oh, I've tried and like other distros but settled on SuSE, and AFAIK Red Hat (the only(?) other distro with wide cross-platform support) doesn't support PPC.)
(And yes, I'm too lazy/have too little time to recompile everything in a distro for another platform myself.)
No, no, no. It ain't ME babe,
It ain't ME you're looking for.
Re:Sparc now - Transmeta later? (Score:1)
Re:Cheap SPARCS are the main merit of this... (Score:2)
but if they allow you to put in place a web server on hardware actually designed for serving
Yup. They make great servers. Or, get a happymeal and set yourself up a decent router/firewall box. kart.dhs.org has been running on an old SS10 ever since I registered the name with dhs.org back in May.
--
Re:yay? (Score:2)
--
Re:Yay! Will it squeeze into an ancient IPC? (Score:2)
No, no, no. It ain't ME babe,
It ain't ME you're looking for.
Re:yay? (Score:1)
Re:Sparc now - Transmeta later? (Score:1)
Re:Solaris and Linux (Score:1)
/Brian
Re:One question: Why? (Score:2)
Well, I am sure many will disagree with me on this one, but Solaris is a pain in the ass to use as a desktop OS. It took me about a week to get all my "must have" tools installed (gcc, Gtk+, Enlightenment, etc...) Even after all that, It's still a crappy workstation because the version of OpenWindows that ships with Solaris 7 has shared memory bugs that cause all kinds of chaos with imlib. Solaris is perfectly wonderful as a server OS... it kicks major ass, but as a desktop workstation? It's a major pain in the ass unless you are content to stick with the windowmanagers and applications it ships with. (Motif anyone?)
Since I am not content to deal with low quality windowmanagers, I end up being very frustrated by Solaris as a workstation. Good thing my current employer is not very stingy, I get to have an Intel box (for Linux) and a Sparc station (for testing scripts that I write for our servers) side by side on my desk! I would install Linux on the Sparc, but the whole point to having a Sparc workstation is so I can do local testing of how my code works with Solaris prior to sticking it on the servers...
SuSE supports more platforms (Score:3)
* IBM's S/390 and soon - AS/400
* IBM's RS/6000
* Soon - Linux for X86-64 (AMD Sledgehammer)
* IA-64
As you can see - if someone is very good as porting Linux to - it's the SuSE guys