



Fedora Core 4 Reviewer Finds It Bloated 110
Provataki writes "TuxTops reviews Fedora Core 4 and finds a number of problems with the popular distribution: high memory usage, usability problems, bugs, bloat. They awarded FC4 with 6 out of 10 at the end as despite its quirks they also find it a 'powerful distro' and easy to use."
FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ironically, the one disappointing feature of FC4 is that the DVD distro has actually been *cut down* compared to FC3's DVD - many packages (some of which are wildly popular like abiword, xmms or tuxracer) have been surprisingly moved off of even the DVD and shunted into Fedora Extras as an optional download instead. I think this was a knee-jerk response to people complaining that FC3 took up 4 CD's - fair enough, but why not keep the "bloat" for the FC4 DVD then and leave those packages off the CD version?
BTW, it always pays to wait a few weeks for initial bugs to be ironed out in Fedora releases - FC4's Firefox couldn't use the Sun Java plug-in with SELinux enabled until they released a policy patch to sort this out for instance. Mind you, I think the Anaconda installer should optionally allow you to download updates before it completes its installation - SuSE's YaST does, so why not not Anaconda?
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:1)
I'm, fortunately, on a highspeed line, so I prefer to install over the internet. With RPM based distros, you end up installing from a static set of packages... even if they're 3 months and 3 security patches out of date. Only then can you install updates.
What's the point of downloading and installing 500 megs of packages if immediately afterwards you have to download and install 300
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:2)
I go google a bit, because I want to cut down on the services I start, (I was not on net at time, and didn't want ftp or anything, since it was a fairly old laptop) I wanted nearly all things off.
smtp, no, httpd, no, scp, no, ssh, no, ftp, no you get the point.
So I go into #linux, and I get lots of cursory glances. "What distribution you use" etc etc, immediately I feel downhearted. A few proffer some scripts they use.. . I remember looking at some files, but the human readability w
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:2)
Anyway... there's a GUI program that gives you access to starting/stopping the services and loading on startup, on different run level. Search for it in the System menu, I think it's called Services.
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:1)
I'll do you one better: the original poster should RFTM on chkconfig, which can configure services from the command line on Red Hat Linux and its variants.
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:1)
As for the power saving features, I don't see w
Re:FC4 still runs too many services... (Score:2)
At any rate, what I want to point out is how you seemlingly carelessly throw around the concept of "Granted they may add a second to the boot process, but big deal.". I'd like to chime in with just how bad this is.
People (And os designers:)) who think like this tend to add 12 or 15 of these services on board. All o
Not a Fan (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not a Fan (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not a Fan (Score:1)
And way to beat a dead horse with the mp3 thing. Until the patents or whatever go away, it's not going to happen. Get over it already.
Give Arch a try (Score:2)
Re:Give Arch a try (Score:1)
Re:Give Arch a try (Score:1)
Re:Offtopic: (Score:1)
As soon as i clicked "Submit" I was regretting it; why would anyone care that 1 user out of the several million Fedora users has issues with the desktop crashing?
OTOH, I haven't seen many reviews of fedora, so it could have been useful to somebody wondering whether to upgrade to fc4 (or indeed gnome 2.10 or gcc4).
Bloat what bloat? (Score:2)
And as for usability, go and fix it. Set up a foundation and collect money to run it and write software to make it usable.
Complaining aobut software is what you do to closed source vendors. You have the ability to change this stuff, so dont complain about it, hire someone to fix it, and while you are at it, appreciate the free work that people put into this frankly, astoundingly robust stuff.
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:1)
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:2)
I just installed FC4 yesterday (from DVD by the way, whcih didnt work for hte author of TFA). FC4 worked just as expected, and installed painlessly. It is not bloated at all in fact, lots needs to be added to it to make it more useful, like, the automatic recognition and mounting
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:1)
It installed painlessly for you. The author describes his personal experience in dealing with FC4 and how he viewed it. And why should critiques only be made privately? By opening up problems to the public [not just emailing those on the devel list], perhaps someone who is
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:1)
yeah, i know, stay with the other distros then... but if i was reviewing fc4 like in the article i'd be calling it bloated too. i'd have that feeling of "i did an 'everything' install and it still d
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:2, Insightful)
In extreme cases of meritocracy:
- You are not allowed to wish for anything, unless you do it yourself
- You are not allowed to report a bug, unless you do it yourself
- You are not allowed to express your opinion about something, unless you FIX IT YOURSELF. (yelling intended)
I would much rather have a world where people are allowed to express themselves about thing
Re:Bloat what bloat? (Score:2)
Well, I agree that you can't demand that developers fix something or add features when they don't want to do it but there is nothing in the fact that someone decides to work on OSS project for free that prohibits others from saying to ot
Needs a comparator (Score:2)
The article begs the question.
Re:Needs a comparator (Score:1)
I'll be trying gentoo for my next linux box... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be trying gentoo for my next linux box... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be trying gentoo for my next linux box... (Score:1)
Try this:
[user@debianbox ~]$ su -
Password:
[root@debianbox ~]$ rm -rf
See what happens. The lesson is, don't do anything as root unless you absolutely have to.
Re:I'll be trying gentoo for my next linux box... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be trying gentoo for my next linux box... (Score:1)
Amen (Score:2)
It was bad... I wiped FC4 and installed Debian.
c.
Re:Amen (Score:1)
Re:Amen (Score:2)
Re:Amen (Score:2)
I use "apropos" and "locate" pretty much daily. And it's not like either of those processes _should_ be any slower going from FC3 to FC4.
c,
Re:Amen (Score:2)
I guess it's more of a problem for people who turn their systems off at night. The job runs shortly after the next boot, which is often the worst possible time. I do use "locate" on occasion, but on a file server which has plenty of nightly idle time to spare.
Re:Amen (Score:2)
Rather than wipe it all out, you could try moving the daily stuff over to weekly if you're not adding new stuff to your system every day (most of us do not).
Also, most people can probably get away with disabling a lot of daemons/services. Disable them 1 at a time at all runlevels and run your favorite software. Not affected? Disable the next one...
Still, all of that stuff put together is actually just a tiny drop in the bucket (to the point of being a red herring) compared with some of the gfx relate
Re:Amen (Score:2)
If you mostly care about desktop performance, I strongly recommend trying Debian 3.1. I can't even decribe the difference. Everything feels faster (and I'm not just comparing with FC4). Heck, I think my typing speed might have increased...
c.
Re:Amen (Score:1)
Re:Amen (Score:2)
_Everything_ that I was doing in FC3 prior to upgrading to FC4 is at least twice as slow. In some cases, five times as slow. You name it. Booting, starting an X session, compiling. Video playback became effectively impossible.
Disabling selinux didn't have any noticeable effect. That was the first thing I tried. Turning off mDNSrepeater (?) for some reason
Re:Amen (Score:2)
Re:Amen (Score:2)
What I don't know is why it's running. I don't use zeroconf. I don't need zeroconf. I don't really _want_ zeroconf. I sure didn't tell my system to run any of this stuff (and I'm almost positive I told it _not_ to in FC3). I certainly don't want it running by default. I don't even want it _installed_, but I gave up long ago on expecting sane dependency management in a Red Hat distro.
c.
FC4 was released too early (Score:5, Interesting)
Note: "in the near future". Just like when Redhat pushed the envelope by adopting GCC3 and ELF at an early stage,in comparison to Redhat's x.2 and x.3 releases, the x.0 and x.1 result has been slightly flaky at the edges.
I think that Fedora Core 4 was released two months too early. Another couple of months in rawhide development would have ironed out a few more of the kinks.
Re:FC4 was released too early? Wait for FC5 (Score:2)
If you really feel that way, then simply wait for FC5.
Re:FC4 was released too early? Wait for FC5 (Score:2)
How the hell did redhat become as unstable as windows nowadays. Dare I say "enterpri$e" edition.
Re:FC4 was released too early (Score:3, Insightful)
A Fedora Core release +6 months of patches is a really nice system you can run for a year. By that time there's another FC+6 months release available.
A new FC release is fun to have as a play/development system but noone should expect to depend on it.
Can't we do better? (Score:1)
Re:Can't we do better? (Score:4, Insightful)
It got a 6 out of 10 from one reviewer who wasn't even able to get a DVD working... I mean, I know nothing about that guy, but the simple fact that he couldn't get a DVD working (while I installed FC4 from DVD on 3 different computers, with 3 completely different settings; and I'm also quite sure thousands of other people installed from DVD without any problem), doesn't give him a whole lot of credibility to me.
What he encountered is not a problem with the distribution, it's an anecdote.
Re:Can't we do better? (Score:1)
-Install using a NORMAL, MANUAL partition scheme crashed the graphical installer. I had to use the text-mode installer.
-After install finished, grub was set up to pass the wrong command-line options, so booting required intervention.
-yum --update (or equiv, I don't have a FC box handy) overwrote some GPG signature file. This broke yum f
Re:Can't we do better? (Score:1)
Because, at it has been said from the very Fedora's constitution day, FEDORA IS THE TESTBED FOR RED HAT. So Fedora's users are either:
1/ Red Hat enthusiasts that want their hands dirty to help build their distribution of choice, and know in advance what will it bring to them
2/ Ignorants abused by Red Hat's management in their role of beta-testers.
For Red Hat policies both are equally useful. 1/ will help them to make a trustworthy product that will fill up th
Fedora Core is for productivity (Score:5, Interesting)
Fedora Core strikes me as a good balance between Free and current. Sure there is no MP3 playback, but that is because Red Hat long ago decided to keep it's distributions free of any software using licenses that were not Free Software [fsf.org]. There are plenty of other media formats that are as good or even better. And there are plenty of places that provide a way to add MP3 support, it's just that the distro has decided to keep the base 100% free. (Which is fine with me, I'd prefer that than starting to rely on some software that gets yanked in a year because it's copyright holders decided to start charging an arm and a leg for it.)
Fedora is also up to date. Here again, the basement dwellers among us can point to XYZ distribution that has bleeding-edge package ABC. But the FC packages alwyas seem to work within the distro. From time to time I'll venture out into one of the alternate repositories or closed-source drivers and I always regret it. The system gets unstable or something else stops working.
Which brings me to my main point, Fedore Core is proving to be a fine distribution for my productivity. I have long lost interest in tweaking and exploring the system deep into the night, now I just need one that I can use for email and web browsing, authoring various documents, develop software, draw, do genealogy, personal finances, etc. I'm not saying FC is perfect, nothing is. But it's usefulness is equal and better than my Windows XP station at work. Every release gets better, and while I want to see continuing advancements in my desktop environment, I also need one that is useful to me now.
Balance is rarely appreciated (I like Honda, too) but it's a sign of both skill and maturity. Keep it up team.
Re:Fedora Core is for productivity (Score:1)
More reviews (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.osjournal.com/content/85/Reviews/A_loo
http://star-techcentral.com/tech/story.asp?file=/
These reviews aren't quite so negative as the review posted on
Re:More reviews (Score:1)
Out of the box Fedora Core 4 will work almost perfectly on every system--no tweaking or command line editing necessary, just pop in the DVD and go. Best of all, Fedora Core 4 is completely free and open source.
Which is a completely different picture that what the original review states.
I haven't used RH / FC since Quake 3 (Score:2)
Seriously, a nice, compartmentalised, light weight, organised linux will come when some people accept some change.
I would like to see etc bin sbin lib blah foo moo schmoo gone, and have an easier to understand, less distributed file system. Fixing the ability to remove and add components of the 'OS' i.e. key apps and user apps, will help cut bloat, and allow people to choose more software for trial basis, and cut it out again.
Every time I say this I get linux u
Re:Don't install it on a laptop (Score:1)
What is the Red Hat distro of choice? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd like to go back to a Red Hat variant, but am confused by the various clone options -- Fedora, CentOS, White Box, etc. Can anyone sugggest why one of those might be preferable to the others? (Hint: one thing I've learned from Gentoo is that the packaging system is only as good as the repository behind it.)
Re:What is the Red Hat distro of choice? (Score:2)
Fedora is a community based spin off of Redhat, used as a testing ground for new stuff such as SE Linux, Xen etc.
For a desktop I would use Fedora, personally I've found it is a nice balance between the latest goodies and stability.
For a server, I would use CentOS, of the Redhat enterprise clones it seems the best supported.
Re:What is the Red Hat distro of choice? (Score:2)
Comes on a single KNOPPIX-like bootable CD. Try it out live, only install if it works.
Re:What is the Red Hat distro of choice? (Score:2)
It never ceases to amaze me how many compatible but not compatible distributions of Linux are out there. It seems these things fork for the most basic political squabbles, even though the amount of effort required to maintain a new distribution is _immense_.
The operating system fashion show is getting really old. IMO, that's why many people are going back to Mac OS and Solaris after dancing with Linux for a while.
Bloat? Why yes. (Score:2)
Re:Bloat? Why yes. (Score:1)
On the other hand that's not really reducing the Bloat, just moving it to somewhere that may be faster for you...
Re:Bloat? Why yes. (Score:2)
Re:Bloat? Why yes. (Score:2)
Part of the problem... (Score:2)
As a result, what distro writers tend to do is compile one version of the binary with everything they think will be used linked in. This can be a serious health hazard - well, sanity hazard anyway - as it means you'll end up with a lot of stuff you won't use but can't get rid of.
Another option is to have many different versions of the same application or library, wit
Re:Part of the problem... (Score:2)
FC4 is pretty good (Score:2, Informative)
Sure it has some kinks, but I accept that since Fedora tends to push the envelope. It's really not 'Linux for Mom' like Ubuntu. Fedora requires some heavy lifting and some RTFM-ism. I've always liked Gnome and 2.10 with Clearlooks is just gorgeous. FC4 boots faster and does a good job of detecting hardware. A week or two ago I swapped my motherboard and processor and it booted up with everything working -- despite my changing 90% of the chipset includi
memory bloat measuring technique? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure about the memory-bloat measuring technique he's using. I just installed FC4 on a 128mb machine, and after boot and gnome login, only 48K of swap is in use - that's nothing! According to his supposition I should be swapping like a banshee already. I think his RAM-measuring technique is not accurate.
Re:memory bloat measuring technique? (Score:2)
Yes, banshees are notorious for thier inadequate memory management techniques
origins of "swapping like a banshee" (Score:2)
And the video card in that computer is
Re:origins of "swapping like a banshee" (Score:2)
To say I grew up in the age of quiet drives is something of an exaggeration, though -- unless you consider the desk-shaking capabilities of my first hard drive (20 MB in an old Zenith box) "quiet".
No Surprise Here (Score:3, Interesting)
As much as I tried to clean and lean the system it still felt slow. A previous comment about services running that aren't required holds very true, as a knowledgeable amateur I was able to discern which services were stoppable but if this is really the Year Linux Takes The Desktop(tm) then things have to be much more beginner oriented. Even then it wasn't as spritely as an OS designed for a 386, the latest and greatest super computer and everything in between should be. I blamed Gnome at the time, but honestly even running CLI only it wasn't satisfying.
Of course I now have a new laptop running Ubuntu and the world is good. I feel bad for all those years spent avoiding anything related to Debian. If anyone wants to get a friend/relative/particularly attractive stranger interested in Linux, give them an Ubuntu CD, a quick 5 minute lesson on backing up and partitioning and they are good to go!
Re:No Surprise Here (Score:1)
How do you pull off teaching someone how to backup their stuff in only 5 minutes?
Re:No Surprise Here (Score:1)
And to address the forthcoming, "and how do you explain partitioning in 5 minutes?" question;
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=windows+l inux+dual+boot+partitioning [google.com]
Of course this might be better handled by giving a 5 minute lesson on how to use Google, but that's a whole different thread.
High memory usage?? (Score:1)
Re:High memory usage?? (Score:1)
Jabber server on FC4 (Score:2)
Also, if anyone wants to set up Jabberd to log to PostgreSQL, I've put some notes on that here [infoether.com]. It includes notes on using Ruby's ActiveRecord with that setup too, good times...
Without a GUI (Score:2, Insightful)
I just installed FC4 on a file server so I will see how that goes, but I expect it will be solid as the others.
And if you don't like the packages that come with FC4, roll your own, I don't install the default httpd, I always get the source and compile my own.
I like the FCx distros, 'cause it is easy to get a solid base install of a very current kernel. When I am t
Wierd.... (Score:2)
I run FC2 (my work notebook) and FC3 (my work desktop) and I've run FC1 and I honestly believe that FC4 is, by far, the slickest and least bloated one of them.
My memory usage is minimal, right now it's at 25% (after 30 minutes farking and slashdoting, out of 512Mb of RAM). Disk thrashing is very low - for some strange reason despite having installed it o
YMMV (Score:2)
The article just focused on a few features the author was interested in. It was not a comprehensive evaluation of the product. I just upgraded to Fedora Core 4 a couple weekends ago and it has been great for what I needed it to do. For some people Fedora will fit their needs and for others it won't.
If you're going to evaulate the product, evaluate ALL (or at least a majority) of it. Don't just give a product a bad rating because it didn't do/have specifically what you wanted or because you don't under
Wrong interpretation. (Score:3, Insightful)
What was wrong? The interpretation. I've bet that author stated full memory usage but hasn't bother to check how much of this "used" RAM was taken by system buffers and how much by real applications? I use Fedora day to day on my laptop - I've tweaked it a bit (to be honest). Disabled services, use WindowMaker instead of bloated GNOME/KDE, Opera instead of Mozilla etc. After boot -- X11 with WindowMaker, few services (postgres, httpd for developement) -- the system (not buffers) takes ~50MB RAM, but of course free(1) shows ~240MB (with system buffers).
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
I think your inerpretation of what he is saying is wrong. he default install is GNOME/KDE. Not everyone will 'tweak' their system. Out of the box, you are saying that it is bloated too.
I've heard the argument that all your RAM should be in use for 'good memory' management. I can write a program with lots of memory leaks that will use your RAM. Is that good memory management? I think the issue is that th
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
> saying is wrong. he default install is
> GNOME/KDE. Not everyone will 'tweak'
> their system. Out of the box, you are
> saying that it is bloated too.
Yeah I know - that is why I've stated that I am honest that I've tweaked my system.
Fedora is compromise between functionality and speed. Of course default install will be slower and bloated since it tries to do all at once - to come against all user needs (f.e. printing enabled by default, file sharing
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
No it was working in FC2 and now it is not. That's not unsupported, that's broken.
What do I mean, my console is not working? If I am in X and I hit Ctl-Alt-F1, I used to be able to log into a console, and do stuff. I can't do that any more. I hit Ctl-Alt-F1 and get a console login prompt, and I enter username and password and it resets the console. If I pass to the command line init 3, when I g
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
> That's not unsupported, that's broken.
I've missed that. Of course you are right... But for me everything works...
> What do I mean, my console is not
> working? If I am in X and I hit Ctl-Alt-F1, I
> used to be able to log into a console, and
> do stuff. I can't do that any more. I hit Ctl-
> Alt-F1 and get a console login prompt, and
> I enter username and password and it
> resets the console. If I pass to the
> command line init 3, whe
Re:Wrong interpretation. (Score:2)
I did an upgrade. I should have looked in the logs, but was really frustraed and just upgraded this weekend. After looking in the logs I googled that message and found it is a bug, but their is a work around.
https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-list/2005- J une/msg03525.html [redhat.com]
This guy is clueless (Score:4, Insightful)
the installation screen won't initialized and load without beforehand adding the "nofb" or the "vga=971" command in the kernel configuration line.
On certain hardware you need to pass these options, no matter what distro you're installing. Are you complaining about having to type a few extra characters on his first boot?
FC4 booted much faster than any previous version, still though, not as fast as other distros like Arch and Gentoo.
Gentoo is faster from other distros, but I don't see any difference on boot times. And anyway, if you're gonna complain about nofb, I can sure tell you that Gentoo is not for you. The installation is nothing but easy.
But I wasn't as happy with the memory consumption. About 230 MBs of RAM were used on a clean, default load (according to "free", just after the OS loaded -- no major cashing has occured yet).
Linux uses memory more aggressively than windows, and tries to avoid swapping, while windows does the opposite. This is the first complain I hear from windows users using linux. You need to understand that you *want* your memory to be used. The more memory is used, the faster your programs will run. And btw here's my free on Gentoo:
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 513828 428216 85612 0 50048 176256
-/+ buffers/cache: 201912 311916
Swap: 506008 4024 501984
As you can see, most of my RAM is used. This does not slow the system down. It has the opposite effect. Anyway, I'm glad no major 'cashing' occured on your system.
I find this requirement huge, it means that computers with 256 MBs of RAM will swap heavily after only a few minutes of using the system (e.g. after opening Firefox and Evolution or OOo alone).
No you got it totally wrong. See above.
I had to go and unload some services before I could see the RAM usage go down
Most of these 'services' you stopped are init scripts that run once at boot and do nothing afterwards. So your RAM usage going down is most likely the placebo effect. Get a clue.
And btw, why can't I kill completely 'eggcups' (it keeps respawning) which takes so much RAM, and I don't even have a printer in my house?
Are you serious? you cann't stop a service? And you're writing a review on a linux distro???
Also of importance is the fact that Fedora does not automount FAT/NTFS partitions and so new users will find this a bit dissapointing.
Which free distro automounts a FAT/NTFS partition? AFAIK, none. But anyway all you got to do is add 1 (ONE) line to your fstab.
Having to use "mount" in the command line or have to mess up with your
Is this the same guy who was talking about arch and gentoo?
Why did this horrible review made it on
Seems to me... (Score:1)
Windows is said to be bloated, yet 99% of the examples revolve around the simple mistake of using the default installation and not picking and choosing only what you need. Do this and Windows XP sings along nicely. Most of the so-called bloat is eliminated. I personally enjoy stress-testing my systems and tend to install every last thing I can and see what happens.
Same thing applies to Fedora Core. I
Buy More Memory (Score:2)
Memory is cheap now. Some of it is slow, but it is cheap, and at least it's faster than swapping. Do yourself a favour if your system is swapping and go out and buy yourself half a gig of cheap memory. It'll cost about $100, yes, but think of the time you'll save.
I'm running FC3 at the moment with, 1GB of memory(the decadance). I don't think t
bloated (Score:3, Insightful)
And no, i'm not talking about memory usage - 4 CDs worth, and it didn't even detect/include apps for power management on my laptop.
Wtf? This is 2005...
Ubuntu detected everything, gave me fully working power management, etc as standard.
The package manager is brain-damaged... rather than installing from CDs in sequence, adding/removing packages after install results in swapping CDs several times (ie, CD1 is requested 2-3 times or more), rather than loading everything it needs from CD1 first, etc.
It looks pretty, but as far as use goes, its crap, imho.
smash (Linux user since 1996)
Does it handle USB 802.11b keys? (Score:1)
A distro which, out-of-the-box, no-foolin', detected-and-it-works, can find and use a USB wireless device, so I can get one of these: http://www.keybola.com/ [keybola.com]
Anyone hit such a one yet?
GPL software only (Score:1)