Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Debian Software Linux

Toward a New Kind of Linux Distribution 354

An anonymous reader writes "Progeny co-founder Ian Murdock wrote a weblog entry that has been reprinted at Newsforge. He talks about how current distros are built from the top down, making a 'one-size-fits-all' solution of technology. He proposes making a modular solution that encompasses building modules so distros can include only the technology they need to suit their purpose, kinda like building from the bottom up. Interesting read, good arguments, potential for a new Linux community."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Toward a New Kind of Linux Distribution

Comments Filter:
  • Ian (Score:5, Informative)

    by termos ( 634980 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:15AM (#8416189) Homepage
    Progeny co-founder Ian Murdock wrote

    Wouldn't it be worth mentioning that he is founder of Debian as well?
    • Re:Ian (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2004 @12:11PM (#8416931)
      And the name "Debian" is a contraction of his name (IAN) and his "ex-girlfriend" name (Deborah) = Deb+Ian.
  • by Saven Marek ( 739395 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:17AM (#8416196)
    but wouldn't something like this be better based on Gentoo? If it's going to be modular and simple to use for the majority I think it'd be better off with package management more along the gentoo line, instead of debian, which while good is more suited to hackish, more finely grained options?
    • why? (Score:5, Informative)

      by qortra ( 591818 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:35AM (#8416283)
      Never mind that Ian Murdock is also a founder of Debian, and that Progeny has always been built on Debian; what objective reason is there for building this kind of OS on Gentoo rather than Debian?

      First of all, Debian is quite modular and simple. In fact, Lindows uses it behind their "click 'n' run" front end, and its supposed to be amazingly smooth. Debian can be used for more finely grained options, but can also be used for a modular system as described Murdock.

      Plus, lets be honest; source distributions just aren't going to cut it in an environment where package installation speed is important.
      • Re:why? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Jay Maynard ( 54798 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:28AM (#8416506) Homepage
        Ignoring for the moment that Debian is objectionable to no small number of us because of their explicit kowtowing to Stallman...

        Gentoo is not just a source distribution. It is true that many folks treat it that way, and doing so has its advantages. However, if you don't want to compile everything from scratch to optimize it for your specific hardware, you can install precompiled binary packages and go to town. Look at the Gentoo Reference Platform (GRP) for details.
      • Why Gentoo (Score:5, Informative)

        by metamatic ( 202216 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:41AM (#8416553) Homepage Journal
        The point of Gentoo is that using the source for installation allows much finer grained dependency resolution.

        For example, take vim. Depending on what you have installed, it may or may not have Perl integration, Python integration, an X UI, ctags support, make or ANT integration, and so on.

        A binary distribution needs to provide a different binary for every possible combination of those, if it's going to allow fine-grained choice around what the Linux system has installed. Either that, or you have to turn off a lot of functionality which could be turned on, in case the dependencies aren't installed.

        With Gentoo, the binary's dependencies are determined at install time, so you can have a single package which supports all the possible combinations of other components the user might have chosen to install. If I have Perl but no Python dev tools and opted not to have Python integration, no problem, vim is built appropriately from the same package everyone else is using.

        In practice, the binary distributions seem to provide only two versions of vim, a "minimal" terminal-only one, and an "everything, including X" version. Personally, I don't want either of those--I want most things, excluding Python and X. Gentoo lets me have that, Debian doesn't because it doesn't have a vim-perl-ant-make-nox-nopython package.
        • Re:Why Gentoo (Score:5, Insightful)

          by sydneyfong ( 410107 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:16AM (#8416672) Homepage Journal
          Actually, Debian is close.

          $ apt-cache search vim | grep vim
          kvim - Vi IMproved - KDE 3.x version
          vim - Vi IMproved - enhanced vi editor
          vim-doc - Vi IMproved - Documentation files
          vim-gnome - Vi IMproved - GNOME2 Version
          vim-gtk - Vi IMproved - GTK2 Version
          vim-latexsuite - Brings the LaTeX power to Vim
          vim-lesstif - Vi IMproved - LessTif Version
          vim-perl - Vi IMproved, with perl scripting support
          vim-python - Vi IMproved, with python scripting support
          vim-ruby - Vi IMproved, with ruby scripting support
          vim-scripts - plugins for vim, adding bells and whistles
          vim-tcl - Vi IMproved, with tcl scripting support
          vim-vimoutliner - a script for building an outline editor on top of Vim
          vimacs - Emacs emulation for Vim
          vimpart - Vim Component for KDE

          And you could always choose to compile the thing from source yourself. But I prefer the convenience.

          (btw, I'm posting from a Gentoo machine.)
          • Re:Why Gentoo (Score:4, Insightful)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @02:31PM (#8417711) Homepage Journal

            If you're using gentoo, then you should know your USE flags are set in /etc/make.conf and they turn assorted features explicitly on or off. (Anything you do not explicitly specify will go to defaults.) Here's mine:

            USE="crypt -cups curl doc flac imagemagick\
            jpeg mbox mmx mpeg nocd pam perl png postgres\
            python readline samba ssl tiff usb"

            Note that as my USE flags are currently set, among other things which are defaults, vim will get support for python. If I put tcl, gtk, lesstiff and so on in my USE it would automatically be compiled with support for each of these things.

            In other words, if you put an easier installer on the front of it, and slapped together a cute little program to help you maintain USE flags from the list of available flags, then you would have the very distribution we're talking about here. What's more, when you change your USE flags, as packages are upgraded they will be recompiled with the new flags, and support for new software. All you have to do to update software to support your new stuff is to re-emerge it with the new USE flags. You can rebuild the entire tree with emerge -e world, though I'm not sure what order it will happen in. You probably want to rebuild, say, glibc first with whatever your current gcc and binutils is, then the toolchain again with your new glibc. The complete system can be transferred by doing an emerge -eB which will create all the binary packages you need. (If compiling for a different architecture, you will need to tweak certain variables in make.conf on the command line using the 'env' command, or perhaps several 'env' commands, including changing the location of PKGDIR.)

            Having a bunch of different premade builds of vim is one way to go, but with the current power level of even most portable devices a recompilation scheme begins to make a lot of sense, especially if you can do it in the background while doing other things, as you can for most upgrades.

            I'm putting gentoo in a virtual machine for use as an application server for my Midori Linux-equipped (M4I actually) i-Opener, so that I will be able to ssh someplace and run some applications. I know that I will be able to optimize it to minimize its impact on my PC.

        • Re:Why Gentoo (Score:4, Insightful)

          by E_elven ( 600520 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:43AM (#8416809) Journal
          Hm.

          An interesting attempt would be to combine the source and binary packaging systems at the distribution level. You noted well that having all the different variations as binaries would require countless binaries to be distributed. The following solution would be a bit more involved.

          Let's have a distribution, Distributimized Linux. In the package management system (or website or whatever), a user can click on a package they desire. This brings up a menu (or a screen or a page) in which the user can select the configuration options, dependencies, optional features and so on. Satisfied, the user will send in the request to receive this compiled to a binary.

          This could be done directly by the distro computing farms but since it might be a bit too intensive for one party to handle the compilation of hundreds of packages daily, a better option would be to force the use of something like distcc for anyone using the distro. The central package management multiplexer would form the distributed compiling network from suitable computers and set it to work on the build. Then -in considerably less time than compiling it on your own- the binary would be dropped into the requester's computer, it would just execute the make install.

          A problem to overcome is overloading -an individual computer should not be used in a distcc (or whatever) network more than X times per hour (could possibly be configurable at the user end (for example heavier loads when you're not there) but ensuring some minimum value) to ensure that any single system would not be bogged down. Another great advantage would be if each computer could build packages for at least one other platform, so that my x86 box could support compilation for Joe's KDE package for his Solaris.

          I'd be happy to partake in a distribution like that, be it making one or using it :)
        • Re:Why Gentoo (Score:5, Interesting)

          by jsebrech ( 525647 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @12:12PM (#8416940)
          First of all, a well designed application shouldn't have that kind of conditional compile time dependancies. It's possible to do that all at runtime.

          Secondly, debian supports building from source right in the debian package system. It's not possible yet to build the entire distribution (due to incomplete and circular build dependancies), but when you've installed a base platform, it's quite easy to rebuild the stuff you need with whatever optimizations you prefer, all while still making it easy to do binary only installs.

          Admitted, that last bit of functionality didn't really take off until gentoo led the way, but I remember compiling my own optimised debian packages in the previous century, so...
        • Um, what? (Score:4, Interesting)

          by delmoi ( 26744 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @02:41PM (#8417787) Homepage
          A binary distribution needs to provide a different binary for every possible combination of those, if it's going to allow fine-grained choice around what the Linux system has installed. Either that, or you have to turn off a lot of functionality which could be turned on, in case the dependencies aren't installed.

          There are thousands of apache modules out there, but I can get pretty much any combination of them without recompiling. What you're talking about is a design flaw in vim, not a fundemental fact of computing. Look at Emacs with it's LISP based adons. No recompling needed.
    • by gripdamage ( 529664 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:44AM (#8416317)
      This article is by Ian Murdock, who is the Ian in Debian [debian.org]. The logo isn't there because of a direct relationship to the subject of the article; the Debian logo is there because of a direct relationship to the author.

      Notice that his current project (Progeny) is about companies looking to build on a 'distribution neutral platform [progeny.com]', and the link in the article goes to a page about 'Progeny Componentized Linux.' Believe or not Gentoo is not the only highly configurable linux game in town: Progeny seems to be playing that game, but at the enterprise not the consumer level. He's definitely not thinking of Gentoo for this role. He's talking about Progeny.
      • He's definitely not thinking of Gentoo for this role. He's talking about Progeny.

        We, the people who are posting about Gentoo in this thread, know that.

        The question is, "Why didn't Ian seem to?"

        One of the important responsibilities an Open Source developer has is to check around and make sure there isn't already a project that is nearly what they want, and try to see if they can contribute to that project instead. Of course, being Open Source nobody enforces this (nobody should), but the end result of ig
  • Kinda Cool (Score:4, Interesting)

    by caffeinefiend ( 681092 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:17AM (#8416198)
    This seems like a pretty good idea, I am sure that many people would adopt it. However, it sounds an awful lot like Linux From Scratch, or Gentoo. I'm assuming that a distribution like the one proposed must be a binary one to appeal to the masses.Overall, though, this sounds like a good way to attract more people to the Linux community.
  • Uh..? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Zardus ( 464755 ) <yans@yancomm.net> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:17AM (#8416200) Homepage Journal
    What I don't get is how this is different from, say, Debian or Gentoo at all. At the end of his blog he says "If this sounds a lot like Debian, that's because it is in many ways", goes on to list the ways, and then doesn't list any differences other than an Anaconda installer. So, is this debian that installs like redhat and lets you choose packages? I mean, it doesn't sound like there's anything new here at all.
    • Re:Uh..? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:33AM (#8416269)
      It does sound exactly like my web server, which runs on ancient hardware and a small drive just for the hell of it. Once I've done a debian base install I strip even more out, and then include ONLY the exact services I need, even then stripping out what I don't, while also rebuilding a kernel that has every option I'll never need removed. Sound? out. IDE support? gone. It reduced the kernel size, reduced the base install size, and boosted speed in serving pages (the job it does) by 10%.

      The only difference in my mind is an easier way to do this componentizing than manually, package by package, but that's practically what Gentoo does already.
      • Re:Uh..? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Dalroth ( 85450 ) * on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:20AM (#8416463) Homepage Journal
        AND

        it makes your machine more secure because:

        A) You have less services, so less chance one of them is going to be hacked.

        B) You have less programs on your machine so less (I did not say none) chance somebody who DOES break into your machine will be able to do any actual damage.

        Bryan
    • Re:Uh..? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by bishiraver ( 707931 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:26AM (#8416498) Homepage
      It's different because, while Debian components work on a package level, he's talking about a modular level.

      That is, a collection of packages that work together thematically. For example; a simple productivity module which includes mozilla firefox, evolution, and openoffice. Or a multimedia module which includes xmms, mplayer, and a smattering of DVD players. Or a server module, which includes apache, samba, et al.

      It's like turning the course focus on a manual microscope instead of the fine focus. You get more faster, but it's not as accurate to your specific needs.
      • Re:Uh..? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by pyman ( 610707 )
        Debian is halfway there already. I use debootstrap, then tasksel. Sounds pretty modular to me!
      • Re:Uh..? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by TrentC ( 11023 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:00AM (#8416624) Homepage
        It's different because, while Debian components work on a package level, he's talking about a modular level.

        That is, a collection of packages that work together thematically. For example; a simple productivity module which includes mozilla firefox, evolution, and openoffice. Or a multimedia module which includes xmms, mplayer, and a smattering of DVD players. Or a server module, which includes apache, samba, et al.


        Kinda like tasksel [debian.org] then?

        Jay (=
  • by alanw ( 1822 ) * <alan@wylie.me.uk> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:17AM (#8416201) Homepage
    Many options are selected at compile time, rather than in configuration files, for instance processor selection. My php configuration includes "--with-mcrypt --with-gd --with-jpeg-dir --with-png-dir --with-freetype-dir". The number of different downloads for any pre-compiled distribution will be enormous.

    Rock Linux [rocklinux.org] isn't a Linux distribution: it's a distribution build kit, that allows you to build your own tailored distribution from sources, with your choice of configuration options.

    Even if there aren't currently the options that you want, the simple text-mode configuration files allow you easily to add your own.
    • by HulkProtector1 ( 728239 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:28AM (#8416249)
      His idea sounds very close to Morphix [morphix.org]. It allows easy building of customized live-cd distributions. It supplies its own installer too.
    • Correct me if I'm wrong here, but from the Rock Linux manual, it looks like installs work pretty much like they do for command line installs with ANY source based distribution, just that the installer script includes a small extra section to copy all the stuff to an ISO.

      That's maybe four lines of code.

      It's worth a bit more to go ahead and use an established distribution - source or otherwise, since you'd be building generic binaries anyway if you want to use it on CD - for that purpose.

      If you're really k
      • by alanw ( 1822 ) * <alan@wylie.me.uk> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @12:41PM (#8417121) Homepage

        Correct me if I'm wrong here, but from the Rock Linux manual, it looks like installs work pretty much like they do for command line installs with ANY source based distribution, just that the installer script includes a small extra section to copy all the stuff to an ISO.

        The power of Rock isn't in installing a single package, built from source, on your system, though it can do that.

        Rock allows you to create your own bootable CD from which you can install your own custom Linux distribution.

        1) download Rock (mostly shell scripts and configuration files, and a *very* small number of patches to packages)

        2) unpack it

        3) select your configuration options - choose from a range of targets - minimal LAMP server, desktop, or create your own list of packages - select your target processor, and any configuration options you want - e.g. build postfix with mysql support.

        Some of these are available as tick boxes in the curses based configuration tool, if not you can easily edit a text file.

        4) download the sources you need

        5) start build

        6) drink beer, sleep, whatever

        7) create ISO image, burn to CD

        8) boot from CD, use curses based installation and configuration tool to install new system.

        When you building a large number of boxes to be shipped to customers, and over which you want total control, Rock is superb. I can strip my distribution down to the bare minumum, and easily apply only those security patches or upgrades to new releases of packages I have tested.
  • No no you fool (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:18AM (#8416205)
    One size fits all is good. That is why everyone knows how to use a PC (and Windows) and why Unix is a support nightmare. The last thing we need is another Unix/Linux dialect.
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:21AM (#8416470)
      One size fits all,
      Be you short or be you tall,
      Be you wide or be you slim,
      Be you her or be you him.
      Now please, don't start to scream and yell,
      We never said it would fit well.

      There are times and places where one size fits all may be vaguely suitable for a good many, even the majority of, people. If one happens to be exactly that "one size" you might even wonder why anyone would ever want something else.

      There are also, however, times when one size fit's all, no matter how close the fit, is simply intolerable and a wee bit of tailoring is in order.

      If you don't feel the need of another Linux "dialect" than ignore it. Those that do may find the new "dialect" finally makes life bearable.

      KFG
  • Sounds like SuSE (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:21AM (#8416218)
    They started by making products designed for single roles, with a database server, a groupware and messaging server, and a fileserver.

    Modularity is great for large organizations, but at this point it would be foolish to fall into MS's line of thinking, that you need a separate server for each role in the industry. It would behoove us to try harder to break down the barriers between servers so that they can act in a cohesive, stable and seamless fashion, whether there is one server, five servers, or five thousand servers.

    And that's why we need a stronger LVM!
  • by Yorrike ( 322502 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:21AM (#8416219) Journal
    To allow optimization for depth, a new kind of distribution is needed--a componentized distribution from which users may build platforms from the bottom up, including only the features and technologies their products require.

    I don't know about the distro he's using, but my build of Gentoo [gentoo.org] only has the packages I want (plus their requirements).

    The bottom up model is being used by distros other than Gentoo, too. He's not breaking any new ground or creating any unique ideas IMHO.

  • by glawrie ( 663927 ) * on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:21AM (#8416220) Homepage
    Sounds like a great idea - but surely that's what you get from the gentoo linux system - you custom build a verison of linux that not only has 'just the components you need' in it, but also is (or can be) specifically tailored to suit your hardware and peripherals etc. I can see an avenue for component based distributions taking off, however. The two challenges with Gentoo are 1) the need to compile everything from scratch (which can take ages) and 2) the almost vertical learning curve required to get the resulting linux system to work (work out of the box? - not really!). Presumably the component model might allow both of these to be addressed...
    • The two challenges with Gentoo are 1) the need to compile everything from scratch (which can take ages)

      You don't need to compile everything out of the box on Gentoo - you have a choice between stage 1 (all from source), 2 (base system) or 3 (all binary) tarballs. I just stuck a stage 3 install on my wife's machine (all binary packages) and it took only slightly longer than a RedHat 9 install on another machine the day before.

      and 2) the almost vertical learning curve required to get the resulting linux
  • by AlexanderYoshi ( 750291 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:22AM (#8416224)
    Interesting. I'd always felt that this is how Linux really works the best., rather than being a giant 1 gig hunk of software, I can pick and choose the parts I want to play with. This leads to lots of mistakes early on, but over time, you learn how to optimize and reevaluate what you need and where, with the end result of understanding your system that much better. So my question is: Was this a suggestion for Linux in general, or a suggestion for a new type of business model?
    • by baryon351 ( 626717 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:59AM (#8416373)
      I think this is the way security works best.

      Let's imagine we have a monoculture of Linux boxes, all quite similar, all based on a huge install 'dump' of one massive base system.

      There's a lot there for an intruder to play with. Makes it easier even, for automated intruders (worms etc) too.

      Now, imagine there's Linux as a majority, but split into so many different specific tasks that there's few similarities between them, except for a micro base system; where even the kernels differ in their capabilities due to function. it CAN'T ever become a monoculture even if the same 'distro' group were preparing these systems, unless suddenly the entire world was running webservers, or were running desktop office machines, or running desktop home machines, or running as cluster nodes etc.

      Of course, the extra fiddling around of several well-defined task based versions of linux is a pain in the butt then, but hey - just a thought.
  • Good...but.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Cheo ( 730562 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:28AM (#8416247)
    In order for Linux to appeal to the masses, these "choices" must be available in an easily installable "package". It would be great to install only those options you need, want or require. And, I think most important, is the time it takes to set up the system.
    • In order for Linux to appeal to the masses, these "choices" must no exist.

      Masses do not want choices. They want the Ipod mini. Four buttons and it works. The masses buy a dell with XP home edition preinstalled and think it is so cool. They want to never think about their computers. The distro for the masses is the one that can actually get a deal with dell/gateway/compaq/whatever and get preinstalled with everything preconfigured and a join AOL now icon on the desktop.
  • Morphix Plug (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bmsleight ( 710084 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:28AM (#8416250) Homepage
    This is just what Morphix [morphix.org] allows you to do. It basically takes away the hard work of re-mastering a Knoppix CD.

    Morphix is modular, and can be adapted with less effort

    The base, the Knoppix part contains the kernel, kernel modules, hardware detection, etc. This base is left untouched. You can either a change a mainmod or add lots of minimodules.

    The are four basic images [sourceforge.net] to start off with. So making you own LiveCD is much easier.

    It even possible to save you files, configuration and setting to the Morphix CD you using, ready for next boot up.

    Did I mention the GUI installer ...

    Brendan Mentioned before and here

    • Re:Morphix Plug (Score:3, Interesting)

      by mediovia ( 757376 )
      Another little known and used function in Morphix is the ability to choose which mainmod is loaded at boot time. So, if you have several on a CD or on the HD, say games, KDE and minimal Firefox, you can elect which to use each time you boot: 1), 2) or 3).
  • by Momo_CCCP ( 757200 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:28AM (#8416251)
    He says a basical iso is avaible and "More components and a component-aware, Anaconda-based installation mechanism will be added in the coming weeks".

    Heh, compiling everything for oneself through an intuitive gui sounds pretty cool to me !
    Gentoo now accessible to the unwashed masses (which I'm part of), Yay !
  • Security (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hhawk ( 26580 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:29AM (#8416253) Homepage Journal
    I think it would be good from a security stand point to be able to quickly build the most minimal system, but there is still probably a lot of stuff in the Kernel that isn't needed. Still it would be great to have a tool that was based on the reserve of package dependency and removed everything you didn't want/need.
  • by eagl ( 86459 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:30AM (#8416256) Journal
    Wouldn't it be neat if you could go to a website, enter in a list of all the hardware on your computer, enter in the applications or types of applications you want to use, and then download a customized installation CD with only what you want included? Then if you changed any hardware or wanted more software, you'd revisit the site, enter in the changes, and then download a patch including required modules, applications, and a script that installed/configured the changes?

    That would be cool.
    • That site had better have a monster cpu power and bandwith avaible... It would be slashdotted in a matter of milisecond...
    • Wouldn't it be neat if you could go to a website, enter in a list of all the hardware on your computer, enter in the applications or types of applications you want to use, and then download a customized installation CD with only what you want included? Then if you changed any hardware or wanted more software, you'd revisit the site, enter in the changes, and then download a patch including required modules, applications, and a script that installed/configured the changes?

      Yes, but it would be even neate

    • As another poster pointed out, that site would be /.ed in seconds. However, as a business model, I think you might be on to something. Charge something like ~$20/disk. Not to mention the telephone/email/update support you could sell with it. Just a thought.
  • ROCK linux... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by torpor ( 458 ) <ibisumNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:30AM (#8416257) Homepage Journal
    ... is, in my opinion, one of the more interesting Linux distro's around right now.

    Its not so much a distro, as a 'meta-build system', for building and packaging your own distro.

    To me, this is the best solution, and while these sorts of build-system efforts are still in their infancy, I can see a day when you just answer a few questions, press a button, and get a custom CD designed -exclusively- for the application you've defined.

    That's pretty nice. As a Linux user since the minix post, I'm excited about more and more of these sorts of 'smart build environments' becoming the 'distro construction set' de jour ...
  • My Idea (Score:4, Interesting)

    by MooKore 2004 ( 737557 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:30AM (#8416258) Homepage Journal
    Would be a program that would generate a Linux distribution based on your desires.

    It would be a wizard that would ask you questions about what you want. For example, do you want a server or a desktop distro, do you want KDE or Gnome, do you want office software, games, web browsers.

    After you answer all the Questions it would make you give it a Name, Such as MooKore Linux, and it would genreate an ISO filled with the RPMs for you for you to install.
  • by segment ( 695309 ) <sil AT politrix DOT org> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:31AM (#8416263) Homepage Journal

    But isn't/wasn't this what BeOS intended to do? On the one hand it would be nice, it would be compact as opposed to having 3! cd's full of stuff, yet at the same time, they'd better have a squadron full of developers who would change things on the fly considering the speed at which things change.
  • Hmm, sounds like (Score:3, Informative)

    by fw3 ( 523647 ) * on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:34AM (#8416278) Homepage Journal
    The (varying) approaches used by source distributions (Lunar [lunar-linux.org],Source Mage [sourcemage.org], orGentoo [gentoo.org]), with varying approaches, strengths and degrees of success?

    Diversity is certainly a strength of Linux.

  • by SmallFurryCreature ( 593017 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:35AM (#8416284) Journal
    While it may or may not be a good idea to have endless amounts of distros from a commercial perspective it is certainly fun and who knows maybe it will be just what is needed. Or not.

    Point is it doesn't matter. He has an itch, didn't see anyone willing to scratch so is doing it himself. Maybe it will satisfy others peoples itches as well but if it doesn't it doesn't matter. His itch is being scratched. A non-commercial distro with 1 user who is satisfied is 100% succesful.

    Better then all those whiners who want someone else to fix their problems.

    But isn't redhat and mandrake and suse modular anyway? Not like they force me to install apache or a window manager. Just the if I want say xmms I bloody well going to have to install X for reasons that should be obvious. You may want MS to stop bundling IE but then don't go complaining that Windows Light doesn't come with a browser installed.

    As for putting everything on the CD. Well yes I thought that was pretty nice. Since they want you to buy the thing it means that people with modems don't have to download several gig of extra data just to get a working desktop. KDE is about the only real offender insisting on installing games on every distro I tried.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:41AM (#8416309)

    Gentoo is compartamentalized, but not in anyway that other distros such as debian isn't.

    Both Debian and Gentoo are heavily optimizable, you choose the componates that you want etc etc.

    Bot have your advantages and disavantages.

    Debian's is that the developement cycles that forever to make sure that everything is working correctly, but you get a reliable computer that is usefull for hundreds of different applications.

    and Gentoo's big disadvatage is that it's worthless for anything other then home desktop, but you can play around with newest technology.

    (could imagine administrating a hundred gentoo boxes buy yourself and getting someone to actually think it's a good idea to pay you to run a OS on them that takes a average of two days to get installed?)

    And no compiling for speed is DEFINATELY NOT WORTH IT JUST FOR A PERFORMANCE ADVANTAGE in 95% of the apps you would use on a daily basis.

    But IMHO people are naturally moving towards comparmentalized OSes anyways in Linux. Weither or not they realise it.

    Think about, APT and other decent package managers have caught on in a big way. Fedora can use both Apt and or Yum.

    Using package managers it's easy to customize any install and the BIGGEST advantage is that it's simple to keep everything up to date and to install new programs.

    A BIG advantage over closed source stuff. (once you get it set up.)

    Now if most linux distros agree to stick to a common Filesystem Hierarchy system (http://www.pathname.com/fhs/) then you can use all sorts of packages together.

    I could use Fedora packages, apt packages, debian packages, gentoo build scripts and all sorts of stuff and pluss get support for closed sourced software easily in any distro of my choosing.

    If Debian doesn't have a new enough XFree86 build you can install it from Fedora and build the latest KDE 3.x beta from portage scripts from Gentoo.

    That's what we should aim for, and a common FHS is pretty close. People are beginning to learn the best way to do stuff and the directory systems are beginning to be more and more common to all Linux distros.

    In a few years I hope the consept of numbered linux distro releases will be gone and we will move to a stable/unstable model similar to Debian.

    • After my first stage 1 install of Gentoo I felt the same way. This is a lot of fun but and great for desktop but i can't administer 80 boxes like this. After using it for a few months I fell in love with how well it works and I have used RedHat, Suse, Debian, Slack and others.

      So I decided we would try it at work. We made a master build server, shared the portage directory through NFS, made a few scripts and standardized config files and now setup is only slightly longer than RedHat was. Our install documen
    • by Spacejock ( 727523 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:53AM (#8416600)
      I maintain 3 Gentoo servers (1 of them LTSP, the other two file/print/web) One of the servers has 4 gentoo desktop machines connected to it. I have a portage/distfiles NFS share, I use distcc and I find it really, really low maintenance. My desktops have kde 3.2, publishing stuff, OO, while the servers have Apache, Qmail, etc. Very different installs, all managed the same way. After 4-5 years of Redhat the /etc folder was still very mysterious to me. After 4-5 months of Gentoo everything began to make sense. I switched to Gentoo some time around Redhat 8.0 (can't remember exactly, but my machines were running 7.x when I swapped 'em). Never had a problem.
    • Amen. That, and the fact that Gentoo tends to install everything from a source package, even if I only want a small utility that comes from the big source package. Debian is still the distro I've used that could be contained in a sub-100MB partition and still work perfectly without trying to eat up more space. (try *that* with Gentoo. The portage tree alone eats up at least a few hundred MBs of space)

      For example, I had to install the whole ntp package -- server and client, to use the ntpdate client, wherea
  • by phoxix ( 161744 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:42AM (#8416311)
    There is mkcd [mandrakesoft.com], which allows you to create custom Mandrake CDs with the software and options you want.

    And mandrake has a customizable auto bootup/install via drakx (mdk's installer system).

    Add all of the above, and a little knowledge about SRPMS (if you want true customization), and it works rather well. Also Mandrake's public download edition is 100% FLOSS, so there are no issues about redistributing the software (unless *you* add some non-FLOSS stuff on your own, heh)

    Sunny Dubey
    • I was just about to say "Cool! I want to make my own distro!".. but then I noticed the total and complete lack of documentation and ran away with my tail between my legs.

      Is there a HOWTO that actually has some content? (A quick Google turns up nothing...)
  • modularized distros (Score:4, Informative)

    by andrewagill ( 700624 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:45AM (#8416320) Homepage
    I think PLD [pld-linux.org] (Or in English [pld.org.pl]) tries to be highly modularized:

    no restrictions for a set of packages that must be included in the distribution. The user can have access to every package already prepared for PLD. If something had been prepared in conjunction with other packages, it means somebody did need it, and maybe someone will need that package in the future

    Now, this is not to suggest that PLD does this well, or that it does this actually implements what Progeny is suggesting, but it's still a starting point.
  • by nmoog ( 701216 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:46AM (#8416325) Homepage Journal
    Although I dont think Ian raises any particularly unique arguments, the article is a susinct introduction to the elements that emphises Linux's strong points.

    The thing that aroused my interest in Linux was not its cost, but its ability to be used in projects that were not limited to traditional PC software.

    Imbedded linux will (as long as MS doesnt rethink its licensing) rule the non-pc computing world.

    It makes perfect sence. Who cares how your C64 watch works, as long as it does.

    It seems unlikely that "componentized Linux" is the answer because only imbedded linux realy needs to get down to the "Linux from scratch" kind of level - otherwise, you'll probably be looking for a higher level distro.
  • What does he mean? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BenjyD ( 316700 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:53AM (#8416351)
    Wow - he managed to write 600 words without really explaining what he wants to do.
    Is he just saying that distributions should go for niche markets by allowing greater customisation? So instead of installing everything of the 3 CDs you only install what you want? Kind of like every other distro?
    Or is it more than that? Some kind of pluggable component system akin to Debian's virtual package "provides" system? So you can have different packages that provide standard services (mail, desktop, web-serving etc.) through common interfaces to the other components.
  • by gilesjuk ( 604902 ) <giles.jones@nospaM.zen.co.uk> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @09:53AM (#8416353)
    People keep saying "should be done like Gentoo" or "Debian is like this".What Ian is trying to say is everyone needs to cooperate on this and build a framework which all distros can use.

    In my eyes one of the problems Linux has is libraries and their versions. you can't simply take an executable and guarantee it will run on another Linux installation (unless you statically link).
  • by Moderation abuser ( 184013 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:03AM (#8416386)
    God! Yes! That's it! Why didn't I think of it before? That's what Linux and Linux users need... Another distribution.

  • by no longer myself ( 741142 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:04AM (#8416388)
    So far I've seen a lot of posts where people are already saying Gentoo, Debian, LFS, etc...

    Almost all Linux distros are componentised. OK everyone let's hear it: "Linux is not Windows."

    We've got distros mainly because we aren't all kernal coders who know all the in's and out's of every single chipset. Quite frankly I don't know who even has the time (but apparently some of you do). We have generic groups of packages/aptget/emerge/etc. to allow for faster deployment. And that's another beautiful part to Linux: Choices!

    Yes, perhaps it's overwhelming at first, but you can build it from the ground up if that's what you really want or just pile it on thick and zesty!

    The author wants to promote Progeny and "Componentized Linux", and I think there's always room for Yet Another Distro (YAD), but to say the others are doomed to fail because they came on 3 CD's (Think Fidora) is misleading. Mandrake 9.1 came on 3 CD's but it certainly won't force you to install all of it. In fact, you can just select a kernal only option, and it won't even ask for the other two disks. Not only that, but you can hand select only the packages you want. How cool is that?

    So I guess what I'm trying to say is that most linux distros have options to allow their users to build it pretty much from the ground up. The reason for the different distros lies in what their vision of the ultimate system looks like when it's totally loaded down.

  • Big Whoop (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wasabii ( 693236 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:04AM (#8416390)
    Can somebody who actually READ THE ARTICLE tell me how much more moduler than apt-get install packageX it can be?

    Sounds to me like a front end "Install Web Server?" "Install Development TOols?" choices that proxy a few packages is all this is about.

    Aren't all Linux distros these days already got some sort of package managing that manages every file? Even the base Libc? How more moduler can you get???
  • Marketing Hype??? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by 3seas ( 184403 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:04AM (#8416391) Homepage Journal
    Isn't this really more along teh lines of marketing hype then it is general user useful?

    Come on now, we no longer have sub 50Mhz CPUs (but many times that and getting faster),all the expensive backup media we used to use has been replaced with CD/DVD writers (and that's only going to improve), general storage/access media (hard drives) are far more massive in storage space than the old 120Meg drives and and even far more inexpensive (the larger the drive the cheaper per Meg you pay)....ETC...

    And HEY, we can even use more ram bits for dates, avoiding things like Y2K... Or is not gigs of ram not enough?

    Is it really a value to have injected additional parts complexity to have to deal with?

    What is the trade off? You use up a little less drive space, maybe make a fraction better use of your CPU, use a little less ram space and backup media....in exchange for....

    Additional complexity to allow you to screw things up more often...

    Hell, just wait 6-18 months and get a new faster, larger storage, more ranm, etc... system.... The cost difference will be less than what you might spend in maintaining componentalized linux.

    Hell, I really like the Live CD concept, where it determines what hardware you have and auto-configures.....but all from a standard full package.

  • by Apreche ( 239272 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:27AM (#8416504) Homepage Journal
    The problem we have here is that linux is designed for linux users. Like myself, I prefer gentoo. It fits my person style and I just love emerge-ing all kinds of junk and making my own kernel.

    I would like to see a linux distribution the exact opposite. One that I could give to people fed up with windows. It should detect all the hardware like knoppix. Then it will bring up a simple GUI style disk formatting tool, like the mandrake installer. Then after I select which partitions it should just install, no more questions asked. When its done all the hardware should be working. One of every necessary software application should be installed. The gui will be simply laid out with big pretty buttons. One that says Web Browser, another for Word Processor, etc. Wine, lilo and other things will be configured perfectly and automatically without user input. There will also be another big button that says "install software". It will have a big nice easy to use app that sorts softwares by categories, shows screenshots and readable descriptions of different programs. With a single click these programs will be installed and new icons will be created. With another click these programs should also be automatically updated to the newer versions without breaking anything. And of course easy uninstallation is a must too.

    I see no reason why this isn't possible. Why hasn't anyone (that I know of) done it yet?
    • by pe1chl ( 90186 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:32AM (#8416518)
      SuSE Linux is mostly what you describe.

      But indeed this is what is required for a desktop Linux.
      No toolkit of modules, but a standard install that sets up a standard Linux installation that can be made user-friendly, can be well debugged, can be optimized w.r.t. parameter settings, etc.
    • Have you seen the Longhorn beta in action? It asks the user for their name and a cd key. Not much else. The end users are getting dumber and dumber as time goes by, and are willing to do less and less to set-up/maintain their computers. Asking them to partition their own boxxen is an excersize in futility. On all other points, however, I agree with you wholeheartedly. Way back in 1998 I proposed an idea to usenet about a Linux distro that came with an executable installer, so that you could run it from with
  • Dear god. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CAIMLAS ( 41445 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:41AM (#8416559)
    There are thousands of fanboys waking up (or getting ready for bed :P) across America right now that are reading this, and all of them are thinking, "Well, this or that distro already does it!" You've all missed the point.

    Has it occured to you that his writing isn't directed towards those of us that already use Linux? Could it be that the founder of Debian would possibly want to make a little money on his toils and ventures by selling his ideas to Suits and PHBs?

    No, that couldn't be. Could it?

    Yes. (And no, I'm not saying this is a bad thing.)

    Stop thinking the world revolves around you (us) and your (our) zealotrous love of your distro. (Particularly you gentoovian freaks with your distcc clusters! :P) Seriously, though. Linux is linux; let's not make a fuss. It's just nice to see a movement away from the techniques of the past - RPM, in particular, which doesn't make custom rollouts terribly easy.
    • But then why? (Score:3, Interesting)

      When he talks about a bottom-up distro, there's really nothing more bottom-up than gentoo. Gentoo basically downloads the source off of the developer's web site, cvs, whatever, and compiles it.

      If that's too "bottom-up," well, then write a tool that generates binary packages off of the gentoo portage tree, and then a pretty installer that uses them. You could run an apt-style repository on a gentoo box, and then have this new distro just combine the binary packages from gentoo. However, you have to mak
  • by Digital Dharma ( 673185 ) <max@zenCOFFEEplatypus.com minus caffeine> on Saturday February 28, 2004 @10:47AM (#8416576)
    That Linux distros are taking the shotgun marketing approach, unlike Microsoft who has painstakingly researched what end users want in an Operating System and for the most part, has delivered exactly what the majority of PC users want. Granted, Linux is destined for the server market for the time being so a distro packed with services is appropriate for the most part, but if Linux ever wants any substantial share of the desktop commodity its going to need to do some serious work on several fronts like UI, ease of use, intuitiveness, size and speed.
  • by Micah ( 278 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:08AM (#8416651) Homepage Journal
    My organization is standardizing on it for critical servers, and I think it does a lot of what this article talks about. On install, it asks which services you want to run ... and it ONLY installs what is absolutely necessary to run them. It's pretty lightweight, but gets the job done. And it's also hardened like you wouldn't believe, with most services preconfigured to run in a chroot() jail, something the others should have been doing from the start IMHO.

    Website [openna.com]
  • by FullCircle ( 643323 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:37AM (#8416776)
    There are several reasons that distros are built top down and you would think that Ian would know.

    Linux packaging isn't bad at all, it is actually the lack of any standards that hurts the natural evolution of a modular Linux.

    GCC/glibc are moving targets. You can't depend on linking between two versions of GCC or glibc, so all the apps we package today will be of questionable use tomorrow.

    All other libraries suffer from the same problem. There is no guarantee that you can upgrade or install anything on the system without breaking random other applications.

    There are far too many compile time options in applications. Instead of checking for dependencies at runtime and acting on that information, the applications have to be built either for a minimal system configuration, possibly dropping features, or built with every possible dependency, making installation require far too many dependencies.

    Until these issues are cleared up, there is no other way to create a distribution than top down so that all dependencies are known and accounted for or built from source.

  • by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Saturday February 28, 2004 @11:53AM (#8416859) Homepage Journal
    It's monolithic nature has been one of my major gripes with Linux. This is most apparent in the kernel itself; the sources are distributed in one big (and I mean BIG) tarball containing sources for nigh on every architecture and every device supported. Then when you configure the beast, many options cannot be built as modules, so it's either bloat your kernel or miss out.

    The same is true for many distributions. Although a lot of software comes in packages, installations tend to range from quite heavy to almost ridiculous (about 1 GB). And the kernel, again, tends to be a fairly monolithic one, supporting a few filesystems that are unlikely to all be used, etc.

    I have to say that Debian tends to be quite OK. The base install is, what? 100 MB? And to that you can just add what you need, dependencies solved for you and all. The kernels you apt-get are usually modular (although the generated ramdisks haven't always worked for me, and cannot be edited due to their being in cramfs). Still, it's annoying that when I want a feature added to my kernel, I have to reconfigure, recompile (I don't' keep the object filesaround - they take too much space), reinstall, and reboot. Sure, I could get a faster computer and a bigger hard drive, but even then, having plenty of something is no excuse to waste it.

"Hello again, Peabody here..." -- Mister Peabody

Working...