Slashdot Mirror


IBM's Interest in Red Flag Linux

eldavojohn writes "For those of you unfamiliar with Red Flag Linux, it's an OS for the growing Chinese community of Linux users. Interestingly enough, IBM is looking to support Red Flag Linux as the next distribution of Linux that its more than 300 applications will run on. Support from a huge vendor like IBM certainly raises the rate of adoption of a distribution of Linux so this is certainly good news for Red Flag Linux and also the Chinese open source users. IBM currently supports Red Hat and SUSE Linux, which creates twice as much testing for each of their applications. Will Red Flag Linux cause them to require three times the amount of normal testing?"

4 of 97 comments (clear)

  1. This is a good thing. by miffo.swe · · Score: 4, Informative

    If IBM is smart they will target LSB (Linux Standard Base). Then they will ask the distributions to please conform to that standard. If anything this is the kind of thing that could work on unify Linux even better if done right. Ofcourse testing will have to be done anyway but the likelyhood of problems will be very small for every new distribution supported.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
    1. Re:This is a good thing. by teg · · Score: 3, Informative

      RHEL and SLES are both LSB certified already - the problem is that LSB doesn't specify enough to be useful. An LSB-compliant application needs to include everything outside the LSB scope in itself, which ends up being the OS minus the X libraries and glibc (I'm exagerrating, but not that much). LSB is the lowest common denominator, and a very static target, in a world of rapid evolvement (e.g. GNOME every 6 months, new compilers, new glibcs etc).

  2. Asianux by raffe · · Score: 4, Informative

    Red flag is based of Asianux which is based on red hat.The current release version of Asianux is 2.0 , which is based upon Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4. Asianux 1.0 was based upon Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3. The first releases of red flag was very poor quality. Asianux is a joint development between Linux vendors Red Flag , Miracle Linux Corporation and Haansoft .

  3. Re:Red Flag...LSB compliant by ronanbear · · Score: 3, Informative

    A list of Linux Standard Base compliant distros is available on their site http://www.freestandards.org/en/Products Asianux 2.0 (which Red Flag is based on) is listed as compliant so it would be reasonable to assume compliance. I've never used Red Flag so YMMV.

    --
    the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe