Introduction to Debian 374
[vmlinuz] writes "SitePoint has an article that I wrote that introduces Debian and has guidelines on installing it. This could be usefull for managers, new users and other people that may be interested in using Debian." And honestly, who among us isn't interested in using the obviously superior Linux Distribution against which there can be no other contenders? (Oh dear god don't flame me! It's a joke people!)
The first person to mention (Score:5, Funny)
MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:2, Insightful)
If you can't f'ing install it you can't evaluate its superiority. Mandrake is by far the easiest distro to install. Until Debian is as easy to install I don't think it will ever get bigger Linux market share. If you want to give a taste of Debian to average user your best bet is to give them a Lindows CD.
Re:The first person to mention (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:5, Informative)
Plenty of other otherwise excellent OSes have difficult or non-user-friendly installations. FreeBSD is a good example. But it gets the job done, it isn't really that hard if you RTFM, and once you are finished you have a far superior OS to Mandrake (in my opinion).
No, Debian isn't going to be on the desktop of Windows users anytime soon. That's a position most likely to be filled by RedHat or Mandrake. But not just because of the installation; desktop users want features and bleeding-edge more than code maturity or stability. Debian doesn't even have KDE3 in the stable tree yet. So while a nicer installation may be nice, the kind of users Debian targets don't really need it.
Re:The first person to mention (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:2)
Yeah but if you can't install it I can measure yours.
Seriously I've never seen anything wrong with its installer - its really cake compared to a lot of things. First time I ever used it was on a sparcstation simply because Redhat stopped developing for it and I fell in love so much so that at my job (at the time I worked for a small software company) I switched ALL our Redhat systems to Debian. Reason? Mainly the consistancy - all config fil
Re:The first person to mention (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:5, Interesting)
a) That is an (old) prejudice, the Debian install is pretty easy by now (including the tasklist --- if you want X, then click "X-Windows".
Debian is a superior distro in many, many ways. I can't argue with your points b) and c), but a) is wrong. Debian is a pain in the ass to install.
I have an old AMD K2 box here. It's a practice box that I got from a friend. I opened it once. It's now tucked under my desk under a pile of other stuff.
I installed RedHat on it a few weeks ago. RedHat autodetected almost everything: The network card, video card, hard drives. Not perfect, but it was actually easier to install then Win2k. It took 2 hours total, and I was away from the computer for 80% of the time.
I'm installing Debian on it today. I'm on try #3, and have spent 3 hours flipping back to my primary computer and reading documentation. I'm still on CD #1.
Debian can't automatically find the drivers for network card, will only give me the option to reformat hdb and not hda (I booted to an emergency disk and used fdisk to destroy the partions on hda. Now debian sees hdb. Go figure.),
My fear is that I will have to drag the computer out from under the desk, open it up, write down make and model numbers. I just wanted a 1 hour project to do while eating breakfast... I have a million things to do today, and don't feel like spending my Sunday morning choking on dust, scraping my hand on the case and searching for obscure installation hints on the internet with my primary computer.
apparently you haven't used Debian (Score:3, Informative)
The biggest problem is finding out what the hell module to install. It's not exactly as simple as seeing "I have X network card, so I'll insta
Re:The first person to mention (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The first person to mention (Score:2)
CR should be testing use, not installation.
Sweet Jesus Malda! (Score:5, Funny)
You know you can't say something like that around here!
On a similar note, (Score:4, Interesting)
My biggest complaint w/ debian is the slow release cycle. I'd like to be able to pin the newest KDE/gnome/whatever to stable and do an apt-get upgrade without breaking a million things. Last time I pinned kde 3.1 and updated I spent three days finding broken stuff and fixing it.
And yes, I am aware of the other debian-based distros that are more up to date, but they're all (to my knowledge) pay distros, and I am looking for something cheap/free.
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2, Informative)
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2, Informative)
Re:On a similar note, (Score:5, Informative)
You can pin the newest KDE/gnome/whatever to unstable. Newest always goes in unstable first. Unstable is pretty cutting edge, but with an occasional hiccup.
The point of stable is that it works. Things go there after they are 'tried and true' in unstable, and then in testing.
Re:On a similar note, (Score:3, Informative)
People keep saying that
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
Actually I used debian for about 6 months. I installed stable, immediately upgraded to testing and stuck with it for a few weeks. Testing was *awesome*. Nothing ever broke. Then i went to unstable. Unstable was also pretty good, only small problems every so often, nothing major.
But, kde 3 came out. And I really wanted it. I waited and waited and it never got added to debian. I tried the unnoficial pac
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
Part of the problem is how slowly stuff migrates to Testing. Some maintainers (especially the GNOME/KDE guys) seem to have a policy of not moving anything to testing until its obsolete by at least two versions. Often, the claimed reason is because there hasn't been enough bug-testing... But the purpose of testing is to get more bug-testing from people who don't want to risk having to reinstall their system because they ran an apt-get upgrade without checking the news listings for system-destroying packages.
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
The more complex a package is, the longer it takes for it to be verifiably safe. That's just the nature of the beast.
Still, you can use unstable without prob
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
What I'd like to see is an intermediate step between unstable and testing. The policy would simply be "packages that have been in unstable for at least n hours (48 would be good)". Actually, you wouldn't really need a different repositoy, just an apt-get option that checks the changelogs and removes from consideration any "excessively new" packages. It might be cleaner to do it as a separate branch, though.
This simple precaution would prevent 95% of the (rare) problems that do crop up in unstable. Wha
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
I like the current system just fine. If you upgrade constantly, you'll eventually be the one to get bitten. But it rarely needs more than a bandaid, and you can save everyone else the trouble. This way even users who never contribute a line of code still benefit the whole through their use.
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
I hope that if you develop something like this, you keep it to yourself, you selfish bastard. :-)
Not likely :-) Actually, I don't really need it. I think it would be helpful for some other people I know who'd like the upgradability of Debian and the software in unstable/testing. Testing would, in theory, be the ideal distro for them, but it frequently gets jammed up over a few packages, and when it's in that state it gets *no* security patches, which is very bad, IMO.
This way even users who never
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
Yes, this sounds good, except for the fact that testing was created as an intermediate step between stable and unstable. We can do this as many times as we want and there are still gonna be people that are unhappy.
Testing is where the next stable is prepared, and it's important for that reason. However, the testing policy makes it fairly bad as a distribution for actual use, at least during certain portions of the release cycle. Why? Mainly because the way packages flow (and don't flow) from unstable
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
My biggest complaint about Debian stable is that it tries to achieve stability through completely freezing updates, even bugfixes (except for secur
Re:On a similar note, (Score:4, Informative)
since I was not familiar with the Debian way of building packages
I assume you are familiar with it now, but for others, the process is (as yourself, no need to be root):
The result is a .deb which you can install with dpkg -i. If you needed to patch the sources, you'd have to do it between the apt-get and building the package, obviously. dpkg-buildpackage may complain about missing -dev package prerequisites; if so, just apt-get install them. You can omit the "-uc -us" if you have a gpg keypair; dpkg-buildpackage will invoke gpg to sign the created packages (and prompt for your passphrase).
For example, if a new OpenSSH security flaw is discovered and a security update will be available at security.debian.org, I have no clue how the version number conflict is solved.
You can use dselect or aptitude to "hold" the package you built. This will prevent apt-get from upgrading that package even when new versions are available. When a new version is available and you apt-get upgrade, apt will tell you that it's not upgrading that package, so you know to deal with the issue.
I would also recommend one other optional step before building the package: Modify the changelog to change the version number and to indicate what you changed (patch applied, etc.). Just edit <packagename>/debian/changelog and add another entry at the top that looks just like all the others in the file (but with your name, appropriate content, etc.). Change the version number to include your name or something and a number. For example, if the package is 3.6.1, I might make it 3.6.1-shawn.1. That way you can see which packages you've modified. When an update comes along that has a "greater" version number, according to normal lexical ordering rules, apt-get will replace your modified package unless it's held.
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
Not to be too nitpicky, but you don't need to use dpkg-buildpackage to build a .deb It's used primarily to build packages for upload to debian's archives using dupload. Instead, you can just:
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
That's the very thing I like most about Debian. There are enough distros pushing for 6 month release cycles regardless of the reliability of the underlying software. Debian seems to take the opposite stand, sticking with old versions until the newer versions work properly. Personally, I'd rather have a reliable KDE 2.2 than a buggy KDE 3.x-beta1. I make my living using this software. I don't want to spend time tracking down obscure kdelibs bug
Re:On a similar note, (Score:2)
deb http://ftp.us.kde.org/pub/kde/stable/3.1.2/Debian stable main
I thought the beauty of open source was... (Score:5, Insightful)
I thought the beauty of open source was that even if the original author (be it a natural person(s) or a company) decides to no longer support a project that the source is there for you to look at and provide your own support.
Re:I thought the beauty of open source was... (Score:2)
Re:I thought the beauty of open source was... (Score:2)
Um, wait . . .
A Joke?! (Score:4, Funny)
How many Debian users does it take to change a lightbulb?
Just one, but he has know how to apt-get install liblightbulb1. apt-get install light-switch-client if you want to be able to turn it on.
Re:A Joke?! (Score:4, Funny)
It is rumored that electricity will get into testing Real Soon Now though.
Re:A Joke?! (Score:2)
Re:A Joke?! (Score:2)
that's it
For Managers? Installing Debian?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh, please... It's a joke, isn't it?
I'll be glad to see if there's any managers USE Debian. Managers INSTALLING Debian... ?? Wow! It's so... "news that matters".
Re:For Managers? Installing Debian?? (Score:2)
I am a true-to-the-bone suit (manager).
I use Debian too, at home... Installed it all by my very little welf too! Yeehaw!
Of course, I must confess I don't use it exclusively... I am a member of the horde guilty of having multiple OS'es on the machin
what's a distribution? (Score:4, Funny)
Superior Linux Distribution (Score:5, Insightful)
Well if debian could get their installer and hardware detection right I don't know how far off that statement would be
Re:Superior Linux Distribution (Score:5, Informative)
Yet, I agree with you. The installer is a pain in the arse. Bear in mind however that I only installed Debian once. All the other installations were "cloned" from the original one.
In any case, I'd love to see Knoppix HW detection routines incorporated into Debian. Knoppix is a killer in this area.
RedHat's not a nightmare (Score:2)
Easy to use, free, widely supported, plus its the best looking distro out of the box. Plus they are strong supporters of linux and are a large reason why linux is where it is today.
The only thing thing I don't like is how they have gone to a one year support cycle for their free version. But hey, I'm not the one footing the bill for all
Re:Superior Linux Distribution (Score:2)
As for unstable, I've no doubt that in time it will move to testing and then stable, and all the while my Debian b0x3n will be as solid as ever, whilst others scratch their heads over the latest and greatest buggy packages pushed into the latest and greatest Commercial Distros. (All that being said I do have a soft spot for Red Hat for my desktop box)
Debain=No Software Patents! (Score:2)
Debian has no software patents and doesn;t like them
Installer (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Installer (Score:5, Insightful)
The install is fine.
It's dselect that sucks.
Re:Installer (Score:3, Interesting)
I found more recent installers to be better, but when you exit a kernel module category it often returns you back to the top of the list, thus losing your place in the list.
All distros should give you the option of automatic hardware detection and manual selection if things go wrong.
Re:Installer (Score:2)
My suggestions to anyone using debian are to skip past dselect during the install, and then apt-get everything afterwards. You can find out what packages there are by looking at packages.debian.org [debian.org].
Another hint you might want is that I've had problems getting the debian config programs to set up my XF86Config-4 file correctly. If you're moving to Debian from another linux, I'd recommend backing-up this config file for
What's wrong with dselect? (Score:2)
What exactly is wrong with dselect? What do you use instead? Why do you find that tool superior?
Re:Installer (Score:3, Insightful)
Recently I had to install GNU/Linux on a laptop, and had no idea what was inside it. I could have spent a lot of time trying to find out, but instead I slipped in a Knoppix cd, completed the installation in about 15 minutes, and had a working Debian box. If I'd had to use the Debian installer, it might have taken hours.
Another way to try debian... (Score:5, Interesting)
No, seriously. I don't run debian primarily because I don't want to go through the install process. I don't know what chipset my nic has, and I really don't care to know, know what I mean? Ditto with everything else.
I've been using flavors of RedHat, culminating with Redhat9 that's currently my Linux of "choice", mainly because Redhat offered superior hardware detection/setup. But, I've always had to tweak a bit here and there to get it working nicely.
However, with the advent of Knoppix, I think that's about to change. I popped in Knoppix 3.2 today for the first time to see what it was all about. The hardware detection on this LIVE CD is absolutely.. superb. It recognized and setup my Orinoco Wireless card. It found and mounted my Sony Cybershot Camera. Jesus, it even found and setup my Wacom! The only thing it didn't do was give me dual-head support OOB, but I don't think I know any distro that does that. But that's okay, fortunately I know how to set that up myself. It comes with KDE, it looks great, it just WORKS. And because it "just works" I'm really tempted to wipe RedHat off and do the HD install of this.
Some notes that I've come across, though: As Knoppix uses a special blend of testing/unstable (or something like that), it's really hard to do dist-upgrade and what not without downgrading your desktop. I heartily recommend reading through the docs at the Knoppix website and finding out what issues may remain. As a desktop Debian based distro, though, I think Knoppix just plain rules.
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:4, Interesting)
Their apt-gettable repository forms a really up to date exo-distro around Redhat where you can get the latest stuff that installs easily and 'just works'.
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, I haven't installed from "freshrpms" so take my statements with a grain of salt, but... Past experience says that Debian has at least three big advantages over RedHat:
- Almost every significant (and many not-so-significant) free software program is part of the official distribution, integrated with the menu system, mailcap system, configuration database, etc.
- The installation of most packages tries to help you get a working configuration (by asking you questions) out of the box. People often find this confusing, but many find it preferable to having something like "sendmail" installed but broken.
- Upgrading anything but the kernel itself does not involve rebooting, and your configuration is generally either left alone, or migrated with some help from you. (And most packages that can't do one of those tell you "I'm broken, please read [whatever help file]" so you have a chance of doing something about it.)
Until you've lived in Debian (and perhaps another OS) and maintained a machine for some period it's hard to appreciate these things. I've got a machine that has been migrated to the latest and greatest since around 1996, and not had a fresh install in this time. It's had uptimes of hundreds of days, and just chugs along, secure and doing it's job.
If running RedHat with "freshrpms" is like that, more power to you, and I'm glad RH has caught up. Otherwise you might want to give Debian a try. If you find the install confusing, as others have suggest, Knoppix makes a fine installer for Debian.
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
However, for what it does have, it really makes the whole Redhat + RPM thing much more bearable.
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
Really? I wouldnt know, last time I installed an OS was in the 90's, debian in 1999 actually. What's a modern install like?
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
Really? I wouldnt know, last time I installed an OS was in the 90's, debian in 1999 actually. What's a modern install like?
Hear, hear! This, people, is the bottom-line *reason* why Debian hasn't bothered (until recently) to build a really good installer. I installed the "copy" of Debian that's on my laptop (the one I'm typing on) three years ago -- on a different machine. Copying a Linux install from one drive to another is as simple as formatting, copying the files and running grub-install, and keepi
Another easy way, pick up the phone. (Score:2)
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
First, I don't speak German, that is the first big obsticle I have to get around with Knoppix. Second, Koppix was not able to instaill a gui, mandrake had no trouble with the same system. Third, Knoppix does have mandrake's nice disk partitioning utility.
Mandrake has it's problem also. RPM dependency hell sucks.
What about Morphix (Score:2, Informative)
Morphix [morphix.org] is a modular variant of Knoppix. The FAQ [sourceforge.net] explains the differences between Morphix and Knoppix. Simply put, Morphix is much more flexible than Knoppix.
I did an HD-install of the KDE (3.1.1) main-mod. The only problem I had was the with boot configuration (I have an unusual setup), the problem was solved by downloading the boot-disk image that contains the ever-useful Smart Boot Manager (I wish that more distros would, at least, include this as an option).
Minor problem asside, the install went s
Re:Another way to try debian... (Score:2)
Then don't install Debian. You're not the target audience anyway. Debian is pretty much aimed at the server crowd first, and desktop user as a distat second, from what I can tell. This explains the long release cycle (to ensure packages are rock solid), the difficult install (Debian installe
Knoppix - easiest Debian ever IMHO (Score:2, Redundant)
Yum!
FBSD, Deb, and Slack, Oh My! (Score:2, Interesting)
P.S. Redhat is no good at all. It's not that I'm being close-minded, but every single time I try to use Redh
And we all know the REAL Linux distro is... (Score:3, Funny)
Red Hat... (Score:2)
Can't wait to do my RH253 course with them next month
The best way to meet linux. (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a number of longtime hardcore Linux fans, most notably my (now) roommate. After being ridiculed for a long time about my use of Windows (especially my need to reinstall it every three months, due to it's tendency to crap out, regardless of which one I used--9x, 2000, XP), I decided I'd try this so-called "Linux".
So I asked for a copy. Not even being aware that I had a choice of distributions, I took the first cd set given to me--"Woody", at that time Debian's testing distro, later to become Debian 3.0.
At first, I kinda freaked. No pretty graphical install, but it really wasn't so bad. I've been through worse in DOS. The instructions were pretty straightforward, though I did have to ask my friend what NIC driver to use (it was tulip). But after about an hour, I had a working system, with WindowMaker as my default window manager, and witha simple "startx"....
It worked.
And didn't stop, ever. It's never even paused on me. Since then, I've taught myself every intimate detail of linux in general, and even tried a few other distros on my other machines, but always end up going back to Debian (though now I'm running unstable--I like to live dangerously). Even used it to turn my crappy 486/DX66 Toshiba Satellite w/16MB of RAM into a useful internet terminal for my living room.
It's not the easiest way to start, but when you're done, you'll have a good grasp of everything you'll need for an everyday system, and adding features or building a custom "utility system"(email server, firewall, etc.) is just an apt-get away. Overall, I'd highly recommend it to anyone.
Unless you're really -that- lazy.
Re:The best way to meet linux. (Score:2, Informative)
meh... (Score:2, Funny)
Recent gem article's from them include:
"image resizing in php" that is actually just a trick to use the height and width properties of the <img> tag to make the browser resize the image. "I don't feel like having 4,000 different thumbnails on my server for each product..."
And, "practical web design with tables" for people who think "CSS is too hard"
Installer, unstable and a bunch of whiners (Score:4, Insightful)
The old Debian installer is somewhat technical, but who doesn't like that? I find the old installer much more easy to use than Windows XP's setup. If the only reason for hating Debian is the (soon to be deprecated) text mode installer, you really should just run away.
Debian is the superior distribution!
GNU/You GNU/spelled GNU/it GNU/wrong (Score:3, Funny)
Enough with the "Debian's dated" already... (Score:5, Informative)
But, for those of you who want the bleeding edge without risking instability, Debian does just fine there if you know what you're doing. Go ahead and jump to unstable. Seriously!
The only thing you're missing is "apt-listbugs," which does this automatically with every update...
Before starting installation, apt-listbugs fetches all the bug reports for versions between your current version and the target version. We can see that two bugs have been closed (fixed by later versions, or the bug reports were bogus), and we see that the tetex-bin bug is still open.
In this case, we'd type 'h tetex-bin' to hold the broken package and proceed with a perfectly usable system.
Of course, this still leaves you in the position to be the one in ten thousand who finds a critical bug on installing any given package. If that happens, be a Good Debizen and use reportbug so the next guy is notified. Further, if you flag a critical bug, it's rare that it isn't fixed within a couple hours, even at 2am on Sunday. Once you've reported your bug, go ahead and roll back a version and carry on until the developer closes the bug -- if you used reportbug, you'll get an all-clear email automatically when he or she closes the bug.
With unstable and the apt-listbugs' automatic reports, the chances of ever winding up with a broken system are exceptionally low. Showstopper bugs are rare even in unstable -- maybe one package update in five thousand. But, with thousands of other users snarfing packages and reporting any bugs, the chances of your being the one to discover breakage without apt-listbugs warning you first are virtually nil.
All that said, if you can bear to be a week to a month behind the bleeding edge, you can use apt-listbugs with testing as well. The chances of getting a broken system with testing and apt-listbugs are about the same as the chance of Windows Service Update not needing a reboot. Virtually nil.
Everyone knows... (Score:2)
debian isn't just a distro. it's a lifestyle. (Score:5, Funny)
Wimps and couch potatoes with their grey tasteless distros don't understand the pleasure a good distro gives. We offer two exquisite distro flavors for the linux user with style:
- STABLE: coke drinking folks will never get it, but programs are like good red wine. They get better with age. That's why we only include very old programs in this distro. If you think that these programs are outdated and full with bugs that have since then been corrected in newer program versions, you miss the point: this isn't a fast-food distro. It's a distro you use at candlelight.
- UNSTABLE: this is our distro for the fast and the furious. If you're complaining about this distro and saying that Mandrake and Gentoo both have up-to-date versions that, unlike debian, aren't actually "unstable", you miss the point and you're most probably a wimp. This distro isn't for couch potatoes but for people who love the thrill of the risk. For people who play carmageddon for real in their SUVs, go bungee jumping and skydiving and just occasionally forget to take a parachute. But that's what makes the kick of debian unstable.
Debian isn't just a distro. it's a lifestyle. It's what separates the men from the boys. Go download your copy from www.debian.org now
The Debian Experience (Score:2, Interesting)
Although we rely on it, the release cycle reall
Article (and philosophy) contradicts itself. (Score:2)
This is not the case with Debian. The Debian project is entirely volunteer-run and doesn't seek to generate profit. This essentially means that, while the
Looking at it the wrong way (Score:3, Insightful)
1) I do the install and get the hardware working. Even Mandrake can screw up on some hardware, and if you don't even know how to edit text files, you're not going to be able to recover. Most people learn an OS that's pre-installed for them. Why not Linux?
2) They don't have to stress about packaged depends. It's taken care of in a very simple, powerful, and elegant way. I've been using APT for years now, and I still learn something new about cool ways to use it almost weekly.
3) Packages aren't broken "out of the box" as they frequently are in RH or Mandrake. Users can use a subset of the utilities and get used to them rather than searching for which text editor crashes the least.
4) The rules on how packages behave are standardized, and file location/behavior is very predictable. Good for people to learn about good UNIX directory structure use.
5) Things work and configure properly on their own, but you can hand-tune text config files without breaking some bizarre mother configuration script that depends on it being the only thing that ever edits the files.
Once the user gets used to the shell, the directory structure, and basic system management, we talk about the installation process, and they can ususally basically handle it on their own. I learned Linux through the "trial by fire" of installing it wihtout even knowing how to use the text editors. It was painful and it took forever. No matter how pretty a face you put on the installer, you can't get around the fact that OS installs are usually not for beginners. Better to make the system self-consistent and manageable than to allow the user to easily install an OS himself that he has no hope of properly managing for himself.
Too bad nobody really knows about Linux... (Score:3, Interesting)
Too bad some IT managers view the choce as "Linux = no counterstrike". The network administrator for my Cable ISP really sucks at Counterstrike, but he loves to play it while on the clock.
Many tech support people are worse though. For example, when trying to get my friend's DSL modem to work with Mandrake Linux 8.0, I had to call up tech support. After the guy had me on hold for a while, he comes back on and says "You're trying to get your DSL modem to work with your Lexus, right?"
As far as Linux vs. Windows goes, I believe OpenOffice.org is a great office suite and almost any buisiness can use Linux for all their office administration tasks. If the company wants to focus on their business, not the computer, Linux distros make for good operating systems. If the people in charge of a company favor having fashon makeover software instead of saving hundreds per seat for MS Office and Windows, so be it.
As far as the companies who buy MS products and then lock the computers with Secure PC or Foolproof, management either is very rich and loves the Windows logo, or is probably leading the company downhill.
Debian Minimal Install (Score:5, Interesting)
I usually log in via ssh/xterm and just run a console on the screen. If I run a X server, it's usually Xvnc, so I don't have to work in a noisy machine room.
Desktop/laptop machines are usually RedHat - RH does have a nicer GUI than Debian, but RH seems to be rivalling Microsoft in the amount of unneeded programs that get installed by default.
Re:Why bother? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
Gentoo stable gets tested long enough, and certainly is not old (of course, not as stable as debian stable), and some of the times i need "unstable" packages because they havent been moved to stable (like xchat 2.02 for example)
And since you get to compile it, it compiles against YOUR libraries, therefore you don't need
Re:Why bother? (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to see packages that are still in testing, type ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" [or ~your_platform_name, like ~ppc] emerge -Up world
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
Re:Why bother? (Score:2, Interesting)
Debian Developers usually get humiliated in public if they upload a broken package to unstable without testing it. Of course, this is somehow proportional to the importance of the package, but if a Developer somehow manages to mess up other packages, too, he will have a hard time defending himself.
Michael
Re:Why bother? (Score:4, Informative)
Heh, I've justing finished writing an article about the problems with APT (What's wrong with APT? [sourceforge.net]).
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
I had to recompile db4 with a custom spec file in order to get apt-get back
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
People just want software that works, and works easily. Debian is good for servers, not for the desktop
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
How about multiplatform? No?
They care more that they cannot view divx because the library that does it may not be gpl.
They care that lots of packages they want, they cannot install them with apt-get because of licensing issues.
They care when they get crippled packages of they favorite applications because of the same (mplayer)
You proved my point. You use debian as a server. Great use.
Desktop users, move along, nothing to see here. Even lindows does a decent
Re:I am just thinking of switching to Debian (Score:3, Informative)
$EDITOR
Replace all instances of 'stable' with 'testing'
apt-get update
apt-get upgrade
Congradulations, you're running testing.
Re:Redhat, Debian, Gentoo (Score:3, Informative)
ls -R
And for the kernel compile, it really *is* a walk in the pack... but don't forget there are new emerging technologies that make installing KDE, X and mozilla a walk in the pack too...
For example, DistCC is a cross-compiler that allows you to distribute your compiling over multiple boxes... those boxes can be running any distro that has the same compiler and libc running on
Re:Redhat, Debian, Gentoo (Score:2)
Trouble is, I'm at home, and this 2GHz/1GB machine is the fastest here - the next closest is a 333MHz/256MB :o((
Re:the installer issue (Score:2, Informative)
Because the 'main branch' is 3.0 aka woody aka 'stable' and debian does not introduce stuff like Hardware Detection in Point Releases ala 3.0r2.
Be assured that there will be automatic Hardware Detection in the next stable release (whenever that will be). It has been in the new, still alpha, Installer for months now I think.
Michael
Re:Debian GNU/Linux (Score:2)
--
You are what you eat.
You eat BSD Users?
Are you that guy with the pitchfork?
Re:for those turned off by the elitist Debian comm (Score:4, Informative)
There is plenty of good community support available for Debian. The only time I've ever seen anyone suggest "RTFM" is when someone posts nonsence questions to the developers mailing lists without bothering to check the various developers manuals. I don't think it's unreasonable to expect DEVELOPERS to RTFM. Users are a whole different subject.
see Debian Thread, "Are We Losing Users to Gentoo" (Score:2)
Re:Redhat dependency hell? No problem (Score:2)
That was when I switched to Gentoo and Portage which automatically sorts out its dependencies etc.