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Debian-Installer Alpha Released

robstah writes "An alpha release of the next generation Debian installer (Debian-Installer) has been announced. Debian-Installer is an actively developed replacement for the older and now rather delapidated boot-floppies installer. This alpha release is available for i386 only as ports to other platforms are not yet significantly mature. Volunteers are requested to test this new installer and help contribute to Sarge, the next release of Debian GNU/Linux." Now's the time to complain if you want to be heard.

221 comments

  1. Downloading right now... by LucidityZero · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm working on it right now. I needed a new distro to mess around with anyway. I had always heard that the Debian installation was just a complete mess, so this is a step in the right direction. Hearing even slight news like this is enough to make me try it out, and I'm sure it'll help convince other people too.

    --
    Sig.i>
    1. Re:Downloading right now... by Gheesh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is *not* a complete mess, it just concentrates on software (all software sources can be defined at installation, so you can begin using apt-get as soon as it is finished) and leaves most hardware configuration up to you (no detection *at all*, just a list of kernel modules, some with no description whatsoever, to pick from).

      I think the new installer will definitely help Debian enlarge its user base

    2. Re:Downloading right now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had far more hassle from RedHat and SuSE installers than I have had from the simple 3-floppy debian installer of about 2 years back.

      You stick the floppies in, and press return - why do people have a problem with that?
      Oh, yeah, I forget, it's text mode and doesn't have a picture of a penguin, lizard, or bloke with a hat in the corner of teh screen therefore it must be crap. My mistake.

    3. Re:Downloading right now... by MightyMike · · Score: 1

      Gheesh is true indeed... it is not a complete mess... i like it the way it is...when your done you find yourself with a nice installation with software you want... if they want to attract more users they have to change the installer but if they dont care they should leave it this way...it not that complicated...it is for people who don't want to read and just blindly click on foward...

    4. Re:Downloading right now... by Brian+Kendig · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Does the new installer have hardware autodetection? I read the links in the article, but I can't find any detailed explanation of exactly what the new installer's all about.

      I've been trying Debian recently. The most frustrating thing about it is that the installer requires me to know what graphics chip I have, what sound chip I have, what network interface I have, what IrDA interface I have, and all sorts of other little hardware details that will foul up the system if I choose wrong.

      On my Dell laptop it took me a day to figure out what NIC driver I was supposed to use (a 3c5xx driver for a 3c905 card, go fig) so I could start the network install, then another day to figure out what video driver to use so X wouldn't hang on startup (I had a Neomagic chip, but I wasn't supposed to be using the Neomagic driver), and now it's been a few days and I still haven't been able to get audio working.

      I'm tired of digging around on mailing lists and web sites to figure out how to get Debian to behave. And lots of the available documentation is now outdated; for example, I was puzzled why I didn't have '/etc/conf.modules' until I figured out that it's been replaced by '/etc/modules.conf'. Huh.

      I really hope the new installer makes all this easier.

    5. Re:Downloading right now... by seann · · Score: 1

      "Princeton University, class of 1992, BSE degree in Computer Science." and you still have problems installing linux?

      The simpsons are going to Princeton!!

      --
      I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
    6. Re:Downloading right now... by trevinofunk · · Score: 1
      I dont knwo what these other guys are talking about. I tried to install Debian no less than half a dozen times, and each time there was several key libraries missing and I was unable to run X. In fact, it barely ran on its own without X.

      I'm sure theres alot of l33tz0r folks out there who dominate all over the Debian installation, but I have better things to do with my time than to waste any more time with that distro.

      Shortly after that, I tried out Redhat 8 and Mandrake 9, and Im using redhat 8

    7. Re:Downloading right now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which key libraries would those be?

    8. Re:Downloading right now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must have really tried hard to do something wrong. I've successfully installed Debian on quite a few boxen (as in more than 10) with no troubles. Maintenance is a piece of cake.

      Are you a troll?

    9. Re:Downloading right now... by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --If you want a great Debian experience, try Knoppix.

      http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html

      ftp://ftp.uni-kl.de/pub/linux/knoppix/

      http://knoppix.net/forum/
      http://www.linuxtag.o rg/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.pl?board =knoppix-en

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    10. Re:Downloading right now... by Wolfrider · · Score: 2, Informative

      --I tend to agree with you. Ppl have been spoiled by GUIs that take up too much memory, are slow, and more prone to have bugs. (And I'm not just talking about the installers, either.)

      --SuSE 7.3's GUI installer was a PITA. I *always* opted for text mode, sometimes "Expert mode" as well - because I couldn't get a reliable install experience using the GUI.

      --I switched to Knoppix because it was the best Linux experience I'd seen since Mandrake 1st edition came out to compete w/ RedHat. Plus the promise of apt-get was too good to pass up.

      --My current install is b0rked tho. I can't get apt-get update / upgrade to work anymore (craps out with a memory error and can't parse some dpkg files) so I'll have to reinstall using the latest ISO and knx-hdinstall. So much for perfection...

      --I also have a download of Libranet 2.0 (the free-beer version) to try out, so maybe I'll do that one 1st.

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    11. Re:Downloading right now... by trevinofunk · · Score: 1

      No I'm not a troll! I seriously had problems installing it. It was missing a bunch of Perl libraries, and refused to work for me.

    12. Re:Downloading right now... by Christopher+Cashell · · Score: 2
      My current install is b0rked tho. I can't get apt-get update / upgrade to work anymore (craps out with a memory error and can't parse some dpkg files) so I'll have to reinstall using the latest ISO and knx-hdinstall. So much for perfection...
      Do you know offhand exactly what the error is?

      Is it something about "dynamic memory map"?

      If so, it's actually a semi-known error, and there's an easy fix. You see, what the problem is, is that you have too many thing listed in /etc/apt/sources.list, and too many packages being found. APT is attempting to load and compile information for the whole set, and the default memory cache size (6MB, as I recall) isn't enough to hold it all. What you need to do is change a setting in /etc/apt/apt.conf to make it larger, and then life will be good.

      If the error I mentioned is what you're seeing, or something similar, try adding the following directive to /etc/apt/apt.conf:

      APT {
      Cache-Limit "12582915";
      };


      Note that what this does is double the size of the dynamic memory map that APT uses (specified in bytes).

      If it's bombing out while trying to read an APT file, it's possible you have a corrupted packages file or something. Try clearing out the files in /var/lib/apt/lists/ and then rerunning apt-get update.
      --
      Topher
    13. Re:Downloading right now... by nil_null · · Score: 1

      I haven't tried this yet, but I've heard the Knoppix is capable of installing Debian and autoconfigures most things. A painless Debian installation from what I've read. It does set your default Language to German, but that is pretty easy to fix.

      Personally, I used LordSutch.com ISOLINUX mini-ISO image and had no problems.

    14. Re:Downloading right now... by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --Thanks! I'll keep that in mind... For now, I've reinstalled successfully but it may pop up again in the future.

      --You're now on my "Friends" list. :)

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    15. Re:Downloading right now... by Christopher+Cashell · · Score: 1

      Yeah. . . it can happen fairly easily. Especially if you track multiple releases, such as stable, testing, and unstable, utilizing the (somewhat) new "pinning" feature. Using pinning, you can install (say) a stable system, but easily install X Windows and Gnome from testing[1].

      Follow all three, and add a few "extra" apt repositories, and you'll quickly hit the memory limit. I've heard that they're considering raising it in a future release, as this type of setup becomes more common.

      Good luck! ;-)

      [1] You can find more information in the man page, apt_preferences(5).

      --
      Topher
  2. XFS support? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I wish they'd ass XFS support for the default install. There are some unofficial boot floppies with XFS support, but they haven't worked for me.

    With my current install, I had to install on ext2, then copy / to another partition, make XFS-capable kernel, create XFS on the original / partition, and copy it back... It's a mess.

    fp?

    1. Re:XFS support? by asdfx · · Score: 1

      I wish they'd ass XFS support

      I get my ass support from BVD.

      Joking asside, do any distro's come with XFS by default? From what I've seen the answer is, "no." I'd like to work with it, again, but presently I don't have the will to go through all the work of moving my data around (I neglected to make an extra partition for the XFS migration during my last install). I think when FreeBSD 5.0 comes out I'm just going to blank my hard drive and start over (I have FBSD, RH and, W2K on there, and it's time I upgrade all that junk).

    2. Re:XFS support? by nexex · · Score: 5, Informative
      should've used this:

      http://people.debian.org/~blade/XFS-Install/

      --
      Winter 2010: With Glowing Hearts
    3. Re:XFS support? by eggsovereasy · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think gentoo comes with it by default... although there is no installer per say, so you just format it whatever you want it...

    4. Re:XFS support? by Dave114 · · Score: 5, Informative
      Joking asside, do any distro's come with XFS by default?

      Mandrake (9.0) gives you the option in the installer.

    5. Re:XFS support? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mandrake comes with XFS.

    6. Re:XFS support? by ljaguar · · Score: 1
    7. Re:XFS support? by mhesseltine · · Score: 2

      If you want to set it up, Gentoo has support for XFS.

      --
      Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
  3. Woohoo!! by sasquatchoflove · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I've never minded the old installer, but whenever I reccomend debian, people have some problem or another installing it. Maybe now I won't have to spend any time fixing other people's installation mistakes...

    - Mik Mifflin

    1. Re:Woohoo!! by IkeTo · · Score: 2, Informative

      > I've never minded the old installer

      You shouldn't. The problem of the old installer, addressed by the new d-i, is the problem of developers, not end-users. In particular, it is too difficult to make the process of creating boot floppies automatic. That made Debian stable to always release late. Perhaps this time (or rather, the next time) they really can make it to meet expectation (in release date).

    2. Re:Woohoo!! by setiyeti · · Score: 1
      I've never minded the old installer, but whenever I reccomend debian, people have some problem or another installing it. Maybe now I won't have to spend any time fixing other people's installation mistakes...

      As stupid as this makes me sound, I have tried to get debian 3.0 up and running many times, only to have it fail to setup X-windows properly, despite the fact that I have told it the correct graphics chip, video ram etc etc. Changing config files makes no apparent difference, even to files that are "correct" on other distributions. No such problems with other distributions, or for that matter FreeBSD.

      If they replace the installer, and it has better hardware detection, and is able to setup X with no problems, I'll give it another go, maybe.

  4. Great to hear by term0r · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is really great news for the Debian developers and the Debian userbase. Debian is a great installation but has one of the more complicated, unfriendly installers out there. This first puts off people changing to Debian from other dists. and secondly stops linux newbies trying out Debian.

    Hopefully this installer turns out to be as easy to use as installing Redhat, but hopefully will stay non bloated and run on low spec machines. Just out of interest has anyone ever tried the Mandrake or Redhat graphical installers run on a low spec machine? Does Mandrake include a command line only option like Redhat does?

    1. Re:Great to hear by LucidityZero · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm installing Mandrake on a laptop right next to me as we speak.
      Yes, you can install Mandrake from a command line.
      Not sure about the performance on a lowend machine, however. . .

      --
      Sig.i>
    2. Re:Great to hear by moranar · · Score: 2, Informative
      >Does Mandrake include a command line only option like Redhat does?
      Of course it does. You just start the installation, press F1, then select the appropriate option. Text install served!
      --
      "I think it would be a good idea!"
      Gandhi, about Internet Security
    3. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes, i have a RedHat8.0 installed on a p133 laptop, and the GUI install ran great, without any problems! Window Maker is running Awesome from it. (GNOME2 and KDE3 arnt a practical solution for it)

      RedHat also has a custom install mode. Its between selecting custom packages and letting anaconda (the linux installer) taking care of everything by itself.
      You can select certian packages from a category menu simmilar to the windows component add/remove in windows. This way, I can select to install vi and not X/Emacs and half other apps that i dont want, while making sure that importnat libraries will remain without me accidentally removing a critical and neccesary default application, because really, very few systems will need the extra 500MB that you might free by going package by package, and then end up installing half of them later, when most app's require them.

    4. Re:Great to hear by piranha(jpl) · · Score: 5, Informative
      Debian is a great installation but has one of the more complicated, unfriendly installers out there.

      That may be correct if you're not familiar with Linux, but if that is the case, one will find that reading the installation manual helps. It's a very detailed document that covers just about everything and every possibility; compare that to the quality of documentation that other distributions provide.

      This first puts off people changing to Debian from other dists. and secondly stops linux newbies trying out Debian.

      It's been said many times: Debian isn't for newbies. However, I recommend Debian to newbies if they want to learn Linux and not be hand-held through the installation and configuration processes. There's not much to learn when your idea of filesystem allocation is a bar graph, and you're not even presented with the names of the kernel modules you can choose.

      Hopefully this installer turns out to be as easy to use as installing Redhat, but hopefully will stay non bloated and run on low spec machines.

      It's not just about running on low spec machines. Keeping the installation simple (in terms of internal design, not UI) eliminates many problems and allows you to do many flexible things. Things break less. Hardware auto-detection and other forms of hand-holding is probably why my last Mandrake installation froze indefinitely (8.2, in VMware); I've had a similar experience with a recent Redhat version (on a non-emulated machine).

      In short, I don't understand why the existing installer gets so much flak. I'll admit dselect stinks for too many reasons to list here, and I find tasksel to be over-generalized. Therefore, I recommend that people search for packages they want, and install them with apt-get after the installation procedure.

      The only remaining challenge with installing Debian is that you understand concepts like partitions, filesystems, kernel modules, etc. If you do, the installation is a breeze (although I've been through it many times). If you don't, the installation manual covers all of this.

      Anything I'm overlooking?

    5. Re:Great to hear by blincoln · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a very detailed document that covers just about everything and every possibility; compare that to the quality of documentation that other distributions provide.

      I would argue that a well-designed and intuitive system shouldn't require the average technical user to RTFM for basic functionality.
      Allowing in-depth technical use is an admirable feature, but forcing it is atavistic. It belongs in the past, just like boot floppies.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    6. Re:Great to hear by Kynde · · Score: 2

      Just out of interest has anyone ever tried the Mandrake or Redhat graphical installers run on a low spec machine? Does Mandrake include a command line only option like Redhat does?

      I always use "expert text" to avoid the graphical one. It's really great that redhat has kept supporting the text and the expert versions.

      But the 640x480 8bit that the gui based thingie uses is not really high end as-is.

      Besides linux X stuff has gotten so bloated already that you cannot run X on a machine with less than 64 megs of memory anyway. And even with 64, you can forget about mozilla and many other programs. The common attitude in linux kernel mailing list for low memory issues and swap usage has been for quite some time "buy more memory and disable swap". That's exactly what I've done in my office box, and yes the interactivity naturally improved, but it's still sad...

      --
      1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
    7. Re:Great to hear by etxjrh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes, OK, an option would be nice. But debian is more flexible than many other distros, as the parent metioned. You can install to Sun/SGI workstations over a serial link, so you don't need a monitor or keyboard for the installed machine. Once you get it bootable and the network is up you can remote administer it. Debian's installer is well engineered for that sort of problem, though I admit for home x86 installations it sucks a little.

    8. Re:Great to hear by peril · · Score: 1

      The average techincal user should be anxious to RTFM for any understanding that it will bring to bear on the problem.

      Installing debian is no better/worse than redhat, (granted it's curses, not X11) but it still requires that you understand the basic of partioning, package selection, and application configuration, (networking, X11, etc).

      The autodetection of redhat/mandrake are great, but when they don't work, you end up RTFM anyways.

      And how the heck do you propose I boot my 90 Mhz PI with no cdrom boot support? The whole cdrom boot process is based upon boot floppies, without the floppy images, your cdrom wouldn't boot.

      --Adrian

    9. Re:Great to hear by Chacham · · Score: 1

      >>Debian is a great installation but has one of the more complicated, unfriendly installers out there.

      That may be correct if you're not familiar with Linux,

      I don't see what's so unfriendly about it. The worst part is not the process, but which floppies, then how many floppies, and the like. Once you know which floppies work, the installation process is a breeze. The questions are simple, and usually have an entire page explaining themselves! And if that isn't enough, you pointed out the idiot-proof manual.

      However, I recommend Debian to newbies if they want to learn Linux and not be hand-held through the installation and configuration processes.

      phitooey! If you want that try Slackware. Debian does *many* things for you. I agree, it isn't for beginniners coming from a Microsoft world, and there is much to learn from installing it. But compared to Slackware, well, Debian isn't hard.

      here's not much to learn when your idea of filesystem allocation is a bar graph,

      /me giggles

      Therefore, I recommend that people search for packages [debian.org] they want, and install them with apt-get after the installation procedure.

      Or use dselect to find which new packages exist. That is a bit of fun you know.

    10. Re:Great to hear by alpharoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Debian isn't for newbies. However, I recommend Debian to newbies if they want to learn Linux and not be hand-held through the installation and configuration processes.
      Recommending Debian (or Slackware, for that matter) to a newbie, from my personal experience, is sadistic. Don't get me wrong, they're sweet distributions, but you should start from the softer side of the learning curve, especially if you don't have a knowledgeable friend who's always around.

      Even the easiest Linux distros nowadays can overwhelm some users. Let them learn with RH or Mandrake, and when they've seen it all and worked their way to the system's innards, they'll move naturally to the leaner distributions.
    11. Re:Great to hear by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      That's good to hear. I just ordered a 7 cd set of Debian3/sparc from Cheapbytes. Sparc serial console installs are great.

    12. Re:Great to hear by La_Classe · · Score: 0

      Guys, Lets face the linux World. It is isn't the old rebarbative Unix world that we one been used to. But debian, is my love, i used it for the last 4 years, on all machines, considering it is the only linux distro that i have seen installing with 8 Megs ram ( maybe Slack could too ? ), and non bloated at all. Lets take a look in newer linux, like RH, Suse and Mandrake. Try them ? i do. After a common install, i have myself bloated with wizards, servers of all sorts, 4 different configurations tools for the same thing, in which they anyway don't archieve much, and kernel ultra 'housed patched' that no one can recompile without having the original 'Vendor' patches, which are not that advertised, check out RH and mdk sites, and try to find out which they are ! It is supposed to be newbie orientated, but it is 'all inclusive never recompile' stuff, similar to what win32 delivers anyhow. Ya got to learn *nix to use it properly, nowaydays anybody installs it in 6 clicks, and doing linux and bsd support on IRC, i am just fed up going around special vendors installs. Lets keep the freedom, and the non bloated. So i am sad, i thought the installer of debian isn't easy but once again, i don't believe a newbie should start with debian, and the installer isn't a problem, once used to it. Will try it now in Vmware.

    13. Re:Great to hear by inode_buddha · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here's how I do a bare-bones RH install... I've done this on 486's even with RH8.

      1. At the bootup screen, select "text mode" install
      2. Set up your partitions, etc.
      3. When you get to the "Package Selection" screen, choose either "workstation" of "server" as appropriate.
      4. Do *not* opt to select individual packages
      5. *Unselect* everything
      6. Proceed

      This leaves you with a bare-bones install between 90 - 150 mB, depending on the RH version.

      --
      C|N>K
    14. Re:Great to hear by inode_buddha · · Score: 2

      Actually, my first distro was Slack 3.0 on floppies, 1 disk set at a time onto a 486... 2 weeks and 140 + floppies later, I had the whole thing on there. That was when I started learning.

      --
      C|N>K
    15. Re:Great to hear by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

      dselect needs to burn in hell.
      I tried to once
      # apt-get remove dselect

      Reading Package Lists... Done
      Building Dependency Tree... Done
      The following extra packages will be installed:
      libwmf0.2-7 libwww0
      The following packages will be REMOVED:
      abiword abiword-gnome abiword-gtk abiword-plugins afterstep aim alsa-base
      anjuta apache blackbook bonobo bonobo-conf console-tools dcgui devhelp dfm
      dillo dpkg dselect emacs20 enlightenment enlightenment-data epplets
      evolution firestarter fwbuilder fwbuilder-iptables galeon galeon-common
      gcombust gconf gdk-imlib1 gdk-imlib2 gfcc gftp gftp-gtk gimp1.2 glade gmc
      gnome-bin gnome-control-center gnome-libs-data grip gtk-engines-metal
      gtk-engines-pixmap gtk-gnutella gtk-theme-switch gtkgraph gtkhtml gvidm
      icewm imagemagick imlib-base imlib1 imlib2 jre libaiksaurusgtk0 libcamel0
      libcapplet0 libedb1 libedb1-dev libepplet-dev libepplet0 libfnlib0 libgal19
      libgconf-dev libgconf11 libgda-common libgda0 libgdk-pixbuf-dev
      libgdk-pixbuf-gnome2 libgdk-pixbuf2 libgimp1.2 libglade-gnome0 libglade0
      libglade0-dev libgnome-vfs-common libgnome-vfs-dev libgnome-vfs0 libgnome32
      libgnomedb0 libgnomedb0-common libgnomeprint-bin libgnomeprint-data
      libgnomeprint15 libgnomesupport0 libgnomeui32 libgnorba-dev libgnorba27
      libgtk1.2 libgtk1.2-dev libgtkhtml-data libgtkhtml20 libgtkmm1.2
      libgtkxmhtml1 libimlib2-dev libmagick5 libobgnome0 libobgtk1 linneighborhood
      man-db modconf modutils mozilla-browser mozilla-chatzilla mozilla-mailnews
      mozilla-psm multi-gnome-terminal nwrite pcmcia-cs pharmacy ppp pppconfig
      pppoe pppoeconf sysvinit tetex-base tetex-bin vim whizzytex xcdroast
      xchat-gnome xfce xscreensaver xscreensaver-gl xscreensaver-gnome xtunes
      The following NEW packages will be installed:
      libwmf0.2-7 libwww0
      WARNING: The following essential packages will be removed
      This should NOT be done unless you know exactly what you are doing!
      dpkg dselect (due to dpkg) sysvinit
      0 packages upgraded, 2 newly installed, 127 to remove and 12 not upgraded.
      Need to get 570kB of archives. After unpacking 375MB will be freed.
      You are about to do something potentially harmful
      To continue type in the phrase 'Yes, do as I say!'
      ?]

      So I decided to leave it installed. Just please don't make me USE it.

      --
      Why not fork?
    16. Re:Great to hear by m1a1 · · Score: 1

      In short, I don't understand why the existing installer gets so much flak. I'll admit dselect stinks for too many reasons to list here, and I find tasksel to be over-generalized. Therefore, I recommend that people search for packages [debian.org] they want, and install them with apt-get after the installation procedure.

      The reason the installer gets so much flak is that MOST people like hardware detection. MOST people enjoy a graphical interface where they click on the packages they want to install and click go, or even just click a default system button, and go on with their life. I do not know why you would knock such handy features because they only add value. Most distros still offer the choice of doing a command line install. If you like to install piece by piece that is your choice. Just install the base kernel, shell, and apt, and get everything else. As for me, I'll stick with my GUI installer, thank you very much.

    17. Re:Great to hear by HiThere · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It may have been improved in the last couple of years, but the last time I tried it left me before X window was configured. Not nice. (I had somehow assumed that this was because some wizard popped up somewhere along the way to do the configuration, but not so.)

      The time before that, it wouldn't handle a large hard disk. (This HAD been a problem with the other distros around a year earlier, but not within the last 6 mo.s.)

      Debian is a great choice if what you are after is STABLE! But, historically at least, it has lagged in adopting changes. This is another example in a long series.

      This makes a great deal of sense, actually. You don't want to install server software very often, and you do want it to be very STABLE. So Debian has been ideally suited for a particular niche. But as desktops become more predominant, is there actually a larger place for a distribution that places stability over up-to-dateness? Probably a slightly larger place, but even holding onto it's basic user base is likely to be difficult. As computers become more powerful, the graphics front ends eat up a smaller fraction of the resources. (Well... ideally. OTOH the 2.4 kernel appears to be quite greedy for resources. So much so that I had to revert one of my smaller machines, or I couldn't even run efficiently in text mode.) So it becomes more reasonable to run a graphics front end on a server. This means that Debian needs to pay more attention to graphics setup, etc. So this new installer is not just nice, it's important to the survival of the distribution. FWIW, I find that I usually try the graphic tools before I try the text based tools, until I have learned the text based tools quite well. Even then... it's much nicer to select some files than to try to type in their names correctly...(is that a one or an ell?)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    18. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IT's a real shame that it appears someone stopped writting the installation guide some time after the release of progeny. It was allaways an unfinished document. Old information is worse than no information.

    19. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can only think of one thing to say: Get off your high throne and wake up. Debian does NOT have a very good installer program, and no peon such as yourself running around telling everyone that it is a piece of cake (just to satisfy your ego) is going to change that. Only improvements in the installer itself will change that.

    20. Re:Great to hear by norweigiantroll · · Score: 1

      Besides linux X stuff has gotten so bloated already that you cannot run X on a machine with less than 64 megs of memory anyway.

      Ah a Red Hat user indeed! I have a laptop (P75) with 24 megs of ram, it runs X OK. Although I admit, X is very heavy on resources, the main problem is the software. I run ratpoision, dillo, and rxvt, all very light software. Icewm is nice too. Anyway, Red Hat is kinda crummy for old computers, since it takes so long to load, and most people with choose KDE or GNOME or something, which certainly _isn't_ for old computers...

      And even with 64, you can forget about mozilla and many other programs. This is very true. There are no good, light browsers for Linux. Mozilla, Galeon, Skipstone, and Konqueror (KDE) are way to big for old computers. Dillo is very nice, but not very featureful. Sad to say it, but on my laptop Internet Exploiter seems to run about twice as fast as Skipstone or Galeon (I have two hard drives)...

    21. Re:Great to hear by MyHair · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In short, I don't understand why the existing installer gets so much flak. I'll admit dselect stinks for too many reasons to list here, and I find tasksel to be over-generalized. Therefore, I recommend that people search for packages they want, and install them with apt-get after the installation procedure.

      Agreed. When I installed Debian dselect drove me nuts for quite a while until I finally read up on apt-get. Dselect gave me as much depencency hell as RPM did; RedHat 6.2 advised not to try to install X after the the system was installed! I tried it anyway and hated RedHat since. But apt-get is way better, and I've used Debian package search to find things like xxd (a hex dumper that Debian told me was part of the vim package) and glxgears & glxinfo.

      apt-get dist-upgrade is just way too cool. Really. Potato (Debian 2.2r4) to Woody (Debian 3.0) with no problems. Wow. (Well, one problem: Gnotepad+ and some other package both fight over ownership of one html help file that I don't use.)

      Disclaimer: my early days of GNU/Linux go back to 1994 and the then-current version of Slackware. I've always like the text-based installers better. I guess it depends on how much you want to know and control the system versus how pretty and/or "easy" you want it.

      Another point that needs to be made is in comparing distro installers to commercial installers is the fact that there are more decisions to be made because there are more functions available to install from a free distribution than a commercial system. With Windows you have to jump through a few extra hoops to get IIS, SQL Server and other server software or MS Office installed, but in GNU/Linux distros you make that decision at the OS install. So part of the confusion is that there is more to choose from rather than buying the servers/apps as add-ons.

    22. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually find apt-cache search x > ~/search.tmp, apt-cache search x | grep y and apt-cache show x to be easier to use than opening links packages.debian.org or the like when in text mode (which is he majority of the time when I am using apt). But if you don't have the stable, testing and unstable Packages files in the cache, then packages.debian.org is useful.

    23. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > It's been said many times: Debian isn't for newbies. However, I recommend Debian to newbies if they want to learn Linux and not be hand-held through the installation and configuration processes. There's not much to learn when your idea of filesystem allocation is a bar graph, and you're not even presented with the names of the kernel modules you can choose.

      There's plenty to learn; the difference is, most people will want to do that learning at their leisure, after a smooth, event-free install, rather than being forced to learn these things 'under fire' before they'll be allowed to have a usable system. After all, would you guess that "tulip" was the network driver for your card if you didn't know beforehand? How about "nv" for the NVidia driver?

      There's always time to inspect the filesystem layouts, and read up on the rationale behind them, and look at lsmod and the modules subdirectories in general - but let's at least be able to do this from a running, system.

    24. Re:Great to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Followup: One of the *great* things about Knoppix is that it's the smooooooooooothest "installing" Debian system there is. And, after you've finished being suitably impressed, you can go to a console window and run /usr/bin/knx-hdinstall to do an install to your hard drive, complete with a multi-boot Grub option.

    25. Re:Great to hear by sjames · · Score: 2

      RH does have a heavily patched kernel in the distro. A look at the kernel SRPM is very informative there. It can use a vanilla kernel without much difficulty though. You can even modify the spec file to generate a more vanilla kernel if desired.

      All that said, I personally use Debian and don't find the installer to be a problem.

    26. Re:Great to hear by Malcolm+Scott · · Score: 1
      I recommend Debian to newbies if they want to learn Linux

      I disagree - I think that the best distro to use if you want to really learn about each package on your Linux system is Gentoo. Installing Gentoo is an education in itself. No automated installer - not even a text mode one. Just have a glance through the steps in that installation guide and see what I mean.

      Gentoo wasn't my first distro -- that was SuSE -- and perhaps the process may seem a little daunting to someone who's never used Linux before. However, I believe that a reasonably intelligent sysadmin who's had a fair bit of experience with command lines should be able to install Gentoo themselves, and will learn a huge amount in the process.

  5. Awesome! by afra242 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This, I am really happy about.

    Most Linux users at work love Debian from what they have seen on my laptop, but are intimidated by the installer, and what they have heard about it (ie. time consuming, tricky). Therefore, they won't use Debian...

    They would rather just put in a Mandrake, or Redhat CD and click a few mouse buttons and off they go with a new system, in less than 1/2 an hour.

    This is great news, and I will be keeping an eye on this. Soon enough, I'll make sure to push Debian onto other people once the installer reaches a significant level.

    Well done and congratulations to all involved in the Debian-Installer project!

  6. Re:Booohoo!! by noshellswill · · Score: 0

    Your first mistake, pad're is using Plebian... but now that the 6502_installer is alpha you can upgrade to a 6800 system. Stay ahead of the curve, what ...?

  7. I am an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    • This is my point.
      • This is another point.
      • I am an idiot.
    Please make me a sandwich made from home-corks.
  8. OK, but.. by jericho4.0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I never had any problems with the debian installer, and I sure like what it left me with. I have Debian running on i386, mips and sparc. The sparc and mips platforms both have NFS root installs. In both cases I found myself pleased with the ease of install, although I did have to muck around with scripts, etc. But I expected that with 'weird' arches and installs.
    I have heard disses about it though, mostly from newbie types. As distrubutions go, I would like to see it easier to use for people who might not know their way around a linux box.
    Most of the complaints I've heard (and identified), deal with documentation, though. As I don't feel like doing a new install of Deb to test it, can anyone offer any insight as to what kind of improvments have been made? The article is kind of weak on that point.

    --
    "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
  9. screenshots? by AresTheImpaler · · Score: 1

    does anyone have any screenshots?

    1. Re:screenshots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you little bitch

    2. Re:screenshots? by krmt · · Score: 4, Informative

      There's not much to see yet, it's only a text-based install right now. S-Lang and GTK frontends are in the works though.

      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    3. Re:screenshots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, get them here: Screenshots

    4. Re:screenshots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clever.

      You should take your show on the road. I head that there's lot of money to be made in inane pointless insults.

      Idiocy being a growth market and all.

  10. Not that this has anything to do by SensitiveMale · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    with the story.

    But I always hoped that compact flash cards replaced floppies.

    1. Re:Not that this has anything to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I always hoped that compact flash cards replaced floppies.

      How about for your IDE drive? Something like this.

    2. Re:Not that this has anything to do by fferreres · · Score: 2

      Aren't CF cards already IDE in nature (mini-IDE devices)?

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
  11. Is this a YNCORW ? by Khalid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can someone explain ? is this Yet a New Case Of Reiventing The Wheel ? I thought that the Progeny (Debian based) installer : http://hackers.progeny.com/pgi/ was very nice and GPL too ?

    Why is there a need to reinvent the wheel over and over again ?

    1. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      count the processors pgi supports and then the processors debian supports.

    2. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by neksys · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's the beauty of open source - you can reinvent the wheel as many times as you want. Yo leave it up to the end use to pick the wheel that rolls the best.

    3. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by krmt · · Score: 5, Informative

      Progeny's installer (known as PGI) doesn't work on non-x86 archs (it may work on PPC, but not on the majority of the arch's that Debian supports). From what I understand, there's no movement towards porting it to other arch's, either because it's difficult or people aren't interested in doing so. Anthony Towns (the Release Manager for Debian) basically just wants a working installer, and debian-installer is what people are actually working on.

      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    4. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by zerblat · · Score: 1

      PGI isn't as flexible or powerful as boot-floppies (the current Debian installer). PGI is great for a certain group of users on certain hardware. Debian-installer is supposed to be everything for everyone, basically. It has a modular design in order to be able accomodate for everyone's needs.

      --
      Please alter my pants as fashion dictates.
    5. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by tfheen · · Score: 3, Informative

      Debian-installer is an old project, it will soon be three years since the first commits into the CVS repository.

      PGI is nice and everything, but does not use debconf, it is monolithic, which means that it's a lot harder to rip out a part of it and replace with something else (say you want EVMS or LVM instead of normal partitions). This is quite easy with debian-installer.

      In addition, there is the issue of PGI not being ported to anything but i386 and PPC. d-i already works on hppa, and is getting into shape on s390 and ia64.

      Since debian-installer uses debconf for interaction, it will be quite easy to support automated installations as well.

      --
      Tollef Fog Heen (d-i hacker)

    6. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by catch23 · · Score: 1

      Why in the world are moderators moderating this as flamebait? I think it's a perfectly valid question....

    7. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by hswerdfe · · Score: 1
      you can reinvent the wheel as many times as you want. Yo leave it up to the end use to pick the wheel that rolls the best.
      funny...
      I alway thought that this was a property of a free and open market...
      I didn't think the ability to create new products was exclusive to open source
      ohh well, guess I should have taken that economics course after all
      --
      --meh--
    8. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by mikael · · Score: 2

      Why? Is it written in 386 assembly or what?

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    9. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by Khalid · · Score: 2

      Why has my question been moderated as a flamebait ? that was a genuine question !? thanks for all those who have answered ! it's clear that things are often not as simple as you might think !

    10. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the beauty of it, yes..but not the purpose. The purpose seems to be lost on most people.

      The point of making sure that code is kept public and open, so long as everyone contributes back to said pool of code, is that the best solutions for many problems eventually arise. As an example..suppose someone created a very good way of filtering mail, and released it under the GPL. If it obeyed the object-oriented model of programming, was portable (or made portable in the future), and was available for everyone to use, then others would contribute it..and, rather than attempt to "reinvent the wheel," which in the case of programming isn't as clear-cut as forming a circle out of wood or stone, many projects could use the same method. Many could all apply the lessons learned in first creating the mail filter, and future software wishing to include such a feature could fall back upon and use this extensively tested, evolved piece of code to their benefit. Choice is certainly a great benefit of open-source software as well, but it's by no means the most practical.

    11. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by noweb4u · · Score: 1

      I liked the installer from progeny, but the issue I had is that it wouldn't recognise a raid device as a root partition. It had boot support, it could see the device, but it listed I had no drives. It was a Mylex RAID controller. I know most people don't have these on their desktop, but if the controller is detected, it should at least be useable for installation. :-/

    12. Re:Is this a YNCORW ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that the beauty of free software was that the wheel only had to be invented once (in theory, at least), and then ported/forked/improved.

      Proprietary software, on the other hand, must be written from scratch by each software developer competing in a given market. It may not do exactly what you want it to, and it may not work on your OS.

  12. What This Means For Debian by krmt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What most people are going to think of when they see this is that this will make Debian's install more friendly. While this is very likely to happen, there are going to be other major benefits to this project.

    The main one is that this will completely replace the old boot-floppies software that previous releases were based on. boot-floppies was, by all accounts, a major pain to deal with. For the release of woody, the installer was supposed to be re-written, but people complained and it was decided to "just" update boot-floppies once again for woody so that the release could get out the door quickly. This update took an extremely long time, so woody took a lot longer to release.

    Sarge is largely waiting on debian-installer to be in good shape to release. No one, and I do mean no one, is willing to work on boot-floppies any more. I've never personally looked at the code, but I know it's just not worth it. debian-installer is modular and will provide the ability to have multiple frontends. The only one in place right now is the text-based frontend, so it's even uglier than the boot-floppies UI right now, but GTK and S-Lang frontends are in the works. Either way, the modularity of the new system will hopefully make it easier to update for new stable releases. boot-floppies was really holding things back there, much to everyone's dismay.

    The other thing of note is that the entire installer is based on the debconf system (well, a rewritten C version of it actually), which is Debian's standard configuration backend. There are multiple frontends, like Gnome, Dialog (curses), and text-based for it, and it's in heavy use in Debian right now. It's a good system that's worked well, and using it in the installer will encourage even more standardization in an already fairly coherent distro.

    As for this alpha, it only supports i386 right now. I don't know how far along the porting efforts are to other arch's, but a new Debian release won't happen until it's been ported everywhere that it needs to be. Still, the installer team has done a great job, and this is a project that the Debian community really should be paying close attention to.

    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

  13. Knoppix? by Ashish+Kulkarni · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I really hope that the Debian installer would have support for autodetection and configuration of all installed hardware, something like Knoppix (which is based on Debian) does. I know you can manually configure everything, but having all the hardware already known to it detected and configured would be great. This would mean that Debian would again be on the innovative edge of GNU/Linux distros...Debian does have the reputation of being a slow-moving, but stable distro.

    1. Re:Knoppix? by tfheen · · Score: 2, Informative

      debian-installer uses discover for autodetection, and has for more than a year already, so that part is quite well taken care of.

  14. Finally... by CoolVibe · · Score: 2
    I can give that crusty dselect the finger...

    Good riddance to bad rubbish. Oh I'm being too harsh I think... I know there's aptitude, tasksel and apt-* but this is good news too.

    1. Re:Finally... by Daniel · · Score: 2

      I should just point out that your comment makes no sense...debian-installer is a replacement for boot-floppies, not for the package management tools.

      (although I've heard rumors it will default to something other than dselect, such as aptitude)

      Daniel

      --
      Hurry up and jump on the individualist bandwagon!
    2. Re:Finally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still don't understand why everyone hates dselect. Package management is still *far* more frustrating with RPMs.

      It works fine. Every now and then, it will get into a funny dependency loop, but that's not hard to fix.

      I can do text searching.

      I can type 'IoOoO' to get a complete alphabetical list of packages.

      I know what is dependent on what.

      It's just not as bad as people seem to think it is.

      Maybe I'm used to it - been using it for 6 years..

    3. Re:Finally... by Ogerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I can give that crusty dselect the finger...

      You have no idea what you're talking about. dselect is an excellent package management tool if you've actually read the quick-help instead of just ignoring it and mashing keys until the dependancy resolving dialogs are gone.

      It takes a whopping 5 minutes to read the help docs. Amazing how lazy people are these days! And then they complain that Debian is un-friendly!

    4. Re:Finally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has read the docs several times in the four years I've used Debian, I'll have to disagree. There are *no* (absolutely none, I mean zero, it just doesn't exist) docs that explain how to use dselect. It explains briefly what certain key presses do, but the authors, like the guys that did the iproute2 monstronsity, refuse to document it. I'm so fed-up with the thing at the moment that I'm ready to move our four news servers to something other than Debian. The da** inn2 Debian package doesn't create the /etc/news/inn.conf file. The package maintainer says that you have to use dselect to purge the package and reinstall it. He claims "dpkg -P inn2" won't work, and it doesn't. After hours of frustration, I've given-up on getting dselect to purge a package. It's something that should be simple.

    5. Re:Finally... by tfheen · · Score: 1

      As you write -- thise has nothing to do with debian-installer as such. It is the domain of base-config which is what is run after the reboot. Base-config offers the user a choice of dselect, tasksel and aptitude, so unless you want to use dselect, you won't have to.

      And the Pre-Depends on dselect by dpkg will go away after sarge is released.

    6. Re:Finally... by mabinogi · · Score: 2

      use "dpkg --get-selections" and redirect the output to a file.
      Then find the line for inn2 and change the status to purge.
      now cat the file back through "dpkg --set-selections"

      That's marked the package for purging.

      now dpkg -P inn2 should work.

      --
      Advanced users are users too!
    7. Re:Finally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Can't see how anybody could have possibly missed that.

  15. Support for VMware by sawak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wanted to test this in VMware but unfortunally the netinstall bootdisk didn't have support for VMware's network driver. I really think they should include it so it would be easier to try this out. I'm not going to run this on my normal computer and risk destroying all my data.

    1. Re:Support for VMware by momobaxter · · Score: 1

      I agree, I wanted to try this out but I can't get the netinstall working either under VMWare. Hopefully, they'll include the driver soon.

      --
      "Full sources for linux currently runs to about 200kB compressed" --Linus Torvalds 31-Jan-1992
    2. Re:Support for VMware by MSjogren · · Score: 1

      The (highly unofficial!) small ISO I have put up works fine in vmware. It won't let you do net installs, but it will let you do a CD install.

      --
      All signatures with truth values are false.
    3. Re:Support for VMware by simondo · · Score: 3, Informative

      The ISO supports it fine: First make sure you select all the NIC modules under the packages to install (7,9,10) Then, under configure network hardware, choose no to select the driver yourself and then enter pcnet32 for the module to load - Bingo.

    4. Re:Support for VMware by demon · · Score: 1

      All it should need is the PCI AMD Lance driver. Maybe in the next iteration of the test image, that driver module could be included?

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  16. Wow.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been looking forward to running I386 on my Alpha.....:)

    Great job....I'm going to examine it immediatly.

    Installing an operating system should be easy. And it will require skills most people wish to ignore. Microsoft, Apple, Novell and even most Linux distros have tasks that should be completed prior to usage. The tasks depend on the primary reason for the installed system and sitting requirements.

    I have seen too many novice installations of systems in production. Even home windows systems with a share open to the world+dog.

    1. Re:Wow.... by ebassi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Installing an operating system should be easy. And it will require skills most people wish to ignore.

      No, it should not.

      An OS is the most complex piece of software that a user will ever be asked to install on his/her machine, so it should be uneasy (yuk) to install, so that Joe A. Luser really understand what he is doing.

      Intuitive, maybe (never had any problem with the Debian installer, but the new installer system was created to replace the old one, which was unmaintainable). But not easy. An easy installer hides the fact that an OS is intrinsecally a complex thing.

      Users that do not want to endeavour in switching to another operating system, should not be induced in thinking that an operating system is just like any other software the install and de-install.

      --
      You can save space. Or you can save time. Don't ever count on saving both at once. -- First Law of Algorithmic Analisys
    2. Re:Wow.... by fferreres · · Score: 2

      90% of the cases require simple instalations. So you could provide [] Simple [] Hard radio buttons or whatever and solve the problem. But I know most developers do not like that, because the think of users as developers, which are only a small fraction.

      If normal users can get to run a "common case" devian instalation and then just use the normal stuff in a normal system (OpenOffice, etc.) and learn more as they go (gradually), it will be a good thing to happen. As long as allowing for the common case scenario does not mean dumbing down the system (as in Metacity, which is a step backwards with respect to Sawfish, as an example).

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    3. Re:Wow.... by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 2

      Come on now, get off your high horse for a second and relax.

      It does not make you any more of a geek just because something, such as an OS install, is difficult or complicated to do.

      I realize that for some reason that I cannot fathom, some people actually enjoy the mundane hours spent searching through your system and editing config files to make your system usable. If this makes you feel better about yourself because you feel superior to those of us who would rather not have to deal with this crap, that's fine by me. But let the rest of us have the option to do something efficiently and easily.

      It is this kind of attitude that makes people hesitant to switch to Linux. If the installation is such a high hurdle, a lot of people are not going to be willing to give Linux a chance. They will ask themselves why are they spending hours just trying to make their system bootable when OS X or Windows was already working fine.

      I know I thought this when I tried to install Debian, and I am far more knowledgeable than your average user. I'm a comp sci major who has learned a lot about unices from using OS X, yet the Debian install was still so daunting that I nearly gave up midway through. I can't imagine how an average user would be feeling.

      Just because something is simple and works well does not mean that people cannot appreciate the complexity. But more importantly, I think that if Linux is ever to be for the masses, it is vital that people are not required to realize the complexity of an OS. When people install OS X, they (well most anyways) don't think, "Oh wow, this is really amazingy that Apple has put out Unix-on-the-desktop and made it so easy to use while still giving people all the power of a Unix." Instead, they say, "Oh cool, I click a couple times, and it just works."

      People learning math don't go straight to differential equations. They start with 2+2. The same applies to computers. People don't want to start their Linux experience in /etc trying to find the file they need to edit. They want to go through as painless of an install as possible and see what Linux has to offer like OpenOffice, Mozilla, etc. Most of the distros have realized this, so hopefully soon this ease of use will become a reality.

    4. Re:Wow.... by ebassi · · Score: 1

      It does not make you any more of a geek just because something, such as an OS install, is difficult or complicated to do.

      I'm not talking about being a geek or not. I'm talking about a lousy concept that seems to be the target of all the IT industry nowadays: "Computers are easy". Well, since you have CS major, you already know that computers, no matter what people tries to do, are not easy. And they are not going to be more easy, as the number of tasks they cover is increasing every day.

      I think that if Linux is ever to be for the masses, it is vital that people are not required to realize the complexity of an OS.

      AFAIC, Linux could never be ready for the masses: as far as it serves my purposes, I'll stick to it, no matter of what the "masses" do think about it. And this is exactely what every computer user in the world should ask to himself/herself: "is my OS currently serving my purposes? And if not, what am I willing to learn about how to make a switch?"

      I've seen, on Usenet, many people that simply install Linux in order to get a more reliable Windows, and then throw the installation CDs out of the windows (the real window :-)) in disgust. Or, worse than that, trying to apply some misconcept inherited by using Windows into Linux (savage format/reinstall when something goes wrong, complete screw up of the filesystem hierarchy, massive security issues).

      If Debian is the distribution for the developers for the developers, it should maintain a certain minimum entry level, just for humility's sake, so it doesn't fool people into thinking that it's an "easy" OS.

      I'm a comp sci major who has learned a lot about unices from using OS X, yet the Debian install was still so daunting that I nearly gave up midway through.

      I'm no CS major (not yet AHR AHR AHR... err...), and I too do hate dselect. The first time I had to sit through two thousand pckages (it was Potato; I don't want to think about Sarge), I was about to shoot myself. Then, I learned to install the base system, and install only the packages I needed via apt-get. It's some kind of trick that you are compelled to learn if you do not like dselect :-). Since then, my installations of a Debian workstation (or laptop) were smooth and painless, and tailored to the machine I was configuring. Trying to do this with another distro without getting a major headache is impossible.

      I'd like to point out that, as soon as Debian created tasksel I was the happiest person in this world; this just for demonstrating that I'm not a complete zealot: I love GUIs (I use GNOME2 regularly, logging in directly via GDM2), when they leave the user the option to follow his/hers desires, and not twisting the "poor plebs" mind into the misconcept that everything complex about computers is to be hidden from user's point of view.

      Just my 0.02

      --
      You can save space. Or you can save time. Don't ever count on saving both at once. -- First Law of Algorithmic Analisys
  17. Re:debian is dying by krmt · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Debian is using outdated software (KDE 2.2, Gnome 1.2), an outdated kernel (2.2).
    For stable, yes, but that's stable. If you're running stable, you probably want the most rock-solid software you can get. KDE3 and Gnome2 aren't rock-solid yet and kernel 2.2 is very well proven (and still maintained). Kernel 2.4 is an install option for stable as well, by the way. Plus, nothing is stopping you from installing your own up to date kernel on Debian.
    It has NO compelling features, whats the point of apt-get if you cant get good software for it.
    It has the largest number of supported platforms of any Linux distro, which is great if you've got a Sparc or an old Power Mac lying around.

    It has three branches (stable, testing, unstable) so you can choose your ratio of features to stability.

    It has a large community of users to give support.

    Each software package acts as a personal liason to upstream authors of software so you can get wishlist requests in and solid bugreports dealt with in a reasonable manner.

    It has a completely open development process so you can see everything and even participate if you want.

    It has a clearly defined and actively updated policy that provides standardization throughout the system (any package that violates policy is buggy by the way, and is treated as such).

    It has an army of developers over a thousand strong who maintain "more than 8710 packages" to make this distribution the largest (what was that about no good software?)

    Theres gentoo for the geeks
    There was a long and drawn out discussion about this on the debian-devel mailing list. If you want to sit around compiling your entire system from scratch, you're welcome to, but note that you can do this in Debian too, and keep things packaged. There's the apt-src package that will do this and keep all the debian stuff you love. This program hasn't had the most active development in the past (the author is one of Debian's best developers and contributes all over the place) but you can be sure it'll be improved soon. Plus, say what you will about Debian's install, it's way easier than gentoo's manual bootstrap method.

    Besides, the majority of apps won't benefit from custom compilation enough to make it worth the time.

    lycoris/lindows for people who think the internets aol
    This traditionally hasn't been Debian's focus at all, but hopefully the desktop subproject will change that once it really gets going. And as for Lindows, it's based on Debian itself. Debian does serve as a fantastic platform for other people to build systems on.
    theres red hat for server stuff
    I'm sorry, but if you put Debian stable vs. Redhat on the server you'll find Debian wins out everywhere that it needs to including upgrades and stability. Redhat gives you corporate support if you pay for it, which is a definite advantage when you need to cover your ass or you're ignorant. There's something to be said for a name brand, that's for sure.
    suse for destkop work, and mandrake for multimedia and fun
    The desktop project will hopefully work on this. I personally do just fine having fun and using multimedia on my Debian desktop system, but maybe that's just me and the thousands of other users like me.

    Why dosent the team just fuckget about linux and concetrate on the turd
    Well, there's the HURD subproject in the works, as well as a NetBSD port. None of the other distros you mentioned have that. The reason for that is that Debian is far more than a Linux distribution, it's a whole project devoted to making a great system. This system can be ported to other kernels and other architectures. It's flexible and has the underlying infrastructure (like autobuilders and debbugs database) to handle this task. It's got the large quantity of manpower and the policies in place for managing it. Debian isn't a corporation, so it doesn't work the same way as Redhat, Mandrake, SuSE, and the rest. The closest one to it is Gentoo, and it's no mistake that Gentoo modeled its social contract on that of Debian.

    Debian isn't the be all end all by any means. But it's an amazing project that moves at its own pace. While everyone else is worried about pretty installers, Debian is working on supporting computers that no one else supports. While everyone else is worried about grabbing the largest userbase, Debian is working on making the best system that the developers can put together. It just works differently than other distros. This doesn't make it obsolete, it makes it impressive.
    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

  18. YHBT. HAND. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

    1. Re:YHBT. HAND. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is that? Do you come in peace?
      Please don't attack. You would not want to live here as we are decaying in our own filth.

  19. Proper announcement by mr_tenor · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is here
    http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announc e/2002 /debian-devel-announce-200212/msg00002.html

    Including links to an .iso and details about this release/filing bugreports.

  20. Re:debian is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What? The Debian packaging system contains more packages than I will ever use, which cover ever type of application / daemon that I will ever need. Many times have I looked at some software I wish to install, to find that someone has already put it in the apt mirror, AND written a nice text based front end configuration from it.

    USB mice - apt-get install hotplug detect gpm - and your away

    Debians policies and standards are put in place to ensure that it will long be around after other commercial vendors have gone broke. It does not rely on cashflow and will be around a LOT longer than other distros.

    You are a troll.

    -mikkav

  21. PLEASE test.... by a+(+h+3+r+0+n · · Score: 5, Informative
    The last editor's note is an EXTREMELY valid one... if you use Debian in any way, please, please test the new installer. Now really is the time, folks. The most common complaint about debian is the installer. Don't sit back and assume everything will work itself out, and then complain about the new installer when sarge hits stable down the road.

    Developers NEVER have enough people testing and reporting quality feedback. So again, if you use Debian at all, please help out.

    1. Re:PLEASE test.... by 1%warren · · Score: 2

      Downloaded it - mounted the initrd.img on loopback - had a look - no ppp support AFAICT - no test.

      --

      Full plate and packing steel! -Minsc
    2. Re:PLEASE test.... by bfree · · Score: 2

      How many distros have an automatic package management system which includes thet ability to ensure that your system is redistributable (i.e. leave out non-free and your debian box is a system that can be replicated and/or modified at will without legal repercusions)? How many distros are produced without commercial considerations? Debian is more than just apt-get!

      --

      Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

    3. Re:PLEASE test.... by MyHair · · Score: 2
      if you use Debian in any way, please, please test the new installer.

      ???

      I'm already using Debian. Why would I want to install it again? It works fine!

      :-)

  22. This is great news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Debian is one of the best distribs out there! It's always exciting to hear about developments that will further the cause. Speaking on those lines, I'd like folks here to take a look at the site I put up on my first Debian box! Check it out! I'm sure Tux would approve. :)

    1. Re:This is great news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm... it's not the goatse site, but it's darned awful close. Unless ye like gay porn, which I do (although not of this variety), since I am gay, you will want to avoid this. If you are a homophobe, multiply that sentiment times 20.

  23. Flamebait? huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you even know what flamebait is, punk?

  24. apt-get.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for all of you complaining about the lack of specific software packages (mplayer, divx, ...) why not go to
    www.apt-get.org (sorry no direct link, and be kind, not my server)
    and update you're /etc/apt/sources.list
    then do an apt-get update && apt-get install packagename and play you're ware^H^H^H^Hbacked up dvd's :)

  25. the reason is knoppix by horcy · · Score: 1

    I think Debian got thinking of the popular GUI installer cdrom from knoppix which uses debian. I think the FreeBSD installer is for babies in comparison to debian's.

    So this is a welcome change.

    --
    Check my site: http://pixel.pagina.nl
    1. Re:the reason is knoppix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not just the GUI that's great; the author of Knoppix did quite a bit of improving on the hardware detection/configuration utilities. Hopefully these will be folded into the Debian mainstream as well.

  26. Re:debian is dying by horcy · · Score: 1

    Looks like krmt(91422) has done his home work.
    Interesting read dude =)

    --
    Check my site: http://pixel.pagina.nl
  27. The question is... by LucidityZero · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The best news is that I now have a Linux distro that is exactly what I'm looking for. I got DISGUSTED with RedHat when I actually started poking around the kernel/packages and realized how bloated it is. I tried Gentoo, but I'll be honest, I just don't think I'm up to that level of Linux knowledge/comfort yet. Took me three installs (which are LENGTHY processes by the way) to even get it installed and working, and by that time the "emerge" function (the basis for the whole portage system) wasn't working right. Gentoo isn't worth much without emerge. :)
    Anyways, even if the previous installer problems were only myth, that is a mute point. The point is that now people KNOW it has a better installer (on it's way in anycase) and should be able to nicely fill the gap between those than don't care that their Kernel compiles support for RAID, IDE and SCSI drives all at once no matter what your system setup is (i.e. RedHat and Mandrake) and those that enjoying recompiling their kernel 17 times before they have a working installation (i.e. Gentoo and Slackware)

    The question I want to raise is this: Could this be bad news for Debian? Is a more friendly installer going to end up with a more bloated distribution as well?

    --
    Sig.i>
    1. Re:The question is... by JerkBoB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1. WTF is this "Insightful"?

      2. The question I want to raise is this: Could this be bad news for Debian? Is a more friendly installer going to end up with a more bloated distribution as well?

      How does distribution bloat logically follow from a better installer? The new installer addresses some serious problems in the old b-f system. Making custom installation CDs won't be as much of an ordeal now, since the new system uses debconf. Also, there are some features which make life a lot easier for sysadmins, like a http backend for default configuration information, support for kickstart-like automated installs, etc.

      The fact that the new installer is modular and therefore able to have nicer frontends is the icing on the cake.

      What the hell does distribution bloat mean, anyway? I love Debian, but if I have to I can install a stripped-down RedHat pretty easily. Just don't select any of the package groups. It's true that Debian's basic install is still smaller, but not by that much.

      So, how is this bad news? Did you really think about the question before you posted it?

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    2. Re:The question is... by tfheen · · Score: 1

      Also, there are some features which make life a lot easier for sysadmins, like a http backend for default configuration information, support for kickstart-like automated installs, etc.

      Those features are not there yet. I hope to have them ready by the time the beta is released.

    3. Re:The question is... by Erik+Hensema · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Debian is already extremely bloated. It contains WAY to many packages. Yes, I know it's all about choice, but do we really need ten differend cd-player apps? Five clocks? Twenty editors?

      A better installer hides features from novice users while preserving an expert mode for those who want/need it. A novice wants to have an installer which requires pressing for about ten times to install the distro. Auto-detection and auto-configuration are not bloat. They are needed features for most people. Even for the lazy expert :-)

      --

      This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.

    4. Re:The question is... by Hater's+Leaving,+The · · Score: 1

      """
      Debian is already extremely bloated.
      """

      You're either an idiot troll, or you're an idiot.

      On one of my Debian systems I have _zero_ CD player apps, and _zero_ clocks. OK, I have 3 editors, but they have different features for different jobs. (vi for quick /etc/passwd mods, jed for quick text/code edits, and emacs if I know I'm going to want to open up a shell and a debugger while editing).

      THL.

      --
      Keeping /. cynic density high since the fscking Kwhores/trolls arrived.
    5. Re:The question is... by nitehorse · · Score: 2

      Strip down a basic redhat install of _every_ extra package that the installer wants, and you end up with well over 500 MB of software. (This was on 7.3, last I checked.)

      That does NOT constitute stripped-down in my book. Also, the resulting system that you get is f*cking useless. It has no ssh{d}, wget, apache, or practically anything.

      So, yeah, theoretically, you could probably strip down a redhat install to less than 500MB. But the resulting system would be even more useless. Debian is much better if you're going for low disk usage - and the packages you get in under 200MB are much more useful. (Then again, what do I know - I use Gentoo! :)

    6. Re:The question is... by mrjohnson · · Score: 1

      What's really lame is spending two or three hours with awk and friends stringing things together like `rpm -e gnome-core | awk '{print %1}' | xargs rpm -e ` to get the size down/remove unwanted cruft.

      `apt-get remove` is sooo much better. :-)

  28. Netboot + VMWare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trying to install via net-boot in VMWare under windows and it doesn't detect my network card. Other installers find it alright, oh well, i'll try again next release.

  29. Re:debian is dying by joib · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, about kde3, all I can say is that since I upgraded kde on my woody box to kde3, konqueror (and the few other kde apps I use) crashes a lot less than konqueror in kde 2.2.2. Not that I blame the packagers though, when the decision was made not to package kde3 not much was known about how stable it would be (if it even was released at the time, I don't remember). It could have been full of bugs, so it was certainly a better and safer choice to go with kde 2.2.2, which was known to be relatively bug-free.

    Anyway, hopefully they get to release sarge by the end of summer 2003. Or if they at least could get gcc 3.2 as the default compiler in sid by then...*sigh*..:)

    *dons asbestos kit*
    Related to the above, the weird thing about debian is their stubborn refusal to use a schedule. "Release when ready", what kind of mantra is that? Every human endeavour requiring cooperation among many individuals, related to computing, warfare, whatever, for pay or voluntary, benefits from a schedule. Hell, most people schedule their own lives too, for good or bad. What makes the debian project so special, that they can't use the same basic tool that almost all other projects in the world use?

    Yes, of course I know that debian developers are volunteers, they can't be forced to do anything. So what? It's not like debian is the only volunteer project in the world. Most schedule their activities somehow. It gives everyone a common goal to reach for.

  30. Re:debian is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    hah-hah!

    feels the moderator wrath...

    <nelson>all I said was "hah-hah"....</nelson>

  31. Replacement? by pkplex · · Score: 1

    I hope it does not replace the ability to install debian from off of floppys... cos that would be a bad move :( However, it has to be good for Debian as a whole to get a yuppy installer... and lets hope it sets up X11 properly.

  32. Unofficial APT repositories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    go get it @

    www.apt-get.org

    please be kind, not my server

    I added all the verified servers as to not hog the main server too hard, enjoy

    for the video codecs I recommend http://marillat.free.fr/

    just remember too run apt-get update after you updated you're /etc/apt/sources.list

    also why not try synaptic, a nice easy to use apt-get frontend

    Repository list:

    * (Verified) GMonsters, a multiplayer networked monster raising game. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by reeve(AT)ductape(DOT)net
    Packages: gmonsters-client gmonsters-server
    deb http://gmonsters.sourceforge.net/debian ./

    * (Verified) Latest version of the Nessus scanner client and daemon. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://www.srce.hr/~joy/nessus1.2/ ./
    deb-src http://www.srce.hr/~joy/nessus1.2/ ./

    * (Verified) Several packages maintained by Robert Jordens that appear here before being uploaded. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by robertjo(AT)phys(DOT)ethz(DOT)ch
    Packages: xmms-ladspa, aconnectgui, alsamixergui, remstats, libgtk-canvas, ardour, gnuift
    # Robert Jordens
    deb http://n.ethz.ch/student/robertjo/download/rj-deb/ pkgs ./
    deb-src http://n.ethz.ch/student/robertjo/download/rj-deb/ pkgs ./

    * (Verified) Packages to run kernel 2.4.x on Debian potato (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by Adrian Bunk
    Please read lynx http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/kernel-24.html
    deb http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/debian potato main
    deb-src http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/debian potato main

    * (Verified) Packages for woody (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by Adrian Bunk
    I have prepared some packages that update some packages that are not or only in an older version in woody. I try my best to avoid problems with both installing these packages on a Debian 3.0 and upgrading with these packages installed to Debian 3.1. Please read http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/packages/
    Packages: e.g. gcc 3.2, Kernel 2.4.19,XFree86 4.2.1, updated versions of Freeciv, GNU gs, Mozilla, SANE, Wine
    deb http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/debian woody/bunk-1 main contrib non-free
    deb-src http://www.fs.tum.de/~bunk/debian woody/bunk-1 main contrib non-free

    * (Verified) Here you can find the devel version of the not-to-minimalist window manager a.k.a ION. ION is a keyboard-driven window manager that prevents windows from being hidden by others. It a kind of GNU/screen software but for the window manager. In ION windows (or programs) are called clients and the clients are managed through frames (Emacs users should know what this means). Give it a try. I promise you'll never look at other window manager. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8)
    This package is a candidate to integration into sid.
    Packages: ion-devel
    deb http://kanin.dsv.su.se/ ion-devel/sid main
    deb-src http://kanin.dsv.su.se/ ion-devel main

    deb http://kanin.dsv.su.se/ ion-devel/woody main

    * (Verified) psbind: Transform PostScript files to save trees and reduce guilt; klimb: A bike route planning program for the San Francisco Bay Area; fmt2: An optimal text formatter for traditional Chinese text; nph: A modern client and API library for accessing PH servers. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by ccshan(AT)eecs(DOT)harvard(DOT)edu
    Packages: psbind, klimb, fmt2, nph
    deb http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~ccshan/debian ./

    * (Verified) A mirrow with an unstable packege of WineX light for example (Windows Emulator wine with Microsoft DirectX support). (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by marc(DOT)leeman(AT)advalvas(DOT)be
    deb http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~mleeman/debian unstable/

    * (Verified) Various packages, mostly software written by myself. (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by Christian Garbs
    Packages: wondershaper whatsnewfm japana makesig kenny tentakelcoder
    deb http://www.h.shuttle.de/mitch/stuff ./

    * (Verified) Husky project: Portable FidoNet software (for woody) (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by pavel(AT)collage(DOT)etel(DOT)ru
    Packages: bsopack, fidoconf, hpt, hptkill, hptsqfix, hpucode, htick, nltools, smapi, sqpack
    deb http://husky.sourceforge.net/debian stable contrib non-free

    * (Verified) Husky project: Portable FidoNet software (for sid) (Added 2002-12-3, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: bsopack, fidoconf, hpt, hptkill, hptsqfix, hpucode, htick, nltools, smapi, sqpack
    deb http://husky.sourceforge.net/debian unstable contrib non-free

    * (Verified) Woody backport of lifelines packages (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by bubulle(AT)debian(DOT)org
    By the lifelines package maintainer
    Packages: lifelines lifelines-doc lifelines-reports lifelines-reports-pt
    deb http://www.perrier.eu.org/geneal/lifelines-debian stable main
    deb-src http://www.perrier.eu.org/geneal/lifelines-debian stable main

    * (Verified) Samba 2.2.x woody packages (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by bubulle(AT)debian(DOT)org
    Quota and ACL support is added. The base for this work are the official 2.2.3a packages. Be careful : official samba packages maintainers have deliberately chosen to skip ACL support due to "libacl1 instability" in woody, according to them. The packages work for me, that's all I can say..:-)
    Packages: libpam-smbpass libsmbclient libsmbclient-dev samba samba-common samba-doc smbclient smbfs swat winbind
    deb http://www.perrier.eu.org/samba-debian stable main
    deb-src http://www.perrier.eu.org/samba-debian stable main

    * (Verified) Woody backports of Cyrus IMAPd 2.1, and all required dependencies. (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by hmh(AT)debian(DOT)org
    It is as official as an unofficial repository can get, since I am the maintainer of the official packages...
    deb http://people.debian.org/~hmh/packages woody/

    * (Verified) Contains packages and tools packaged in heanet. (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by colmmacc(AT)heanet(DOT)ie
    deb http://apt.heanet.ie heanet contrib

    * (Verified) linux.piter-press.ru/debian (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: anjuta, fookb, wmcliphist
    deb http://linux.piter-press.ru/debian unstable mine

    * (Verified) http://debian.a3.nl/ (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: caudium, flow-tools, mailgraph, autopgp, freenet, pgp4pine, apg, arla, ...etc
    deb http://debian.a3.nl/debian a3 main

    * (Verified) http://ftp.3logic.net/local/ (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: Apache-RUS
    deb http://ftp.3logic.net/local/ woody apache-rus

    * (Verified) http://debian.theracingworld.com/ (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: pppd-mppe, amavis, razor, spamc, ...etc
    deb http://debian.theracingworld.com/ local main contrib non-free

    * (Verified) Samba-TNG repository (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: samba-tng
    deb http://samba.cadcamlab.org/debian/ woody/

    * (Verified) OCaml 3.06 related packages (compilers, libraries, tools, ...), rebuilt for debian/woody (Added 2002-12-4, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by zack(AT)debian(DOT)org
    deb http://people.debian.org/~zack/ocaml woody main contrib non-free

    * (Verified) Open CA (openssl certificate authority) (Added 2002-12-5, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: openca, selinux, heimdal
    deb http://snoopy.apana.org.au/~ftp/debian/ unstable main
    deb http://snoopy.apana.org.au/~ftp/debian/ stable main

    * (Verified) Some packages that I never uploaded or that asked for removal. More info at: http://people.debian.org/~amaya/ (Added 2002-12-5, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: enlightenment-conf: The Enlightenment window manager configuration tool arp-fun: Arp-fun, an ARP Spoofing utility
    deb http://people.debian.org/~amaya/debian ./
    deb-src http://people.debian.org/~amaya/debian ./

    * (Verified) Debian packages for MythTV for woody (Debian 3.0) or later. (Added 2002-12-5, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by mdz(AT)debian(DOT)org
    Packages: mythtv, libmythtv-0.7, libmythtv-0.7-dev, mythweb
    deb http://dijkstra.csh.rit.edu:8088/~mdz/debian woody mythtv
    deb-src http://dijkstra.csh.rit.edu:8088/~mdz/debian woody mythtv

    * (Verified) Backport of lame to woody. (Added 2002-12-5, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by mdz(AT)debian(DOT)org
    Required for MythTV.
    Packages: lame, liblame0, liblame-dev, lame-extras
    deb http://dijkstra.csh.rit.edu:8088/~mdz/debian woody lame

    * (Verified) Backport of xmltv to woody. (Added 2002-12-5, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by mdz(AT)debian(DOT)org
    Required by MythTV
    Packages: libtk-tablematrix-perl
    deb http://dijkstra.csh.rit.edu:8088/~mdz/debian woody xmltv

    * (Verified) irssi cvs snapshot built for woody and sarge (Added 2002-12-6, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by debian(AT)selfdestruct(DOT)net
    Packages: irssi-snapshot
    deb http://selfdestruct.net/debian woody main
    deb http://selfdestruct.net/debian sarge main

    * (Verified) Openoffice.org woody backport (Added 2002-11-25, last checked 2002-12-8) - maintained by debian-openoffice(AT)lists(DOT)debian(DOT)org
    Packages: openoffice.org
    deb http://ftp.freenet.de/pub/ftp.vpn-junkies.de/openo ffice/ woody main contrib

    * (Verified) Unofficial cr.yp.to packages for Debian sarge (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: qmail, djbdns, daemontools, ucspi-tcp et al
    deb http://smarden.org/pape/Debian sarge unofficial
    deb-src http://smarden.org/pape/Debian sarge unofficial pape

    * (Verified) Unofficial Mozilla 1.1 for Woody (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://people.debian.org/~otavio woody mozilla

    * (Verified) [NOTE: replace "us" with your country code]. Latest KDE debs for woody. (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://download.us.kde.org/pub/kde/stable/latest/D ebian/woody ./

    * (Verified) Unofficial cr.yp.to packages for Debian woody (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: qmail, djbdns, daemontools, ucspi-tcp et al
    deb http://smarden.org/pape/Debian woody unofficial pape
    deb-src http://smarden.org/pape/Debian woody unofficial pape

    * (Verified) Unofficial cr.yp.to packages for Debian potato (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    Packages: qmail, djbdns, daemontools, ucspi-tcp et al
    deb http://smarden.org/pape/Debian potato unofficial pape
    deb-src http://smarden.org/pape/Debian potato unofficial pape

    * (Verified) colortail, paralogger, xfonts-ansi (bright, outcast, peq, shine, zaber, zone) (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://mywebpages.comcast.net/ddamian/deb/ ./
    deb-src http://mywebpages.comcast.net/ddamian/deb/ ./

    * (Verified) various packages such as mplayer,acroread...for unstable, testing and stable source packages are also given. (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://marillat.free.fr/ unstable main

    * (Verified) [NOTE: replace "us" with your country code]. Latest KDE debs for sid. (Added 2002-11-27, last checked 2002-12-8)
    deb http://download.us.kde.org/pub/kde/stable/latest/D ebian/sid ./

    and much more @ www.apt-get.org
    enjoy

  33. Debian ROCKS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been using Debian testing/unstable for about 3 weeks. I would have to be completely and utterly OUT OF MY MIND to ever go back to Redhat or anything else, EVER AGAIN!

    I LOVE DEBIAN!

    1. Re:Debian ROCKS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unstable for more than 2 years. There are the occasional problems, which are usually fixed the same day, but that's why it is called unstable. I don't think there is any other [binary] distro with newer stuff than unstable (for KDE people there are debs on kde.org). I am curious, how painless is the upgrade on Red Hat or Mandrake from one release to the next (or the one after that)? Can someone point me to a link with instructions (just out of curiocity)?

    2. Re:Debian ROCKS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never tried to upgrade a Redhat installation, but I have the feeling that unless you hadn't even used the previous installation, it wouldn't work so well.

      Plus, the very idea of upgrading to a new .0, .1, .2 release every so often really annoys me. I never felt comfortable with that process. I only wish I had tried out Debian earlier.

  34. Debian killed my thinkpad! (This really happened) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I ran Debians ddect hardware dection program, and it CAUGHT MY THINKPAD ON FIRE! Fuck it, it never happened with ms windows.

  35. umm call me stupid but... by hswerdfe · · Score: 1

    atavistic?...huh?

    --
    --meh--
    1. Re:umm call me stupid but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He probably meant archaic.

    2. Re:umm call me stupid but... by handsomepete · · Score: 1

      It's a semi-obscure synonym for "a throwback". According to this link, it appears to have a couple other meanings. News to me.

      Back to bed. *sigh*

    3. Re:umm call me stupid but... by L0C0loco · · Score: 1

      Remember the episode from the original Star Trek series ('Amok Time' I think) where the cast gets stranded in the past of a planet's history. The time portal operated in the Library by Mr Atoz was called the Atavochron (literally 'Throw back in Time').

      Enjoy!

      --
      -- Instant Karma's gonna get you! [320848 = 2*2*2*2*11*1823]
    4. Re:umm call me stupid but... by psamuels · · Score: 1
      It's a semi-obscure synonym for "a throwback".

      Heh. I love that word. It always reminds me of a Don Chaffer song. He's making fun of people who spout psychobabble:

      "You say faith is semi-atavistically inherent--
      That is, that what I believe is somehow rooted in my great-great-great-grandparent."

      I love that, it's so Ogden Nash..

      --
      "How can you claim that you are anti-crack, while still writing a window manager?" — Metacity README
    5. Re:umm call me stupid but... by MAurelius · · Score: 1

      The episode 'Amok Time' was about Mr. Spock going into rut. He had to return to Vulcan, fight a rival for the right to mate with T'Pring, (sp?), all supervised by T'Pau, the old crone. I can't remember the title of the episode you mention, but Mariette Hartley played the banished woman in the Ice Age cave in that one. Sorry if this is OT, but just wanted to clarify.

  36. no pcnet32? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    didnt you guys think we'd be testing this shit in vmware?

  37. Re:debian is dying by Ambassador+Kosh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is still a bug on sparc related to gcc 3.2 being the default compiler. It is hoped that it will be fixed this weekend. While debian is not the fastest dist to get stuff out from my experience it tends to be far more solid when it comes out.

    During large transitions it typically lags far behind the other commercial dists but it does a better job at the conversion. I have had too many X, KDE, python, ZOPE etc problems on various other dists that I just got sick and tired of it.

    Sid is more stable then Redhat and Mandrake are and the software is more likely to just work which is mostly related to better packaging.

    I get paid to do other stuff then babysit the boxes so I want software that works all the time and for me and that means using Debian and waiting until the software is ready.

    --
    Computer modeling for biotech drug manufacturing is HARD! :)
  38. Re:Debian killed my thinkpad! (This really happene by grokster · · Score: 1

    # apt-get install fire (Don't try this at home... B)

  39. Where the FUCK are the KDE3 debs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not in testing. Not in unstable. Oh wait, I heard they're being delayed so that the developer can study for his final exams... LAST MAY, seven FUCKING months ago.

  40. New installer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    of next-generation huh? I see. Maybe in 2010 it'll be released as part of debian stable.

  41. Re:Yer a trolling idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no one calls me an idiot. no one.

  42. Now's the time to complain.... by Quantum+Jim · · Score: 1

    > Now's the time to complain if you
    > want to be heard.

    OH OH! Sis is touching me! Tell her to stop! Windows blows; Linus stinks and BSD is sCaRy! And I want an official Red Ryder, carbine action, two-hundred shot range model air rifle!

    --
    It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of work to do.
    - Jerome Klapka Jerome
  43. Misconception by IkeTo · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are so many here that expects Debian installer will address the "very difficult to install for newbies" problem of the old boot floppies. So many that it becomes very compelling to reply every of them about the bad news for them. But then it will waste so much time, that I'd better just write it top-level.

    Debian Installer (d-i) is a developer's project. The problem addressed by d-i is the problem of developers, not end-users. You will be very disappointed if you expect a very nice GUI install when trying out d-i. It simply won't make it any more newbie-proof than the old installer of Debian. At least, not now.

    The problem addressed by d-i is the difficulty for developers to create boot floppies. It is difficult to create boot disks, no matter what is the distribution. For other distributions where half of the time of the developers is allocated to new installation and where nobody sees any part of the distribution when it is "work in progress", this is no problem. But for Debian, most developers install it once, and never install it again because it is so good in upgrading. For other distributions, installers are the first things they work on when creating a new version. For Debian, it is the last thing that gets started. Not to mention: they must be built manually, e.g., to try making sure that the floppy size is small enough, to remove some files of packages if it doesn't fit, etc. The effect: installation never get well tested.

    The d-i project is the study about why creating boot floppies are so difficult, and tries to resolve them so that they can be created automatically. Everyone should really try to read the second half of the "Woody retrospective and Sarge introspective" mail posted by the release manager here . This will give you an idea about what are the issues involved.

    So why you should care? First, it will be the installer that you will use. Second, this will be the basis where future improvements to the installers will be made, not the PGI or whatever installer. Third, once it is ready, you will be able to get testing installed directly rather than having to install stable and then upgrade basically all packages to testing (or unstable). For now, test if you can.

    1. Re:Misconception by Daniel · · Score: 2

      Are you sure about that? The two biggest complaints that I hear are (a) lack of hardware autodetection, and (b) starting dselect by default.

      (a) is addressed already by debian-installer, and I've heard they plan to fix (b) as well.

      Anyway, I probably shouldn't spout off too much until I give the new installer a spin.

      Daniel

      --
      Hurry up and jump on the individualist bandwagon!
  44. What a great way to start off it... by eonblueye · · Score: 1

    Wow this is just such great news. I so heart Debian!
    People who were/are die hardcore Debain users that ventured off to find something more modern simplier and "practical" install interface are going to be jumping back onto the Debian bandwagon. I think its safe to say that Debian is one of the most well respected linux distribution out there. Its good to see how things evolve, good luck.

    --
    +++ David Watts 5495 0.0 0.5 1888 884
    1. Re:What a great way to start off it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > hardcore Debain users that ventured off to find
      > something more modern simplier and "practical"
      > install interface

      excuse me, but if somebody is a "hardcore Debain user" why on earth would he be going for another distribution because the INSTALLATION interface is better???

  45. Off course I am FlameBait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    "the Debian developper" : They stop when it work for them when the Goal should be that it work easily for everyone and give reall all around control

    "The Debian Promoter" : They promote superiority and stability , when anyone using there software tell them them what dont work but they have no intention of helping others in working out really there problem.

    "The Debian business" : That one is actually the one I really like to discuss in detail Because people say Debian is free ( when its not ) and they say that it cost nothing and whas mostly made by developper when in fact its built on other Distribution innovation and the Billions ( Many Billions not just one ) that where invested in research over the year by the BYTE The Dust aka , Corel , Stormix , Progeny , etc ... ( more then 400 Failed company to this day and I came late in the game around 1997 )

    "and the Debian user" : Is known for is charm is politeness is alway there to give a helping hand or share its knowledge ( I am cynical here )

    well then If I am Flamebait with all the knowledge I possess about Debian what are You ?

    Not much I guess ... Thats why Debian is not #1 they say shutup when SuSe and Mandrakesoft ( not so much anymore with Mandrakesoft ) Can you precise what you mean and how can whe help you ...

  46. Its about time they joined the 21st Century by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

    Well they've finally stopped living in the dark ages of the 70s and decided to move out, up, and on with life.
    *Note* This is not meant as a troll, or flamebait *Note*

  47. Re:Yer a trolling idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do it myself.

  48. i have no idea what even i am talking about by entropyslave · · Score: 1

    i am a linux newb. the first distro i ever successfully installed was debian. i really don't know what the big deal is. if you have ever used fdisk and have the most vague concept of what a swap partition is then i think you can install debian. and oh my god once you realize what apt-get is you will never use another distro.

    1. Re:i have no idea what even i am talking about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The problem with installations in general is on the difficult parts.
      The easy things can by figured out with RTFM and some motivation, but
      the difficult parts are require more time, more investigating, and above
      all, more desire to seek a solution.


      Having used Debian since the days when the elf format arrived for Linux,
      I can tell you that Debian installs have not been a big issue since the
      main advantage choosing Debian is not for its bloat, but because they
      promises easy upgrades from one release to another. It is not like other
      distributions where you are FORCED to install everything all over again
      and start with a clean state. As such, the issue of installations with Debian
      is less important than it would have been because you can upgrade from the
      old release to the new release without going the steps of a new installation.
      At least that is they promised. ( And they have been proven true to their word
      since I have not installed Debian again for years and I stay current. The
      only exception, of course, is when I buy a new laptop and must start fresh. )


      As for discouraging newbies, that is probably is a good thing since they are
      probably better of to start with Slackware where it is a lot simpler to fix
      problems than with Debian. Debian is easy when it works, but if you need to
      fix problems under the hood, that is way more complex and a moving target.


      In short, Debian is best suited for the newest newbies when it works, but
      only for the old-timers and knowledgeable when the purpose is to learn more of Linux
      and are willing to put up with the bloat.

    2. Re:i have no idea what even i am talking about by commbat · · Score: 1

      i am a linux newb. the first distro i ever successfully installed was debian. i really don't know what the big deal is.

      Me neither. I first installed Debian Rex back in '96, downloading the bootfloppies and all 'Base', 'Required' and 'Standard' packages through a very slow modem to install from my hard drive. It was my first Linux experience and I loved every minute of it... of course I spent a couple of weeks reading everything I could get my hands on, first.

      if you have ever used fdisk and have the most vague concept of what a swap partition is then i think you can install debian.

      Of course, before that first install i'd gotten to the point of examining the partition table with an obscure hex editor (the only one I could find that would allow it... the rest being, basically, file-based) and even putting my name in the mbr's free space. I had no probs with fdisk... matter of fact I hated cfdisk... still do.

      and oh my god once you realize what apt-get is you will never use another distro.

      I have a love-hate relationship with packaging systems. I love the convenience, but hate that they take so much out of my hands. I tried LFS when it first started, moved back to a packaged system for awhile, stupidly went back to mickeysoft... until XP ate its own filesystem, and am back with debian. And now I'm ready to give the latest version of LFS a shot, already downloaded all the source files and everything, and am waiting for a few days free to give it my undivided attention.

      For newbies who want to learn what real unixen OSes are all about, and don't mind a shitload of reading and fixing stuff they've screwed up, I recommend a basic command line Slackware install that is used to bootstrap LFS. Once they get LFS working they will not be afraid of any packaged distro.

      --
      'Intellectual Properties' are uncontrollable in the wild. To base an economy on them is just stupid.
    3. Re:i have no idea what even i am talking about by commbat · · Score: 1

      Whoops, forgot the links:

      LFS

      Slackware

      --
      'Intellectual Properties' are uncontrollable in the wild. To base an economy on them is just stupid.
  49. Debian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    European professionals love Debian, because it is more difficult to install. They hate graphic installtion. And everybody likes apt-get. But I believe this may be a step into the right direction.

  50. so true! by QuantumG · · Score: 2

    The reason is obvious however. I went to get myself a keychain USB flash storage device the other day and they wanted $99 for 16 meg. I bought 10 disks for $3.98 and went home, and then remember that I dont have a floppy drive and that's why I went out. Those disks are still sitting on my other desk.. mocking me.

    For god's sake, $5 is what a 16 meg usb flash card should cost, no more.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  51. goatse guess by fferreres · · Score: 2

    Haven't looked at it, and it sounds like I won't as the message looks too goatsexy.

    --
    unfinished: (adj.)
    1. Re:goatse guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the urethra directory in the URL path is highly suspicious.

  52. Current status for other arches by tfheen · · Score: 3, Informative

    According to my fellow hackers, hppa works, s390 is getting there, ia64 is getting there, alpha, ppc and m68k have started, Sparc isn't begun yet, nor are mips, mipsel, arm. The porting efforts for cool projects like Debian GNU/NetBSD and the Hurd haven't really begun.

  53. Knoppix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm 95% sure knoppix comes with it. I was just playing with it yesterday, and I think I noticed the kernel was 2.4.19-xfs.

    Knoppix was just recently released, www.knoppix.de I think

    1. Re:Knoppix by millette · · Score: 2

      Same goes for yesterday's release of Knoppix, using kernel 2.4.20-xfs. Oh, and don't be fooled. Knoppix has been stuck at v3.1 for a while, but it keeps getting updated, around once a month. And if you ever decide to install to you hd, apt-get dist-upgrade is all you really need :)

  54. if i want to be heard by OSS developers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i think a better question is 'if OSS developers want to
    listen to users, now is the time'

  55. Re:debian is dying by ppetrakis · · Score: 1
    Please don't feed the trolls.

    BTW I run debian on Alpha. Just so happens to be the best damned distribution I've ever used.
    "It just works"

    Peter

    --
    www.alphalinux.org
  56. Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on Mods, wake up and smell the coffee. This is a great attempt at humor. A for effort.

  57. Debian hard to install? by scharkalvin · · Score: 2

    Debians biggest problem in the install process is that you still
    need to know the answers to many of the questions, and there isn't enough help info presented during the install process. Do you know if a program should be installed SUID? Are the defaults safe in most cases, and some questions don't even have a default? You need to know your hardware, Debian doesn't auto probe for your graphics card or your network card (well if your network card was built into the kernel you are in luck, it will probably be found. Otherwise ..... Ditto for your scsi card).

    The package 'tasks' help to select a group of packages needed for specific tasks, but they are too broad. The X11 task installs ALL of the X servers, but you only need one or two.
    The desktop task installs BOTH Gnome and KDE. If you don't want both, well there IS a virtual package for KDE (apt-get install kde will do it), but none for Gnome. I still don't know how to install ONLY Gnome in debian Woody. And BTW, sound is broken in the standard install of Gnome in woody. At least I can't get XMMS or any sound app to work under Gnome (so I am using KDE). Problem seems to be in the set up of ESD, If I kill ESD in gnome then sound apps work, but other things are then broken. ESD worked in gnome under Potato, so I think it is the configuration.

    Still, in all, Debian rocks.

    1. Re:Debian hard to install? by inquisitor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've installed both Debian Woody and FreeBSD on my laptop, so on the record I agree with you.

      FreeBSD 4.7 detects almost everything. You can install this thing by just doing a quick partition, accepting auto defaults, installing the boot manager, and setting a Root Password (although it's probably best to set up a UK keyboard and stuff.) You can actually install this thing off 802.11b... While X is still a configuration blackspot (and one which is fixable), and audio isn't loaded by default, the only thing FreeBSD didn't detect was the audio (a quick kldload later...) and the non-supported softmodem.

      But then, Debian doesn't support the softmodem either, and it has many other problems too. Not only do you need to know that under Linux the keyboard for the United Kingdom is 'gb' ('uk' is the Ukraine), which no newbie is going to know, but the X Windows configuration is insane (at least xf86config has names like "NVIDIA GeForce"), and dselect is the Spawn of Satan. The only thing I used dselect for was installing aptitude, but who apart from the Slashdot crowd has ever heard of aptitude? And besides, they shouldn't need to read three pages of obfuscated 'help' to be able to install a package.

      I know there are problems with FreeBSD too, my rubbish on-board sound system being a case in point - it needs IIC and other non-default options compiled in to work. But in comparison to Debian it's a veritable OS X; and besides, I had much the same trouble with Deb too. Most of the problems with Debian originate from its boneheaded installer and, of course, dselect: once those are fixed, it will become a much better distribution for techie and newbie alike.

  58. Re:Debian killed my thinkpad! (This really happene by UnixRevolution · · Score: 1

    HAHAHA!!!!!!! that's hilarious!!

    someone did an apt-get install comedy on this guy :P

    --
    You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
  59. Re:Debian killed my thinkpad! (This really happene by ThogScully · · Score: 2
    # apt-get install fire

    Followed by:
    # apt-get moo

    Steak anyone?
    -N

    --
    I've nothing to say here...
  60. Re:Help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am thin and have acne

  61. Re:nth post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ::bzzz:: Attention Mods ::bzzz:: This is not flamebait, I repeat not flamebait. This is a troll.
    Thank you

    Sincerly, Anonymous Cocksucker

  62. Platform Support by UnixRevolution · · Score: 1

    Debian IS awesome for all of the supported platforms. It supports i386, PPC, M68K, MIPS, DEC MIPS, Alpha, SPARC, HP-PA RISC, ARM, and IBM S/390. DAMN!! :) to burn all of it to CD, including the GNU/HURD and Source packages for Debian, Would require 89 Compact Discs. I have Sparc, PPC, MIPS, PPC, and x86 boxes. It's nice to know i could install Debian on all of them if i wished. BTW, i never had a problem with the debian installer, and i *am* somewhat of a newbie :P only problem was getting X working. Linux: The OS people chose without $200,000,000 of persuasion.

    --
    You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
    1. Re:Platform Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Debian's platform policy is the stupidest part of the whole endevor.

      Let's delay the release because Hans can't get Mozilla to compile on his Atari ST!

      Outside of x86, PPC, and maybe Alpha and Sparc, you can count the number of users using your toes.

    2. Re:Platform Support by UnixRevolution · · Score: 1

      Actually, it just so happens that i and several of my friends all have HP-PA RISC machines... because IN SOVIET RUSSIA, DEBIAN WANTS WIDE PLATFORM SUPPORT FOR YOU!!! and because we got them cheap. and we can run debian on them, so there.

      --
      You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
  63. The real problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who has used Debian for a few years and has several dozen Debian servers, in my opinion you guys are missing the real problem. The problem with Debian is that nothing is obvious. The names of commands, at the command-line and the command-line options, and the directory names and even the names of the boot disks, are not obvious. The first disk you put in is named rescue? That doesn't make sense. I'm not "rescuing" the system. I'm installing it. The second disk is named root. It makes sense to us old UNIX guys since we know it contains the root file system, but someone with a little computer knowledge will assume root means the first one. Duh, that's what root means, the first one or the starting one. Even the names of the directories on the FTP server are non-obvious. The real files you need to download are in a directory called pool? I've never seen that documented anywhere. I found it by accident on the Debian mirror we maintain. The boot disks are buried in the structure. Just finding the name of the package to install is a pain if you don't know one weird feature. "apt-cache search search_string" isn't obvious. What does apt in apt-cache have to do with files ending in .deb? Why -cache? It searches the cache, but again, it isn't something you'd guess. Even apt-get is nonobvious. You first have to type "apt-get update" then "apt-get upgrade" to upgrade your system?

    Please Debian developers, if you picked sensible names, most of the complaints would go away. The dependency system and the unbelievably large number of packages are great, but pick names that aren't nonobvious.z

    1. Re:The real problem... by dsfd · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, well maybe I would not call it
      *the* real problem, but I had many of the problems that you describe.

  64. Thoughts. by mnmn · · Score: 2


    I just hope this installer includes options to be started from a DOS prompt and install from isos located on NFS/SMB/FTP shares. Also hope this is NOT a replacement for dselect.

    If only they had a hardware config program like Knoppix, this could be the killer distro now.

    --
    "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    1. Re:Thoughts. by cbcbcb · · Score: 1

      Surely dselect is the part of the installer which most needs replacing?

  65. debconf is not an installer by Quietti · · Score: 1
    PGI is nice and everything, but does not use debconf,
    And how the hell is debconf supposed to help me partition a hard disk or auto-detect hardware? "dpkg-reconfigure /dev/hda" and "dpkg-reconfigure /dev/eth0" are not supported options. Debconf is a package configurator, not an installer. Big difference. Meanwhile, PGI is what a proper installer should be.
    --
    Software is not supposed to be about how to work around a useability issue. - Ken Barber
  66. Re:debian is dying by dondelelcaro · · Score: 2
    Related to the above, the weird thing about debian is their stubborn refusal to use a schedule.
    Debian doesn't use schedules that are tied to dates. It uses schedules that are tied to events. Have you somehow forgotten Anthony Town's message regarding the woody release schedule? The software industry is littered with examples of slipped release dates.
    "Release when ready", what kind of mantra is that?
    What kind of matra should debian posess then? If the software is ready, it gets released. If it's not ready, it doesn't. Those of us who use stable in production environments appreciate the unwillingness of Debian Developers to release a distribution that is not ready, even if it means breaking their precious schedules.
    What makes the debian project so special, that they can't use the same basic tool that almost all other projects in the world use?
    What good is an arbitrary schedule when it's not tied to reality? If you really feel it's necessary, feel free to make one for Debian yourself...
    It gives everyone a common goal to reach for.
    The goals of indivdual developers are stated. When those goals are in common, groups of developers share the goals. That being said, there is no central authority that decides who should be doing what. People scratch their own itches, and if they're feeling altruistic, scratch others while they're at it.
    --
    http://www.donarmstrong.com
  67. Re:Debian killed my thinkpad! (This really happene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    apt-shut-the-fuck-up

  68. what the "next generation" means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "An alpha release of the next generation Debian installer (Debian-Installer) has been announced."

    I'd say "An alpha release of the Debian installer (Debian-Installer) FOR the next generation has been announced.".
    Yep. Perhaps our kids will use it. :)

  69. Um, have you looked at aptitude? by Xtifr · · Score: 2
    dselect is an excellent package management tool

    Now now, let's not go TOO far! While dselect is perfectly workable once you get used to its quirks, I hardly think it qualifies as "excellent". Especially when compared to, say, aptitude. I admit, I stuck with dselect for a long time, and I agree with you that some of the complaints about dselect are overblown. But now that I've finally taken the time to learn aptitude, I am so much happier! It makes my life just so much easier. And, in the end, isn't that the whole point of a tool?

    Some of my favorite features of aptitude:
    • Allows you to mark packages as "autoloaded", i.e. only installed to fulfil a dependency. Will autoremove these packages once they're no longer needed. Marks can be manually tuned. This is so much simpler and easier than using deb-orphan, I can't tell you.
    • Can go directly from a package to one of its dependencies (or recommendations), and then back. This makes checking alternative dependencies (A | B | C) so much easier. Best of all, it's recursive.
    • Can see what packages depend on the package you're looking at (and can go browse those, just like dependencies).
    • Can browse virtual packages. Wow!
    • Remembers which packages are new until I tell it to forget.
    'Nuff said.
  70. RedHat Bare-Bones Install by MyHair · · Score: 2

    This leaves you with a bare-bones install between 90 - 150 mB, depending on the RH version.

    I'll have to try that again. I tried to do do a minimal install a month ago for a work project but still wound up with a 450 megabyte system! I tried RedHat because it seems to be the company favored Linux, but after that bloated install I used Zipslack instead and added a couple of packages and removed a few more.

    By the way, the project was to turn obsolete PCs into tn3270 terminals. I wanted it to basically be an embedded device so that it booted straight into the app and didn't allow logins, just like a real 3270 only slower startup. I got my first prototype working on a P166 using Zipslack and c3270 (a curses-based tn3270 client) from the x3270 project when the project was killed by a clueless VP when the tech-savvy people approved the idea and were excited about it. Pooh. I could've had a half-a-million-dollar savings on my resume.

    1. Re:RedHat Bare-Bones Install by inode_buddha · · Score: 2

      Bummer about the savings; I'd offer the knowledge as a potentially useful thing on my resume regardless (for the appropriate type of position)

      I really should clarify though: When I said "unselect EVERYTHING" I meant everything offered by the major categories for one of the default RH installations within text mode.

      In other words, this would be Gnome, KDE, Development, etc.

      I'm not up on 3270 service (I use the default VT102) but I imagine that hacking /etc/termcap could provide the appropriate functionality.

      BTW, I don't doubt that your tn3270 project was a good idea; I'd bet that the VP got scared by the technicality of it.

      --
      C|N>K
  71. Attack of the Open Source Developers by MyHair · · Score: 2

    That's the beauty of open source - you can reinvent the wheel as many times as you want. Yo leave it up to the end use to pick the wheel that rolls the best.

    That's not the way it should be. Everyone should get together, discuss the issue, decide on what's best and do it.

    Cute Senator: But that's the problem, not everyone agrees.

    The should be made to agree by someone!

    [Cue Imperial March music]

  72. knoppix installer by Suppafly · · Score: 2

    I hope the debian team gets Klaus Knopper to help work on the new debian installer. The hardware detection he made for the knoppix live cd's is great.

  73. Definitely take hints from Knoppix! by daemonboy · · Score: 2, Informative


    The Knoppix autodetection is awesome. I have a cheap monitor/videocard that I have never been able to get working properly at resolutions above 800x600 in any distro, and no matter how much I played with the Xfree86 settings.

    Knoppix booted and perfectly autodetected every bit of my hardware. X came up perfectly, so did sound. It worked immediately on first boot! I believe it's all GPL so why not include a lot of the stuff they worked on. It would make debian much better.

  74. Re:Knoppix installer is great ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tried Knoppix at home and at work on three PC's and every one of them worked great. Sound, video card, open office...We were impressed!!

  75. Debian hardware auto-detect easy installerDownload by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

    Just try Libranet. Also has a great tool (XAdminMenu) that makes it easy for even newbies to recompile a kernel. I wish all of you bitching about Debian's installer would try Libranet. There's no reason to put up with Rpm-hell when you have a Libranet CD laying around.

  76. spelling by Shwag · · Score: 1

    "Debian-Installer is an actively developed replacement for the older and now rather delapidated boot-floppies installer."

    correct spelling:
    dilapidated

  77. big word = small brain by pete0t2 · · Score: 1

    I think using useless big words such as delapidated is just a way of making up for a small brain. Especially when you spell it wrong (dilapidated).

    don't get me started on 'utilized'...

  78. Well, I never got my screen to work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't get any X-server to eat my ugly old noname monitor. Perhaps it was because I couldn't find monitors refresh rate in the convenient little brochure they always give you when you find a disposed screen. Somehow neither redhat or knoppix needed to know.
    Last I tried to install debian I had an ISA isdn-card. You probably need to be at least a tenth level linux wizard to install that in debian (except that in Knoppix it just works). And without iSDN, no internet connection, and you suddenly see how fatally some distros rely on everyone having a big, non-transient pipe to the mall of mirrors. Can't look up that pretty installation guide on the debian site _when you don't have a funtional OS on your only machine_!

    No, it's not enough to know what a partition is to install debian.

  79. Here's the proof by slashuzer · · Score: 0
    So mod me down. but here's the proof from DAlnet's website iiself.

    It is a sad fact that it has been somewhat difficult to connect to DALnet for some time. There are several reasons for this, including ongoing attacks and a loss of servers. This weekend, these problems have increased. DALnet has been under an unusually strong, unusually persistent attack. These attacks are directed at all DALnet client servers, rather than just a few. The DALnet administration is working with service providers and with law enforcement to stop these attacks, but this is not an easy task. We apologize for the disruption, and ask that you bear with us through these difficult times.

    Please visit website for more information.

    Why am I mentioning this? BEcause this is probably the biggest DOS attack against such a major network that has been going on for, hold your breath, over 48 hours. If slashdot was attacked similarly, we wouldn't be reading it. I even doubt a massive service like livejournal can take such an attack.

  80. RedHat/Debian on low spec by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 2

    Just out of interest has anyone ever tried the Mandrake or Redhat graphical installers run on a low spec machine?

    I've tried RedHat 8.0 on a Pentium 133 w/88MB of RAM. The graphical installer does not work, there's not enough resources. However, the text based install works just fine.

    I've also used Debian 3.0. I'll try the new installer when I get a chance this week. The old install is not as hard as everyone makes it out to be, just skip tasksel and dselect.

    Getting the right disk / CD, however, is the hard part of the install process. Maybe this new installer will fix that.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  81. The best Debian installer is Xandros by LINM · · Score: 1
    The best installer in all of Linux is in fact from the Debian based Xandros. It has the best hardware detection and has multiple paths for both advanced and novice users.

    Unfortunately, it is currently not GPL so cannot be part of the standard Debian at the moment. Anyone who wants to try a great Debian installer should try it out.

    --

    Hunger is the best sauce.

  82. LUG DISCOUNT by LINM · · Score: 1

    Forgot to mention, LUGs get discount code dcce72d486f2 for 45% off the purchase price in the store...

    --

    Hunger is the best sauce.