Mandriva Linux 2008 RC 1 Released 182
AdamWill writes "The first release candidate of Mandriva Linux 2008, codenamed Galilee, is now available. The release notes are also available via the wiki. A guide to major new features (some of which are not yet implemented in this release candidate), and the detailed technical specifications are also available. This release candidate is available as a three CD or one DVD Free edition (containing no non-free software or drivers) for the x86-32 and x86-64 architectures, with a traditional installer, and as a mini-CD edition for both x86-32 and x86-64 architectures. A One combined live / install CD edition will be released in the near future (problems with unionfs prevented the One edition from being release at the same time as the other editions)."
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If I could be bothered I'd do a comparison of distros, but Ubuntu was largely painless, does everything I want, and is ludicrously popular meaning if there's a program I want and I don't want to cock about with source releases, I
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I'll second that, and point out it's one of the reasons I choose Linux over single-origin operating systems.
Like Steel Shepherd, I've tried several distros (Ubuntu, Fedora, etc) and was impressed with aspects of them, but eventually settled on the ones which work for me now (SLED10 for business and Sabayon for fun). Switching between the distro
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I started out with Slackware, moved on to Redhat, then Mandrake came along and made Redhat more usable.
I dipped out of Linux for a while, came back in, and moved right into Debian because I liked their package management better.
Then used Mepis for a while before settling on Ubuntu.
What seems to happen is that a new distro will come along and their user community will be galvanized into keeping the distro up to date with the features that the desktop user
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I don't understand the dislike for "software as a service". It makes perfect sense from a management POV and it seems to me like an obvious evolution from fat client to thin client to externally managed thin client. Even for home users: remote administration for, say, 15$/year with upgrades, patches and the likes would be a useful tool. Turn on the PC, suddenly Vista is running and everything just works(tm) (yeah, far-fecthed, I know).
Of course this does not mean that it's a perfect solution f
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On a DRM scale, SAS is even worse than Palladium.
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This problem has been solved since the release of 2007.0, which introduced new media on the mirrors, and at the same time changes to the build system allowing maintainers to easily submit testing and backport packages from cooker.
At present, selection of packages to backport is mainly done by the maintainer, but requests are often taken on IRC and mailing lists.
IMHO, there is almost no advantage Ubuntu has
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Really? That surprises me. I can't remember the last time I wanted to install something and it wasn't in the PCLOS repos. And as far as I know, PCLOS was actually born out of a project by Texstar (the main PCLOS developer) to provide non-official repositories with additional packages for the Mandriva community...
Maybe my information is outdated...? But whatever the case is, PCLOS still provides
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I work in web development, so I do have to deal with servers once in a while, but I generally write code and leave the actual server setup and administration to other people (other than my very basic local installation of Apache), so yes, you're right, I am definitely first and foremost a desktop user.
I'll refine my statement then: I'd happily recommend PCLOS to anyone looking for a solid, modern
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Is the command line rhyme tool re-supported?
Is ETHERAPE painlessly re-supported?
I've had problems with libs for each.
Will it let me force the install of Win4Lin 4 (or the pre-xp, pre-2k version so I can run win 98x, since I don't NEED xp or 2k on my Lx box...)
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[adamw@lenovo rhyme]$ rhyme orange
Finding perfect rhymes for orange...
2: orange
see, useless
okay, okay, bad joke. All three packages will be fully up to date and working in 2008. Thanks again for the suggestions.
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No linux distro has ever entirely caught me, but to date my favourite was Mandrake v7.2.
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There is one thing that is better in Ubuntu/Kubuntu. Package installation. The repo is a bit larger, Synaptic has a lot more in the way of search and filtering than RPMDrake, and apt has suggested and recommended package relationships as well a required.
Other than that, Mandriva is better in every way. Configuration, in particular, is way ahead of Ubuntu, and more ahead of Kubuntu.
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About to swap to Ubuntu myself (Score:2)
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2006 is really too old to be supported now. We have a 12-18 month support cycle. It's worth noting that Ubuntu's cycle is just the same, except for LTS releases. I expect you wouldn't have too much luck finding packages for two year old Ubuntu releases, either.
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The issue for me is that there doesn't seem to be an official upgrade path other than a complete reinstall to go from the previous major version to the next? Or am I missing something completely here? Maybe I'm just in the "dumb" category, but the
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You can indeed upgrade from a previous version to a later one. Simply download the later version (you need one of the regular installer editions - Free, Powerpack or Powerpack+ - not One), boot the installer, and you will be given the choice of a fresh install or upgrading your old installation.
Upgrading from 2007.0 (which you have) to 2007 Spring (A.K.A. 2007.1, the curr
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Same boat... (Score:3, Interesting)
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I too used Mandrake / Mandriva for years (it was my first full-time distro), but wandered away a few years back. I lost track of the company once Gaël Duval left. Partly, I was disappointed by the website, which I never quite understood (perhaps I should have studied harder in French :-). Partly, I kept falling into dependency hell - when I tried Ubuntu, installing new packages Just Worked, and I couldn't bring myself to return to my first love.
But I remember Mandriva fondly, and wish them all the
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You can get it from www.pclinuxos.org for free and it works like a charm. I just switched my wife from WXP over to it, which is something I never dreamt possible. No complaints, no nag, no malware, no viruses...
Amyway, I think that original Mandriva has become too commercial while they don't give you the impression that they really can deliver on support etc.
Re:Hopefully (Score:5, Interesting)
I can tell you why I switched to Kubuntu after six years with Mandr[ake,iva]:
1. 64-bits was relegated to very-low-priority (an inordinate number of supposedly-supported 64-bit packages had dependency failures)
2. A large percentage of bug reports would lie untouched not just for months, but for years. I have within the past couple of months received acknowledgements for bugs that I filed nearly two years ago -- and those acknowledgements basically came down to "this bug report is filed against a version that is no longer supported".
3. When a bug report was acknowledged in a timely manner, it was almost always to the effect of "this bug does not exist in 32-bit version; unable to test 64-bit" (or the fact that it was filed against 64-bit was simply ignored)
4. Official update mirrors would disappear for weeks at a time
5. Security updates would be made available weeks after exploits became known.
My experience with Kubuntu has not been painless, but I have found none of the above to be true for Kubuntu. It was with considerable reluctance that I switched, but in any case those were my reasons.
YMMV, of course (and probably does).
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What drove me away from Mandrake (as it was then) was that every time I wanted to install a new package I'd have to spend a couple of hours:
1. Searching for the new location for the repository. They seemed to constantly change the paths arbitrarily every few weeks or so, apparently because they 'decided' that the old path wasn't a good naming convention or something.
2. Downloading the updated package info.
In Debian/Ubuntu an apt-get update takes a little while, maybe a minute or so. In Mandrake the equivalent to apt-get update (using urpmi) would take an hour or so. On the same internet connection. Which was 100M.
I used the 'easy urpmi' site to keep track of the repositories but it was still very very slow and painful work.
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This is now done interactively from the package manager, you just click "add" and it gets a list of mirrors over the internet, you choose one, and your medias are automagically configured:
main + contrib + non-free which countain most of the stuff and their respective updates, backpo
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Weeks after exploits available? I call BS (Score:3, Informative)
5. Security updates would be made available weeks after exploits became known.
Care to provide some proof on that one? A general and very broad statement like that calls for some proof to back it up.
Unless you're referring to the kernel itself (which there were issues with, due to a certain kernel developer that's no longer with Mandriva), most (and I do say most... there are exceptions, just like any other distribution unless you're using Gentoo and can emerge the latest upstream version the moment i
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It is far from a polished distro, and is leagues behind any other major distro due to the aforementioned issues IMO.
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He has set up a team to go through all bugs and clean up the base, and they now follow all new bugs so that they don't leave reports unanswered, forgotten or unsolved. They also take care of the reporter side, whenever people need to be asked for details or tests.
There is also a new bugzilla, much quicker, setup by vdanen iirc.
So yes, there has been problems, but there is also a strong will to do wha
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I note that a lot of users insisting on running a 64bit OS for no other reason than they have an x86_64 CPU (which is quite a lame reason - specifically if you have less than 2GB ram in said machine) don't notice that Mandriva has always had good dual-arch support. This means that you can transparently install and run the 32bit packages as well (which for a long time was imposs
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I bet the popularity loss had to do with the requirement to join their club for ISO's with quick downloads.
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Mandriva tries too hard to be all things to all men. You want KDE? You got it. Prefer GNOME? We do that, too. Want obscureWM? Yes, we include that. Want a smooth desktop? We offer that. Want everything and the kitchen sink? We can do that too.
It's too much, too widespread.
I don't want to spend lots of time tracking what is state of the art in Linux apps. I want someone who does that for a living, or as a passion, to choose the best of breed of each
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RC is the new pre-alpha? (Score:4, Insightful)
How does that work?
Re:RC is the new pre-alpha? (Score:4, Insightful)
Release cycles have changed a lot in the last 10 years or so. With the advent of iterative software development cycles, you can often times get betas that are not feature complete (the idea is to test the iteration cycles that are complete) but a release candidate should be feature complete most definitely.
Re:RC is the new pre-alpha? (Score:5, Informative)
So, no this is not a pre-alpha version ;-)
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So, to summarise your post: there is a feature missing; therefore it is not pre-alpha. Well, OK, if that premise necessarily implies that conclusion for you, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and back away slowly and quietly.
Just to clarify, it is surely obvious that this is not an RC but an alpha version. "Alpha" is after all the standard way of denoting "not feature complete". That's what "alpha" means.
I trust no one is going to claim that "one feature missing" = RC. RC should mean "finished in abs
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Not that I'd accept "Microsoft did it" as an excuse.
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Re:RC is the new pre-alpha?(Score:2)
by hawaiian717 (559933) on Thursday September 06, @03:13PM (#20498069)
(http://www.quanterium.com/)
I trust no one is going to claim that "one feature missing" = RC.
Microsoft did exactly that with the Vista release candidates. As I recall, Vista RC1 was released with the disclaimer that it wasn't feature complete, either.
Not that I'd accept "Microsoft did it" as an excuse.
Hell, Microsoft has always done that with shipping product, not just the RCs. ;-)
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I nominate "gold master" for the new "beta"!
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The marketroid mindset is increasingly prevalent in the open-source world these days. Mozilla publishes misleading statistics in their press releases and drops features to meet deadlines. Slackware skips version numbers to "keep up" with the competition. And people abuse the terms "alpha", "beta" and "release candidate" to mean what they want them to mean [kde.org] rather than something sensible.
People who are thinking of labelling something a "release candidate", ask yourselves one question: if major new bugs
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Almost everything on that page is now included. However, it's true to say that Mandriva RCs are not really true release candidates - they're not builds that we honestly believe could be the final release unless someone finds a bug (well, the *last* one usually is, for 2007 Spring that was RC3, for instance). They should really be considered more as late betas. We didn't even hit version fr
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Crikey (Score:5, Funny)
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Now I have to go scrub my brain with bleach!
I hope this don't cause The Nightmares again. *pictures Bill Gates in a Tux, handing Penguin chairs (yes, also in Tuxes) to Steve Ballmer, who was....NOOOO!! Make It Stop!!!*
Yeah, maybe if I dilute the bleach with lye...that'll work!
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Actually (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a good move! More FOSS products aiming at the mass market should consider adopting a similar approach!
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Agreed. We should put chrome condoms on and run around declaring "I'm the Big Meat 2008!"
Fuck, but I hate m
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Look at Linux, it's free, it's competitive, but it's not marketed and it's not marketing driven, and you can tell by looking at it. It's starting to change, but the fact of the matter remains.
People do not want unmarketable products.
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You're right it's not obvious. I'm an old time Linux nerd who has worked as a *nix admin and reads
Your post is what informed
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Re:Actually (Score:4, Informative)
You are so right. And it was really thought as a representation of the technical reality and timeline of the distro, not for pure marketing reasons.
Here is the complete story that is behind this names, if that interrests you...
The naming convention came from the switch to a one year release cycle for the 2006.
Since the distro was going to be there for one year, and since most of this year was going to be 2006, it made more sense to call it 2006 and have it called 2006 for 3 months in 2005 than the other way around.
The decision to switch to a one year cycle came from users requests for more stability.
Unfortunatly, this move, despite having been made at the users requests, wasnt a popular success. Just read the comments on this page and you will see that a lot of people want the last version of many apps as soon as possible. Which has some sense in the free software world where some apps just move so fast and sometimes a newer version means more stability.
So with the 2007.0 the distro came back to a 6 months cycle.
But some aspects of the one year cycle remained in order to have the best of both world and again, it had to be reflected in the naming convention.
So, 6 months later the 2007.1 was built from the 2007.0 with no revolutionnary change to its foundations (like kernel, glib, gcc) but instead with many improvements and polishings in the desktops, fixing all those little bugs that were so irritating with every mandrake/mandriva release up to now, and a lot of work has been put into improving the existing mandriva tools, like the package manager and now the connexion manager.
So the 2007.1 was a really stable yet up to date distro.
Another nice aspect of the distro since that time is the backporting infrastructure.
Since the distro was going to stay for one year, in 2006 a lot of work has been put into making the softwares from the development version available easily to the previous version of the distro through a process that should not be a burden for the contributors. So the distro was back to a 6 months cycle, but this infrastructure was and is still there, and now important fast evolving apps like firefox can be backported quicker, which was one of the complaints made often to the distro. (You can see the importance of backporting in MEPIS recent swith to debian).
So all this led to chosing a name that would convey the fact that the 2007.1 was very close to the 2007.0, an evolution in time: "2007 spring".
Take all that with a grain of salt, I'm managing the Mandriva french forums for Mandriva, but I'm coming from the mandriva community and it really is my distro of choice.
Got Torrents?? (Score:2)
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In North America, I'd recommend ftp://carroll.cac.psu.edu/pub/linux/distributions/ mandrivalinux/devel/iso/2008.0/ [psu.edu] . In South America, ftp://ftp.c3sl.ufpr.br/MandrivaLinux/devel/iso/200 8.0/ [c3sl.ufpr.br] . In Europe, ftp://distrib-coffee.ipsl.jussieu.fr/pub/linux/Man drivaLinux/devel/iso/2008.0/ [jussieu.fr] , or ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/os/Linux/distr/Mandrakelinu x/devel/iso/2008.0/ [nluug.nl] if that one's slow.
We don't do torrents for beta releases as the demand is not usually high enough to warrant it - the FTP mirrors usually
For all those who haven't tried Mandriva lately (Score:5, Informative)
We've made big improvements in overall polish and stability since the releases that many people remember badly (2005, 2006). 2007 Spring looks much better, has far fewer package quality problems and runs more stably than those releases on most systems. 2008 will be better again, there's been a lot of work done on improving overall package quality, and it includes a very good and recent kernel build with very good hardware support. For instance, we have probably the best graphics card detection and configuration system in a major distro. I'm pretty sure that 99% of cards from major manufacturers (Intel, NVIDIA, ATI) will be correctly detected and configured in 2008. Our support for VIA / S3 (Uni)chrome chips (which are used on VIA's popular mini-ITx motherboards, for e.g.) is better than any other major distro to my knowledge.
Since 2007 Spring, we have a public non-free repository (that is configured when you set up repositories following the instructions above), so it's easy for anyone to get stuff like the NVIDIA and ATI proprietary drivers, Intel wireless firmware, Sun Java and so on. For instance, for the NVIDIA / ATI drivers, just enable the repository and then re-run the graphics card configuration tool, and it will give you the option of using the proprietary driver.
Since 2007, we have official
so, yes, Mandriva is changing, quite a lot in fact. It'd be great if you'd give us another chance with 2008, read up on the forums - http://forum.mandriva.com/ [mandriva.com] - and the Wiki - http://wiki.mandriva.com/ [mandriva.com] - and see if your issues aren't improved.
On the Bugzilla situation - N7DR is not at all wrong in his criticism as it relates to earlier times. During the 2008 release cycle, we created a Bug Squad and I was appointed Bugmaster. The Bug Squad now triages all bugs reported, which has helped immensely with the response rate and time for newer issues.
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A problem with this is, and you probably are already aware, is that the 2005 release was touted as 'polished' and 'stable' and 'greatly improved' at the time as well. We've heard the spin before, and it'll probably take another couple releases before you win
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http://sophie.zarb.org/rpmfind?mversion=10.1&sear
10.1 came out in October 2004.
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Well, I haven't tried it in a while.. and
Mandriva is a great distro. (Score:2)
I' ve been using mandriva on desktops and servers for years, and the progress has been quite noticeable. Frankly the 2007 version is almost as good as it can be (to my needs), not a single problem with repositories (easyurpmi website), 64 bit system/packages without a glitch.
Everyone has his own distro preferences, true, but i feel it's important to support such a great work.
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Burn me twice, I'm going ubuntu!
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gramps-2.2.8-1mdv2008.0
[adamw@lenovo drbd-utils]$
2007.1 (latest stable release) had 2.2.6, yes. That was probably the latest version when 2007.1 was released. 2.2.8 could be sent to
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The 2.3.6 thing I just fixed: there was a perl substitution command lying around in the spec to convert all occurrences of 2.2 to 2.3 in configure. I guess it was something from years ago to fix a Python 2.2 / Python
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My complaint still stands. It's a lousy name for a distro. Not that Ubuntu is much better.
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Yeah, with some of the analogous stability issues. That said, though, it was Mandrake that I recommended to a client when we were building some DV applications for them; Mandrake was the first distro to include the IEEE 1394 (Firewire) drivers, so at least I didn't have to walk them through rebuilding a kernel.
Re:We use it for a reason (Score:5, Insightful)
This one sentence made your entire post utterly infantile. You don't like an entire nation??? Has every single person out of 60 million Frenchmen done something nasty to you so that you dislike them all?
Sorry for being off-topic, but I'll just never be able to understand how a rational, intelligent and Linux-using human being can make such statements of hatred on a public blog, which proudly displays his/her nickname and web site. Crazy...
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Mandriva 2008, like every version of Mandriva*, offers the option to format the drive, use an existing Windows partition, or partition the drive yourself, including on the fly NTFS (et. Al.) partition resizing. * The caveat is that you should only do it this way if you are a skilled Linux person, and you should not use the "Install from Live CD" option. It is known to work poorly.
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* soft core 0
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I wonder what common factor in all these experiences could be causing breakages. Hmmmm...
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The editions we recommend for the general public are Free - a full disc-based distribution on a single DVD - and One - a full live distribution on a single CD (there are K