Download Anaconda for Debian
hsoom writes "Debian Planet is reporting that unofficial sarge-based ISOs using the Anaconda installer can be downloaded from here. The features developed so far include '...changed the code that installs software to use APT instead of RPM, removed Red Hat-specific configuration hooks, and written a new tool called picax that builds Anaconda-based installation CDs from a Debian repository'. However there are features that are not yet working and it is not recommended for use in a production environment."
Why do I get the feeling that Linux users enjoy installing their OS so much? If you like to do it that much, just grab a copy of Win98 and reinstall to your heart's content.
I have been pwned because my
It is official; UN Statistics now confirms: the USA is dying.
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered USA when president Bush confirmed that their markets have dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction their value when he began his term. Coming on the heels of a recent UN survey which plainly states that America has lost its way, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. America is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by being the most hated nation in the world.
You don't need to be a foreigner to predict America's future. The hand writing is on the wall: America faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for Americans because the USA is dying. Things are looking very bad for America. As many of us are already aware, as the American economy continues to collapse.
Red ink flows like a river of blood. For all practical purposes, all Americans are dead, or at least should be.
One of the main 'comments' I get when I recommend Debian GNU/Linux to people, is 'Debian is difficult to install' - a fair comment, and this will be a move in the right direction.
Give it some time.
Knoppix is right now probably the easiest way to install Debian, via knx-hdinstall.
Join the Free Software Foundation
Would be nice to see this expand into a single installer / package manager and (importantly!) a Dependency manager.
Maybe a hybrid of Anaconda + dselect would be nice, if rolled into 1. Add 'kickstart' kind of capablity to that and it would be a kickass app to have around.
Specially since most people dont tend to install Linux from installable mode very often( i havent in the last 3 years)
However there are features that are not yet working and it is not recommended for use in a production environment.
A bit like Debian overall then, really.
I would continue but I can see the hoards of Gentoy kiddies charging over the brow of the hill to assult us all with their whiny and "insightgful" commentry on how much cooler emerge is than apt-get and anaconda are.
Here's the link to building anaconda-based debian ISO images.
Finally a quick, easy way to remaster debian to hand out to friends.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
If I wasn't constantly reinstalling it.
It's harder this time of year when I'm so busy with last minute details, but come summer, I'm a reinstalling geek all over again.
My Anaconda don't want none unless you got buns, hon.
Before getting too enthusiatic about this, please do remember to read the errata before downloading the iso images. Lots of work still needs to be done, but this is a step in the right direction.
If your a Linux Fanatic, that wants an Easy to use desktop Linux, with upto date packages, gui configuaration and hardware support along with the mom approval.
I tried Srackware, Debiam, Gen2, Windows XP, but in the end I found Mandrake Cooker. Now with 2.6 kernel KDE 3.2-b2, OpenOffice 1.1.1, and more. Debian can keep its geek (I mean bearded-loser-geek locked in the basement for 20 years, not the cool punk geeks like me) operarting system for them selves, While I work productivley with OpenOffice.org 1.1 using my Microsoft Natrual Keyboard, utilizing the Windows and Internet keys as killer shortcuts, those bearded losers are writing using LaTeX using Emacs with a Dvorak Happy Hacking keyboard thinking somehow, they are a master author.
While I'm using the Apple+enchanced Konqueror to browse the web at lighting fast speed on my cable modem, the bearded losers are browsing on their 28k modem using Lynx or Mozilla with ugly alaised fonts (ughh), trying to figure out how to mod me -1, flamebait on slashdot, but DNS dosent work, so they have enter the IP address manually.
I'm playing the hottest linux games such as Unreal Tournement, Tuxracer, Frozen bubble and Chromian along with my case modded gamecubee and PS2, while the bearded losers are playing snakes in emacs and nethack.
I'm playing all the latests hits with Rhythmbox and listening to Internet radio, while the bearded losers are listening to ogg files from the command line, after hhaving to edit 20 text files and recompile their kernel 5 times, oh, Debian regarded all the good drives as "non-free", so he uses a POS ISA sound card instead.
Simply put, If you want to be leet, but don't have time for gentoo, and don't want to be in the basement all your life, Get Mandrake Cooker!
-ChanServ- A novice of the temple once approached the Chief Priest with a question. -ChanServ- The novice asked, "Master, does Emacs have the Buddha nature?" -ChanServ- The Chief Priest had been in the temple for many years and could be relied upon to know these things. He thought for several minutes before replying. -ChanServ- "I don't see why not. It's got bloody well everything else." -ChanServ- With that, the Chief Priest went to lunch. The novice suddenly achieved enlightenment, several years later.
I still prefer text based installations, so it will be great if Anaconda will be optional, so Debian will have the best of both worlds.
Does anybody know anything about it?
Anaconda is just a script that asks you a bunch of questions and eventually just calls the normal installer with a set of user-selected options.
Not much different from what you're doing now, unless you're compiling your own Linux from scratch.
So don't worry. Your precious text-based installation is still right there where it always was. In the stone age.
One of the main 'comments' I get when I recommend Debian GNU/Linux to people, is 'Debian is difficult to install'
I think it can be argued that the Debian installer asks many questions that may not be easy to answer for a Linux newbie.
But, as you say, there is hope: I remember someone saying, a few years ago, that a RedHat had formatted their drives without clearly mentioning that it would be destructive (oops!). Today, Mandrake can be installed after just a few minutes worth of clicking "OK". It generally makes the right choices for the user, clearly shows what partitions will be created, and warns if it's about to blank an existing windows partition. If it finds some unsupported hardware, it mentions what it knows about it, so that the user can simply ask their local guru for help.
I think it's no exaggeration to say that someone who already installed Windows can safely install e.g. a Mandrake.
Serously, the anaconda site will be in for a very heavy slahsdoting. They have links to two isos on the page that slashdot links to. How many will click on those links? how many will be disapointed? The filesisze are BTW: sarge-2003-11-25-bin1.iso 688,074,752 bytes sarge-2003-11-25-bin2.iso 42,174,464 bytes ie, about 720 Megabytes in total. I would consider putting up a torrent link myself, but I don't have a large enough pipe to download those files before the site (inevetably) goes down.
I think this is cool. I have been thinking of ditching Windows and was leaning towards a Debian "based" distro. Easier to install (for me) is a good thing.
I can understand some people saying Debian, in it's current state is difficult to install.
But I cringe when I hear that from a fellow computer person. I mean honestly, just because it's not using framebuffer and a mouse on install?
True, deslect/apt can be intimidating, but much easier the trying to manually find rpms down the road...
Do you spend more time supporting systems or installing systems??? Me, it's supporting them, so I love apt...
And if I hear one more RH person say "Well, just select 'everything' on install, then Up2date doesn't have dependicy problems" I'm gonna kick them in the kneecap...
Common guy's just because Debian has a nice GUI installer doe's that really make it any better distro then it currently was?, For people who think debian stable is outdated, Give Knoppix a try , uses unstable branch and comes with nice hardware detection. I had problems with Redhat 9.0 detecting inbuilt hardware on a compaq armarda m300 and knoppix had no problem...
This would have all sorts of benefits:
- The installer can be written using the full GNOME / KDE / OpenGL / whatever-rings-your-bell libraries.
- You know your hardware is supported before installing.
Also, imagine reading everything from the network instead of from a CD. Then you could make a Windows program based on loadlin or whatever. Put a link to it on a web-page that says "Wanna try Linux? Click here!".After it has booted into Linux and started GNOME / KDE / XFCE / Whatever, the desktop contains a "Click here to install Linux on your hard drive".
A nice way to lower the barrier of entry, no?
Installed the Bubblemon yet?
I don't to critisize OpenOffice here, but I do have some problems with it. I have a Liebermann Mach 3.8 machine (A P4 clocked at 3.8Ghz with 4Gb of PC3600 DDR RAM) running Debian Unstable with kernel 2.4.23-bk7 compiled with -o3 with Anacoda installed.
I have been waiting for 2 minutes for it to load, then it types very slowly. Normaly I can do around 50-70 WPM on my Microsoft Natural Internet Keyboard, With Debian I'm lucky to get even 10 WPM. The problems don't end there. I won't even go into the stabillity problems, the annoying command line, the broken package mangement and the annoying kde bias (I'm a gnome user).
Meanwhile, my Dell Optiplex with a Pentium II at 400Mhz, running Mandrake 9.2 loads in 20 seconds, if that and its predictive text and autocorrection means I can get around 80-90 WPM and get it all correct.
I'm sorry, but in the current state, Debian is a piece of dog shit. Don't get me wrong, I love linux, I use it exclusiveley for games thanks to WineX and KDE, but as far as getting REAL work done, Mandrake 9.2 is unbeatable.
Now this is inevitably going to be moderated -1, troll or flamebait, but it dosen't change the fact Debian is the WORST distrobution ever
Perhaps what I should have said instead was "text-based interface".
(Review of The Art of UNIX Programming )
Danny.
I have written over 900 book reviews
It's a shame about that moderation, man.
Hopefully this means we have Kickstart too.
Debian has been needing kickstart-like functionality for a while. (No, FAI is not the answer, it works in a somewhat different manner, and its a royal pain to set up to bootstrap unstable systems from a host running stable).
BeOS had that *years* ago
That the person installing the computer know what hardware they have?
I understand confusion among MB chipsets and the likes... But when a sysadmin comes up and says "Do I have a southbridge?"
I have helped many people compile a kernel, and they always say "Well how am I supposed to know that?"
For a homeuser, sure, I understand... But even then, couldn't manufacturers include a cut sheet?
But sysadmins, come on... If you don't know the hardware in the machine, maybe it's best you don't work on it, and find someone in the office who does....
Debian is outdated.
Debian sucks.
There is nothing to see here.
Move along! Move along!
Knoppix seems like a house of cards to me, it works great as is, but when I did apt-get update I started running into some issues/errors. Then in my ignorance I changed my sources.list to all unstable and did apt-get update again, big mistake. By the end of that day the system wouldn't boot. I've also tried (and I am still running) morphix, which is based on knoppix but is deb unstable. But I've had a few issues with that as well although I'm still on an older version of morhpix (but as parent mentioned I don't want to reinstall now, I should be able to just update this deb distro.)
.bashrc and that worked. But once I installed kdm for logging in it doesn't read my .bashrc anymore. Where do I put it when kdm is installed.
Oh and I tried mepis about a month ago which was mentioned here about a week or so ago. Nice installer but even though I told it not to write lilo to the mbr, it still did and hosed it(just saw a bunch of zeros). The morhpix live cd came in handy to fix that. Also mepis seemed a lot slower than the other 2 distro's on this same hardware setup. Just right clicking on a link would literally take about 2 seconds before I would see the floating menu, or same thing in just using the os in general (whether I was in kde or a light wm like icewm).
I actually prefer using unstable deb for latest software and morphix is a pretty good choice, just not sure if it's the one I want to stick with.
Anyone know of other deb based distro's that are strictly sid/woody? I don't want a distro that mixed with all of em.
Also since this is slashdot I'll throw out a few of my problems and see if anyone can help. I've posted these to boards but no help really.
1) I have a nvidia card. I want to have vsync on for opengl apps at all times. I put the env variable in my
2) I have a psx pad hooked up to my lpt port. It works fine in windows and has worked in older linux distros (mdk 8,9 redhat 7.2) but in all these deb distros it works, but it seems to be using up way too much cpu resources, games that run at a solid 60fps without the gamepad drop to like 30-35 fps with it enabled. I've searched this to no end and the only thing I came up with was modifiying gamecon.c and modifying the psx delay value to something lower. People said this worked for them, but it didn't for me. And gamecon.c hasn't changed since 2001 so I know that the previous distros I was using were using the same version of gamecon but yet had no cpu/slowdown issues.
Ok I could go on and on with linux problems I've had, but if the slashdot crowd can help me with those 2 I'd be a happy linux user.
Morphix or Mepis ( or even one of hte commercialized distros ) is even easier.. just push a button on your desktop and it launches a ( mostly ) GUI install ..
..
Great for a 'new user'.. they dont even have to drop ot a shell ( whats that they will ask ) to start the install
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Debian is outdated.
Debian sucks.
There is nothing to see here.
Move along! Move along!
about a broken version of Debian being offered up for public consumption?
Use Gentoo.
If I really had to say I think we could do one thing better, it would be having a 'headless' install option for some of these devices.
:)
There are times where I go and install software, and have to be in a different room or different area, that me physically being at the console for the entire installation is pratically impossible. It would be wonderful if there was an option to do a network install over https, or a network install over ssh, to get it up and working.
Just think how nice it would be to pop in a CD, sit back at your desk, go to an IP address, and volia, install your server without actually being there
Oh, well, just wishful thinking, unless anyone knows a good installer, wants to help write one, or knows of a free as in beer system to get something like that accomplished.
Ian
I disable sigs...do you?
That would make Debian both one of the most solid distros and one of the most easiest distros at the same time.
Just curious.
I never would have gotten into Debian if not for the hard disk install of Knoppix
Since apt has been ported to the rpm format (by Connectiva) it would be nice to see picax extended to creation of isos for any rpm based distro using the apt-rpm port.
"However there are features that are not yet working and it is not recommended for use in a production environment."
There is no end to criticism if MS or any other company releases something that's buggy. Why does OSS get a pass? Are we expected to beta test? Is that the future of software?
Of course, as a newbie who has wrestled with the install process for Debian quite a few times, screwing up and freaking out, it has been the REAL education I always wanted.
And it is the dumbing down of windows that drove me away. What kind of opinion can one have of human beings if you believe that you must always make it easier for them. Some people are smart. Some liked to be challenged, so long as it is not fruitless.
My machine is humming in a way I always dreamed it would. It took me a little over a year to go from totally uninformed (not even knowing what Linux was) to basically informed. When I look at windows with all their pictures and random names for the system functions, I can see the low opinion developers must have for the non-technical masses. The world of convenience is not unquestionably better for all. Sometimes it just makes us weak.
So how long before the redhat-config-** are ported to debian is the next question.
The differences between these two may soon lie in just deb or rpm. Which is really better may be just a matter of preference, but it seems that there are more distros using rpm than deb, so will debian ever move deb to rpm or are they tied to deb?
Only 'flamers' flame!
Does slashdot hate my posts?
99.99999999% of the world said "I really don't care. And what the hell is a Debian?"
Well, I suppose it's what you're looking for out of a computer, but one of the best things about linux is it's compatibility with old hardware. Debian is my personal favorite of a distro because it's so streamlined. Only what you want when you want it. Fluff like anaconda (like RedHat) will only slow down slower machines like mine and decrease the performance.
On that note, is dselect really that bad? In the time it took me to learn the interface and to select (or deselect) all the packages that i wanted, the windows XP installer would have just about finished loading the SCSI, SATA, & RAID drivers, none of which I have the remote possibility of using.
Now here's where i get really scitzofrenic:
The good thing about this anaconda installer is that it will bring a wider user base to Debian (though many people will be wary because they heard from a friend of a friend that it's hard to install) and to Linux in general (I hope) which will in turn bring about better driver support and software releases to Linux (though maybe i'm just being idealistic)
Debian is Slow, Worse, Expensive
/lib/modules, as you are going to need it.
Open source may be good, but there is one example that sticks out like a sore thumb as a problem with open source. Debian gnu/Linux. It is offically the Worst Linux Distribution ever made.
First of all, Debian has the most out of date software packages of any major mainstream distros. Even in the unstable version, is KDE 2.2 and Gnome 2.0, with Xfree86 4.1 (A version that really sucks). There are literally years that pass between each update of Debian.
Secondly, its a pain in the goatse to set up, first of all, you are forced to use Kernel 2.2, which is horribly hacked with "backports" to get any use on any modern machine (Read, made after 1999). Good luck memorizing all the *.ko files in
Configuring XFree86 is hell! If you don't have a Thick X11 orilley book, and a list of your horizontal sync values from your monitor's intruction manual (if you even have one), BOOM! There goes your monitor.
Even then, good luck getting anything over 640x480@16 colours.
The most common response to help questions on the Debian mailing list is "n00b, READ THE FUCKING MANUAL, you idiot, go back to WINDOWS XP if you can't learn to use dselect", true too, search the archives if you think I'm lying. Other distros give you comprehensive PRINTED MANUALS, PHONE SUPPPORT and/or freindly forums where repling RTFM gets you banned!
Debians support for any decent hardware, including USB mice, scanners, Sound cards, heck even Serial devices struggle. If you can even get 80x25 text mode with PS/2 input devices you are really lucky.
Apt-get has many flaws. First of all it uses a non standard package format (the rest of the world uses RPM, deprecate the DEB format!), has broken respetories, and out of date software to install. All this combined with the kludgey dselect user interface make package management a nightmare.
And if you think I'm joking about this, find out why THOUSANDS of Debian users are switching to REAL distributions Debian is falling to pieces, if it is to survive any market share it will be through its superior forks (Xandros, Lindows, K/G-noppix) and unoffical package respetories.
Of course, while all this is going on, the only thing the Debian maintainers do is argue about politics on the mailing lists. The distribution decays while its creators argue over inane details like software licensing and the virtues of Marxism. Please! Spare me the political rhetoric and just give me a working distro!
Don't get me wrong, I love Linux, and I'm happily using distros such as Mandrake, SuSE, Gentoo and Fedora. But I'm sick to death of zealots that push obsolete Distros on me EVERY FREAKING TIME linux is mentioned. I'm speaking from real world experiance here.
This is really old. You get mod points just for using cut'n'paste?
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Now you have the best of both worlds in one package. Both graphical and command line with redhat's hardware detection (the detection is a much bigger deal than the gui install to me, but I know alot of people who feel otherwise). On 99% of all setups redhat manages to detect every piece of hardware in the system and have everything configured correctly when all is said and done, no other system including some redhat knockoff's like mandrake manages this.
;)
Debian has the best package management and repositories, where debian has stubbornly remained archaic in terms of the installer and hardware detection, redhat has done so in terms of package management. RPM and the Debian installer BOTH suck arse.
Now if we can get the other simple redhat configuration utilities ported over. Little things like netconfig may not be the biggest issue in the world, but certainly simplify setup for someone just started out. You should NOT have to know what a default gateway is just to plug the number in and get your system on the internet
I was playing drink and surf and over bought some case badges. Help me get rid of them and donate money to debian at the same time. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item =3642840115&category=41881&rd=1
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item =3642840800&category=41881&rd=1
"I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I think it can be argued that the Debian installer asks many questions that may not be easy to answer for a Linux newbie.
That's true, but the point is that most of those questions are unecessary. Every PCI device on my system has a number, and the Linux kernel comes with a map of device number to driver names.
I'm not a Linux newbie, but see it as a waste of time to answer silly questions about the modules I'd like to load for every bit of hardware in my system when my hardware is designed explicitly to avoid the need to do so.
I took a look at the Progeny installer. Very pretty. I had an empty hard drive so I gave it a whirl.
I CAN say don't try to select individual packages and don't try to install everything.
BOTH times it crashed and shut down.
I would have liked to see it work to see what I ended up with. Maybe another time...
David