Slackware Officially On Sparc 47
gags bunny wrote to us with the official word from Slackware that Slack now runs on Sparc.
If you've got a Sparc sitting around the download site is live - else just grab the
mini-ISO image and work from there. We had a story on this recently as well.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:2)
Is that supposed to be ironic?
You can get a 133 Mhz Sparcbook (as fast as Pentium class 450Mhz) for $800 compared to a P450 Notebook for $1200+. 2/3 the price and 3 3/4 the performance. Almost 6x the value.
I'd understand this being done on the original Sparc, but I'll castigate the first person who puts Slackware on an UltraSparc II
That's kinda how Linux got the lead. People running Linux found it 2.5x faster than Slowlaris.
You wanna talk big iron, ok Linux is kinda behind in that arena. Does the caverage guy need big iron? No. You figure it out from there.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
$10,000? Where'd you get that number?
I have a sparc5 in my basement, waiting for me to get a CD-burner to start putting Linux on it.
Right now it's got some older version of solaris, but hey - it's a 64Mb machine, SCSI toys, and to be honest, it's an excellent machine.
A buddy of mine picked up a pile of Sparc 1's, and they're doing great for him.
Somebody at ./ wanna close their link tag????? (Score:2)
Re:You MORON. (Score:1)
Yeah, the 68000 and 68010 were 16 bit CPUs with 24 bits of address space. The 68020 and up are 32 bits. I don't remember if the 68060 made it to 64 bit, but I don't think so, I think it was just 32 bit with 48 bit addressing or something wonky like that. You could get a 60MHz '060, though, not too shabby, especially when AmigaDOS runs suitably on a 7.14MHz 68000.
Anyway, the point of this message:
And
So far, uClinux runs on the Palm Pilot and on the uCsimm [lineo.com]. Paul Coene's setup will boot on Atari ST (another 68000-based box, much like an amiga without all the cool custom chips) and in the STonX [sourceforge.net] Atari ST emulator.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
2 years ago we moved to Ultra 10's for our desktops. In our litte office alone we replaced 40 or 50 desktops.
Most people took the 20's home for remote workstations. (And firewalls) (-;
Re:Linux for C64 (Score:1)
Any chance of O2 support? (Score:1)
future of slackware (Score:1)
Re:Great (Score:1)
Re:Great! (Score:1)
Re:Money for nothin' (Score:1)
-JB
Re:Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:1)
In my experience, the best way to get old systems is to know someone who who maintains computer systems at a company where they use a lot of Sun (and can therefore help you get the stuff they throw out), which is how I got mine, or you can look around in dumpsters around high-tech companies. It might sound a little disgusting, but a lot of times people will throw out perfectly usable systems just because they're a little old.
Re:Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:1)
10,20 regularly. I haven't inquired about price,
but it's always negotiable.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
WHERE??? (Score:1)
Re:Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:1)
I got myself four SPARCstation-4s for free from a company who no longer needed them. They came without memory or disks but these parts were easily bought.
Now, two of them reside in 19" racks at some providers and need only 2 units each. Try to beat this with PCs that usually take 4 units.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:3)
Well, I suppose I should prepare to be castigated...
I have a Ultra 10 just "sitting around" right now...
I recently got an UltraSparc 10 from a company that owed me money but had a shortage of money, but surplus equipment. I'm not a fan of Solaris, and I have no interest in supporting a non-free UNIX. I've long been a fan of Linux, and Slackware in particular, and I think it's great that they're supporting Sparc and UltraSparc.
This is a great sign for Linux, it's moving beyond the limitations of Intel hardware. Linux has potential to be an enterprise OS, but Intel hardware is not up to the task of running enterprise solutions in the way that Sun hardware is. IMHO it would be nice if Sun (and Apple...) would realize that they're hardware companies and get behind Open Source solutions like Linux or the *BSDs. (Until I saw the Slack announcement, I was leaning more towards NetBSD...)
I'd be willing to bet that you'd never used Slackware before. The Slackware team makes a fine distribution that is the most UNIX-like of the Linux distributions (at least of the ones that I've used; Debian, Caldera, Corel, Red Hat, SuSE, Stormix, LinuxPPC, Linux-Mandrake).
Maybe you like Solaris. Great, go for it. But don't jump down the throats of people who don't want to use closed-source OSes. (Despite Sun's attempts to convince the media to the contrary, Solaris is not an Open Source OS. Visible source, maybe, Open or Free? No way.)
Is Slack ready to compete with Solaris on Sparc? Probably not yet, but the only way to reach parity is for people to install Slack on Sparc and continue testing and development, which is exactly what I intend to do.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:2)
Chances are, if you have a Sparc machine, it drained at least $10,000 from your wallet and it's running Solaris 7/8.
So now who's making assumptions? We buy rack-mount SPARC hardware regularly, for general purpose servers. They are not Sun branded, they are built on OEM hardware, and can be purchased new for about $2300 and up.
It's easy to justify buying the SPARC hardware over x86:
Most of our SPARCs are running Solaris today. I'm considering installing Linux on some of those to simplify management: it's easer to manage a network of Linux machines than a mix of Linux and Solaris. The main criteria is whether we need a JVM... those running Java are stuck with Solaris for now.
Re:Any chance of O2 support? (Score:1)
Re:Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:2)
Unfourtnatley the offer from sun expired on the 22nd, but they will most ceartinly continue it in a few weeks. http://store.sun.com/docs/specials/specials_index. jhtmlHeres a list of their promos:
If your not a student, goto a JC, pay 50$ for a class, get a student ID, and save 50% on a machine ...
...with thoughts of Origin/Onyx 3000 dancing in my (Score:1)
Re:Great! (Score:1)
IIRC, the hard disks were external only. I had an SLC and don't recall it having room for a hard disk. I used it with Xkernel as an X Terminal, but now that there's slack for sparc, perhaps it would be better done that way.
Do your homework (Score:2)
Frequently Asked Questions About Buying An Old Sun System (FAQABOSS) [sunhelp.org]
Don't expect much from the graphics subsystems - most of the frame buffers that are supported are only 8 bit and unaccelerated. My LX would run Gnome and KDE, but it was excruciating. I am now running most of my Sparc gear (IPX, 2 Classics, an LX and a 2xSM51 Sparc 10) on OpenBSD. The IPX makes a great firewall with the addition of another NIC, and the 'lunchbox' Sparcs are nice and tidy. Watch the heat issues, especially with newer high RPM SCSI drives...
By the way, does anyone know if the PCMCIA - SBUS bridge (nell) is due for attention? What about pthreads and mysql on the old Sparcs?
Re:Somebody at ./ wanna close their link tag????? (Score:1)
...but such is life
Re:You MORON. (Score:1)
Not only that;
The goal of the ELKS project is to create a Linux option for
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
Re:There's even more [incorrect] assumptions here (Score:1)
Although Linux does support console on the serial port, so if that "rack mount device" you speak of is a basic term-server/serial port switcher, you can manage your x86 Linux boxen the same damn way.
True, almost. Just hope you don't have to perform any BIOS changes from a serial console. You can't compare the poor excuse of firmware that ships with most PCs to OpenBoot.
The Blackdown Project has Sparc ports. 1.2.2 is available, though I don't believe that 1.3 is yet.
Good point. The Blackdown folks do fine work. But it's still no match for the Solaris 1.2.2 Production VM. Our server apps have to be robust, fast, robust, high performance, robust...
(I'm hoping the gcj project [redhat.com] will become the great equalizer on Java performance, but it's not quite there yet.)
Re:You MORON. (Score:1)
Actually, the 68000-series CPUs on which the Amiga was based are mostly 32-bit. The original 68000 CPU was not fully 32-bit, but the 68020 and up were. Linux requires a 68020 or higher with an MMU.
Otherwise you need something like ucLinux.
OpenVerse Visual Chat: http://openverse.org [openverse.org]
Great! (Score:1)
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:3)
There are people that payed for Windows 2000 you know...
Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:1)
Beans Means Heinz (Score:1)
Re:Cheap Sun Hardware (Score:3)
If you can find a full system that's great (there are plenty available) but you are going to pay a lot more than they are really worth. I honestly believe unless you got an UltraSPARC it really isn't worth it (but this is only my opinion). I bought one of the Alpha UDB's a while back and got partially screwed on parity RAM and a SCSI HD (w/external enclosure and stuff).
Just a warning
Re:Excellent news (Score:1)
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
I have used Solaris and I am not fond of it, but I am sure that if you bought a system w/it, you would want to use it, what do I know?
I am more comfortable w/Linux myself and would probably prefer to use that but then again, I didn't pay $10k for an USII
There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
Now who has a Sparc machine just "sitting around"? Chances are, if you have a Sparc machine, it drained at least $10,000 from your wallet and it's running Solaris 7/8. So who wants to erase a professionally designed operating system that costs hundreds of dollars to replace it with Slackware?
I'd understand this being done on the original Sparc, but I'll castigate the first person who puts Slackware on an UltraSparc II. They're just throwing their money out the window.
Linux for C64 (Score:1)
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:3)
Also, Solaris 8 drops support for the sun4 and sun4c boxes, IIRC, and it has way too much overhead for a lot of the pre-sun4u boxes.
PS: I'd put Slack on the Ultra 10/440 in my office... but only as a dual-boot setup with SunOS 5.7. Just out of morbid curiousity. I doubt I'd ever get XFree to fully use the Creator3D.
Re:Excellent news (Score:1)
Recently my best Sun has been a SPARCstation 5 running Solaris 8, so I found a new use for my IPX. I threw an s-bus NIC into it (hard to find, since Suns all come with on-board NICs, but I had it laying around), and installed OpenBSD. Makes a great firewall. Fits under the network switch just nicely. (and works a lot better than the crappy crash-happy PC I was trying to do it with before. it was hardware, as I was using OpenBSD in both cases)
Money for nothin' (Score:1)
I didn't like the idea of downloading 1200MB worth via a 56KBaud modem. Bad stuff indeed, especially when I pay 0.28 cents/meg over 300MB every month.
Re:There's some real pig-headed assumptions here. (Score:1)
SPARCstation 5 (Solaris 8, secondary desktop)
SPARCstation IPX (OpenBSD 2.8, firewall)
SPARC Xterminal 1 (stole RAM for SS5, Xt1 to appear on eBay)
SPARCserver 670MP (makes too much noise. parting out on eBay)
Of course I collect my machines for variety. If they were all running one OS, I wouldn't see the point. If I wanted to use Linux, I would just use a PC. If I have a Sparc, normally that means I want to play with Solaris. Likewise, my SGI runs IRIX, and my RS/6000 runs AIX.
I really do collect "UNIX Diversity". Look at my "systems" page:
http://www.logicprobe.org/systems/
Re:There's even more [incorrect] assumptions here (Score:1)
All good points about the SPARC hardware.
Or not.
Granted, resolving bizarre HW interactions is one of the "joys" of running x86 systems. All in all, though, if you use reasonably consistantly configured systems you can get more bang for your buck out of an x86. You even admit this in your second point.
--
If your map and the terrain differ,
trust the terrain.
Re:Beans Means Heinz (Score:1)
-JB
Re:Beans Means Heinz (Score:3)
However, as a collector, I also have an IBM RS/6000. I've looked far and wide, and I'm convinced that there are only 15 hobbist RS6k users in the world. (which includes myself and the guy I got my POWERstation 350 from) On the other hand, old RS6ks kick the crap out of old SPARCs for performance. The "POWER" processor (well, chipset, actually) kicks ass.
Re:There's even more [incorrect] assumptions here (Score:1)
All good points about the SPARC hardware.
Or not.
Granted, resolving bizarre HW interactions is one of the "joys" of running x86 systems. All in all, though, if you use reasonably consistantly configured systems you can get more bang for your buck out of an x86. You even admit this in your second point.
I've got to give you at partial credit here. Although Linux does support console on the serial port, so if that "rack mount device" you speak of is a basic term-server/serial port switcher, you can manage your x86 Linux boxen the same damn way.
In your final paragraph you also state:
Again my response must be: Or not. The Blackdown Project [blackdown.org] has Sparc ports. 1.2.2 is available, though I don't believe that 1.3 is yet. Frankly, with the exception of HP-UX, Slowaris ... er, I mean Solaris ... is one of the most painfull platforms to "write once, run anywhere" on. IMHO, of course.
I will grant you this, though: x86 equipment, on the whole, is drek compared to most Sparc based stuff. It just isn't designed as robustly. Kind of like comparing a Nissan to a Toyota. I love my Nissan, and certainly get better bang for the buck with it. No regrets at all. However, one drive in the eqiv Toy would reveal an obvious difference in robustness, design and fit & finish.
--
If your map and the terrain differ,
trust the terrain.
Re:Linux keeps blowing sun out of the water... (Score:1)
You've been smoking your old CDs again, haven't you?
What's so good about the SPARC? (Score:1)
Admitted -- new boxes are fairly expensive for private use. Until now Sun has a price policy that gives significant savings only for educational institutions and companies that spend huge sums for Sun hardware.
But it is no problem to get used Sun hardware for low prices. Maybe they are not the machines of your choice on your desktop but they are great network servers and the pizza box cases consume less space in 19" racks than standard PC hardware. Except for the newer Ultras, Sun hardware is well manufactured and runs (in most cases) without trouble for years.
why is it so rare to actually find people using one?
Well, I guess you'll find some of them in this thread :-)