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Alpha Relegated To FreeBSD's Tier 2

flynn_nrg writes "Scott Long, from the release engineering team, has sent this message to the freebsd-alpha mailing list:'The day has finally come to demote FreeBSD/Alpha to tier-2 status. While I'm sure that this will come as a disappointment to many, the simple truth is that there is no longer enough community interest nor developer interest to fix critical bugs and assist in the development of new features. We've struggled with this for several years, and it's time to set the proper expectations before we enter 5-STABLE.'" (Read on for the rest of the announcement.)

"Being Tier-2 does not mean that Alpha support will actively be removed from the tree. It does, however, mean that ISO images might not be produced for upcoming releases, pre-compiled packages might not be produced and more (in fact, this already stopped several weeks ago), and future security advisories might not be issued for it. This only applies to FreeBSD 5.3 and beyond; existing alpha releases are still supported by the security team according to their schedule, and future 4.x erratas and releases will still support it also. Demotion is also not a terminal condition. If in the future there is an renewed interest and the existing problems can be fixed, it can be re-considered for tier-1.

Alpha was a very important platform for FreeBSD. It paved the way both for 64-bit cleanliness and for being able to support multiple architectures. It was also a nice and refreshing architecture in a world of bland and hackish i386 systems. Thanks to Doug Rabson for porting to it in the first place and thanks to everyone who supported it afterwards.

The Release Engineering Team"

7 of 70 comments (clear)

  1. Re:alpha is dead by revmoo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Netcraft confirms it! Alpha is....... nevermind

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    I would expect such blatant racism on Fark, but on Slashdot? Mods please ban this asshole.
  2. Re:alpha is dead by isthisthingon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Uhhh. I do. :-) We have two Alpha boxen running BSD for a variety of purposes. They're brutally dependable and really just plain fun to work with. The SRM BIOS is more like a shell than a BIOS in the sense that most people are familar with. For someone familar with Unix, it makes so much sense--no goofy menu/submenu systems like most i386 BIOSes to go hunting through for the setting you're trying to change.

    We had a situation where a cooling unit failed and a couple of RAID cards, drives, RAM, and what not fried in some of our i386 boxes, but the Alphas (knock wood) have never missed a beat even after that.

    I SOOO wish there was a bigger call for 'em in the marketplace, these two servers are among the finest pieces of engineering I've ever encountered. Really. They're great. But, alas! Alphas got trounced by Intel. :-|

    Sigh. Sad day.

    --
    And then one day you find, ten years have gone behind you....
  3. welcome back ... by hubertf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... to NetBSD.

    Bread from the bakery,
    meat from the butcher,
    and multiplatform operating systems from The NetBSD Foundation.

    - Hubert

  4. Bright Side of Things by vga_init · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hey, there's always VMS! =)

    1. Re:Bright Side of Things by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Informative
      That went right over your head. Ken Olsen, the President of DEC, made those comments in 1984. It's kind of a "640K is enough for anybody" sort of thing, except that Mr. Olsen actually said this.

      I thought it was pretty funny and relevant, personally.

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      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  5. This doesn't mean it's dead by agent+dero · · Score: 4, Interesting

    All this really means is that they will not concentrate their efforts on the Alpha port as much as AMD64, and i386.

    It is by no means dead, if you have an Alpha, you can try to help them out ;)

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    Error 407 - No creative sig found
  6. Re:alpha is dead by johnalex · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We're using a DEC (that's right, the original DEC) Alpha 2100 here to run our credit union software. We've upgraded almost everything that can be upgraded short of adding an additional processor. This unit came in the door in 1994. It's still running as it has for almost 10 years now: 24x7x365.

    I've always said, if DEC had hired quality marketing people in addition to quality engineers, the company would still be in business. They designed and built rock-solid stuff.

    --
    JA
    http://www.johnalex.org/