Slashdot Mirror


OS Review: NetBSD 1.6.2 on SPARC64

JigSaw writes "NetBSD is the king of operating system portability, running on 40+ different hardware platforms, including x86, MIPS, and even the Sega Dreamcast. So it comes as no surprise that among the supported platforms, NetBSD runs on Tony Bourke's Sun Ultra 5. Here is his review."

14 of 58 comments (clear)

  1. the only alternate OS for NeXT boxen? by Artifex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I haven't looked recently, but other than NeXTStep, the only OS I ever found that could run on my basic black slab was NetBSD, and even that had to be strapped from a bootserver, with no local disk support. I'm not sure whether it's more a testament to the wacky hardware or how tenacious the NetBSD teams have been that they were able to do this at all...

    --
    Get off my launchpad!
  2. The only real competitor to Linux... by DesScorp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...in the embedded space, that is. I see NetBSD turning up in a lot of devices now, including our new office copier of all things.

    Competition is a good thing, mmmmmkay, as some here would say.

    I have to wonder what's driving Net's adoption in the embedded space. Is it technical merit, or the the BSD license allowing vendors to keep their changes closed?

    I'm just glad to see that Netcraft was wrong :P

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:The only real competitor to Linux... by DashEvil · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm pretty sure that really clean stable code + a license to do whatever you want with it is really all the reason they need.

      --
      -If God wanted people to be better than me, he would have made them that way.
    2. Re:The only real competitor to Linux... by Homology · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I have to wonder what's driving Net's adoption in the embedded space. Is it technical merit, or the the BSD license allowing vendors to keep their changes closed?

      I've often wondered why some companies choose to use Linux when they are unwilling to show their source code. It clearly has not been to the advantage of the companies involved to be exposed as not complying with the GPL. It is risky business decision to choose to ignore license issues.

      Perhaps more attention will be given to the *BSD family with it's technically very good OS and a free license.

  3. Ultra 5? Oh please no by keesh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you're going to review an OS on an UltraSparc box, please pick anything other than the u5/10. The u5/10 is basically a PC clone with an ultrasparc processor. It has a pisspoor IDE chipset, a crippled CPU (IIi has far less cache than a II), a crippled PCI backplane, low memory bandwidth and a PC-like chipset. A far better measure of how well an OS has been ported is an Ultra 2.

    (and yes, I do know what I'm talking about, and I have sparc-related code in the Linux kernel to prove it :) )

    1. Re:Ultra 5? Oh please no by xaoslaad · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It is also cheap to snag on eBay. So are U2's, but well beggars can't be choosers. And if I remember what started all these posts on OS News, it was someone snagging a U5 on ebay or some such. I might be making that up; but i seem to recall. Anyway, for someone wanting to learn about Sparc, Solaris, OpenBoot, and just plain mess around with something different, it is not a bad place to start. And not caring too much about performance what's it matter if he does it on a U5 or U2, and the U5's come in under the U2's a lot of the time. Ya I'm a baised whore cause that's how I got my U5, but then I can also tell you price was a problem, and when I wanted and UltraSparc to learn about Solaris 8/9 and OpenBoot on I got my hands on a beautiful looks like its fresh out of the U5 for $200. I ear the U10's are flaky, but I don't know I've never used one and cannot say myself, but whatever. I tend to think the U5 is just fine for what he's doing without inserting the 'you're using a cheap loser system' type snobbery.

    2. Re:Ultra 5? Oh please no by 680x0 · · Score: 4, Informative
      A far better measure of how well an OS has been ported is an Ultra 2.
      I have an Ultra 1 (UltraSparc @ 167MHz), and I have to say that my experience installing NetBSD 1.6.1 was quite similar to his experience (panic during install, no binary packages available, etc.) And, besides, the review seemed to focus on the app side of things, not the driver/hardware side.

      That said, I don't think there's anything major that can't be fixed. Once installed, it's run flawlessly, and the only package I couldn't compile from pkgsrc is Apache 2.x (I installed Apache 1.x instead).

      I've had the (32-bit) sparc port of NetBSD running solidly on a SparcStation-2 for over a year and a half (it's my DHCP/NTP/DNS server).

    3. Re:Ultra 5? Oh please no by agent+dero · · Score: 3, Informative

      I installed OpenBSD on my Sparc Station 5 without a hitch, but on my dual CPU ultra2, it paniced in the very end of the installation

      Here's some tips:
      when it paniced for me, it was really done installing, it will drop you into single-user mode. From there (where I was) you'll really just have to create the rc.conf file. And maybe do some disk-limbo and some network configuration with 'ifconfig' but it's not too difficult.

      The same basic thing happened for me with NetBSD when I first tried it, but now, it runs like a champ, give it a try

      (I got the Ultra2 from AnySystem.com on eBay for $70, try them out) </shameless plug>

      --
      Error 407 - No creative sig found
    4. Re:Ultra 5? Oh please no by 680x0 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I hate to reply to my own comment, but it looks like the binary packages are available for 1.6.2 for sparc64.

  4. I *hate* OSNews reviews by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why, oh why, do I keep letting myself be suckered into reading these piles of drivel? I know I'll lose an IQ point every time I do, but I just can't keep from looking.

    For example, I have no idea why you would ever not use pkgsrc (or ports) to build packages whenever possible. The reviewer goes on for half a page about his troubles compiling OpenSSL from source. No kidding? That's why we have pkgsrc and ports - someone else has already solved all the little problems for you!

    Likewise, he's incredulous that his locally-built package using uber-elite optimization flags runs faster than the downloadable binary package. Frankly, that's like being amazed that a locally-built Debian package may be faster than the generic i386 package that you can download.

    I honestly don't know why they label these diatribes as "reviews", when they should be called "a day spent with a system I don't understand".

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  5. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit userland.
    NetBSD wants to have 64-bit userland.

  6. Re:Too bad by Kraken137 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Thanks for that pointer... after toying with it for a while, I realized that if I simply created the ld0* devices by hand (a serious pain in the ass), everything was fine and the installation could continue.

  7. Similar problems by harikiri · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have an Ultra5 here at home that I test things out with from time to time. At one stage I envisionged being able to use it as a server running Open/Net/FreeBSD.

    NetBSD (1.6.1) had the crashing issues with installer, and once I finally got it installed I too had issues with packages compiling.

    So I decided to skip instead ot OpenBSD 3.4. Got that installed, only to discover that the applications it supports in its ports tree is smaller and not up to date.

    I then looked into FreeBSD. Now I have an external monitor I use with my Ultra5, and both recently (5.2) and a while back (5.1 or 5.0) I simply couldn't navigate past the initial boot screen to complete the install. The problem with FreeBSD on sparc is that it retains its curses-based install GUI, which renders in some horrible way (term is fucked up) when using a monitor. There are 4 options you can try when using installing, and none of them worked to give me a readable screen. To date I haven't tried installing via console, which could be the key.

    Either way, OpenBSD has proved to be the easiest and most stable for installing on Ultrasparc to date, so that's what I'm recommending at present to people at work (have it on a few Ultra 5's and E220's).

    --
    Man watching 6 MSCE's around a sun box, looks alot like the opening scene's of 2001:space odyssey...
    1. Re:Similar problems by nutznboltz · · Score: 3, Informative

      Try a serial console. Just plug the ttya port into another computer's serial port with a null modem and use tip or cu.