Fedora Legacy Shutting Down
An anonymous reader writes to pass on the news that the Fedora Legacy project is going away. The project has been providing security updates and critical bugfixes to end-of-life Red Hat and Fedora Core releases. From the article: "In case any of you are not aware, the Fedora Legacy project is in the process of shutting down. The current model for supporting maintenance distributions is being re-examined. In the meantime, we are unable to extend support to older Fedora Core releases as we had planned. As of now, Fedora Core 4 and earlier distributions are no longer being maintained. Discussions... on the #Fedora-Legacy channel have brought to light the fact that certain Fedora Legacy properties (servers) may be going away soon, such as the repository at http://download.fedoralegacy.org and the build server."
RHAT just said that if you don't pay them money you aren't important. Bet that makes all those who donated code to them for free feel just great!
IMHO, dropping support for a system that is only 3 years old is a mistake. Everyone who hasn't upgraded to the latest versions of Fedora will loose support. Ubuntu provides 5 years of support with most of their major releases, so would it be so hard for Redhat to follow? I think that Redhat is trying to push it's Enterprise Linux a bit too strongly. I'd like to see the support window for future releases of Fedora to be extended.
This is just another little step to Debian supremacy!!! Go GNU/Linux Debian!!! The Universal Operative System!!!
Uh, they did that long ago when Fedora was created so they could "concentrate on the server market". Whatever makes business sense I guess. I have always said Red Hat users are suckers.
Ubuntu will crush Red Hat eventually anyway.
""In case any of you are not aware, the Fedora Legacy project [CC] [MD] [GC] is in the process of shutting down. The current model for supporting maintenance distributions is being re-examined. In the meantime, we are unable to extend support to older Fedora Core releases as we had planned. As of now, Fedora Core 4 and earlier distributions are no longer being maintained. Discussions... on the #Fedora-Legacy channel have brought to light the fact that certain Fedora Legacy properties (servers) may be going away soon, such as the repository at http://download.fedoralegacy.org/ and the build server.""
So what does Microsoft have to say?
You mean, how are Linux fans going to justify Red Hat not supporting the older versions of software that doesn't cost anything? Technically Red Hat doesn't even support the current version of Fedora Core. If you want support for multiple years, buy one of the flavors of Red Hat Enterprise.
Are you going to complain next that Microsoft isn't supporting Vista's beta 2 anymore? It's pretty much the same thing.
#DeleteChrome
Fedora's whole mission is pretty much implement the cutting edge and let people experiment and play with it. The target audience was inteded to be those desktop users/enthusiasts who would jump on the current release anyway, since it is free. If any business saw a distribution like Fedora and thought it a good idea to base their infrastructure on a Fedora Core release, they are now getting basically what they asked for.
I don't think this is necessarily a bad thing, it's more an acceptance of what people should have perceived all along, Fedora isn't trying to be that kind of distribution. If you want that kind, go to a commercial vendor (RHAT, Novell) or go with something like CentOS or Debian, which have clear missions/policies that align with that sort of usage. Could consider Ubuntu, but I wouldn't be that confident in Canonical yet, but the LTS is at least a stated mission and Canonical has a vested business interest in being considered a serious business worthy option, while Fedora obviously hs no such vested interest. Similarly, I wouldn't use Gentoo or OpenSuSE in those contexts either, their missions are valid, but not in line with common business desires/needs. Debian and CentOS do, and generally end up 'boring' in the eyes of enthusiasts, and Fedora Core, Gentoo, Ubuntu's 6 month releases, etc all are generally more interesting to the enthusiast, but can't provide legacy support and the cutting edge all the time.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
MS pays its programmers to write their software. I think that qualifies as a pretty big difference, don't you?
RHT said nothing. Fedora Legacy, "a community-supported open source project" which "is not a supported project of Red Hat, Inc." did.
My question though is whether what is happening to this Fedora Legacy would not happen to released Windows versions. I have my doubts.
huh? Novell are copping some flack, but they just posted a profit, and Redhat has never been more profitable. Again, I say huh?
"I am just waiting for Linus to cancel the 2.8 release."
Linus would have to announce a 2.8 release before he could cancel it.
This is horrible...plain and simple.
From Internet News
Typically a Fedora Core release comes out every six or seven months. Red Hat's flagship offering, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), by contrast, comes out every 18 to 24 months. Under the new lifecycle plan a Fedora Core release would have 13 months of support.
"Anything beyond this really seems to be corner cases that would really be better served by something like CentOS for free, RHEL for rock solid support, or Oracle for crackmonkies," Keating wrote. "What does this mean for the "Legacy" project? We feel that the resources currently and in the past that have contributed to the Legacy project could be better used within the Fedora project space."
I've got a fever and the only prescription is more COBOL.
No kidding.
Slashdot was the first place I started seeing the mantra "use older distros for older machines" to combat Linux code bloat. So I put it to the test.
An old system (450 MHz K6-3+ saddled with VESA fbdev) under RedHat 6.2, all of its security updates, and a few hand-compiled programs (older ffmpeg, xine-lib with gcc 2.95) can play MPEG4 movies at 512x4xx resolution at about 75% CPU utilization.
The same system, overclocked to 550 MHz and running Gentoo Linux----which I'd expect to perform well with the latest compilers and lean compilation---cannot even play the same file without skipping frames. Evidence that maybe Linux software gets twice slower in 6 years.
Fortunately I have the base install CDs for RedHat 6.2. But the lesson is clear. If old distros disappear they are basically forcing you to throw away old hardware, which is no different from Microsoft. Does it _really_ cost anything more to host old distros and patches, even if they are not actively supported?
You sir are a complete and utter JACK-ASS!
Red Hat was providing a distro for free, and you are complaining that they are not going to support that install for you for life. You have absolutely no reason to even make such a comment.
This has absolutely nothing to do with Red Hat... Fedora Legacy is not controlled or funded or anything by Red Hat. It is community driven, which is what Fedora is all about, and apparently the interest just wasn't there in Fedora Legacy. Hell, at the bottom of http://fedoralegacy.org/ it even says "The Fedora Legacy Project is not a part of Red Hat, Inc."
Regards,
Steve
Red Hat has paid programmers, too. But there comes a point when it's time to move to newer versions.
You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
Before we push any pawns or pass blame out, we should try to figure out why the other guy moved his piece where he did. Why is it being shut down?
... by the way, we're closing the doors, get out.
That is a bit drastic for just re-examining something. So what is the real story?
I admit that the RHEL theory is a pretty good one. I am curious, are there any stats on how many people *don't* upgrade to new versions of Fedora right away when they come out. If the number is low, then why does this matter, since it really is a cooker type of system for Redhat?
Many don't like it, but Redhat is in business to pay the rent and put food on the table (and a BMW in the driveway and a swimming pool in the backyard if they are able). They are not in it for altruistic purposes. If you can't resolve yourself to this you are being naive and another distro is probably better for you. I used to pay every now and again for a boxed distro from either Redhat, Mandrake, or Suse (kind of like a donation for the work they do), but their customer support is so bad that I decided to just go for the free stuff since I usually fixed problems myself anyway (with free advice fro the 'net). Personally, if I could get good service, I would probably pay for a distro still... But not the inflated prices Redhat charge for what they essentially get for free.
I have been thinking of switching to Kubuntu anyway, so depending on what we find out this might just do it. (I like KDE better than Redhat's favourite Gnome anyway :-)
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
Beta != released software.
I am the maverick of Slashdot
Legacy was a community project started to maintain old Fedora Core releases after Red Hat developers stopped working on them. Red Hat has always been completely clear about exactly how long it would work on Fedora Core, and that has not changed. Red Hat has taken no action here; Legacy was created by community volunteers and shut down by those same community volunteers due to the huge amount of work involved. That same huge amount of work is why Red Hat only does the huge amount of work for a limited time on Fedora, and charges for it for Enterprise Linux.
If you want a free OS with long-term security updates, you can always use a Red Hat Enterprise Linux rebuild such as CentOS, or if you want support you can buy Enterprise Linux itself. Or you could buy Oracle's rebuild, which is like CentOS only you get to pay for it.
Enterprise Linux is fundamentally easier to support for long periods of time, because it has fewer packages and fewer new versions (only every 2-3 years). With Fedora, there are many more packages, and since the releases are every 6-9 months, if you support them for 3 years they "pile up" so there are a half dozen versions in active support at all times. This means that one security update takes 6x as much work (or more, if a package has evolved a lot over the three years so the patch has to be rewritten for several versions). The paid full-time staff to do this in a timely fashion would be substantial, and the Legacy project discovered this.
Fedora is fast-moving, that's the purpose. Enterprise Linux is stable and has long-term support. CentOS lets people freeload on Enterprise Linux, if cost is the main factor. A fast-moving and also stable/long-term-supported OS is not a sensible thing, though; there's not a lot of demand for it, it's incredibly labor intensive, plus it's not even clear it's possible (the entire Fedora release cycle is shorter than the Enterprise Linux beta, so how could something releasing every 6-9 months be as stable as RHEL? it violates the laws of software engineering physics)
There are community projects that do explicitly do Long Term Support, Ubuntu 6.06, CentOS are two glaring examples of making a point of it, and Debian in practice has been that sort of distro. Gentoo, Fedora, et. al are catering to a different, more aggressive sort of mission that somewhat conflicts with the notion of legacy support (frequent releases produce too many overlaps in a long term model, having to maintain 4-5 different trees is not feasible. Ubuntu is doing a decent compromise (6.6 is long term, and they plan to do that once in a while, but still have frequent, shortly maintained releases to acheive the better of both worlds).
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
Fedora's whole mission is pretty much implement the cutting edge and let people experiment and play with it. The target audience was inteded to be those desktop users/enthusiasts who would jump on the current release anyway, since it is free. If any business saw a distribution like Fedora and thought it a good idea to base their infrastructure on a Fedora Core release, they are now getting basically what they asked for.
That's pretty harsh considering that they 'knew' Fedora Legacy was out-there.
Most of my clients running Fedora Core releases are doing it because either: a) they needed a newer version of some app than was in a CentOS Release, or b) they have new hardware, the chipsets of which are often only supported in recent kernels which pretty much rules out CentOS. I have one right now with disk controller problems under 2.6.18 with a dualie athlon server we got from NewEgg in August (and wasn't new then, either) that has an nVidia SATA controller - there's a new module in 2.6.19 which addresses it, which means FC6. There' no point in buying a RedHat support license if you're going to compile your own kernel since they won't talk to you on the phone about that machine if you do. I've tried.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Look at the title bar of the Fedora Project web page. It says: "Sponsored by Red Hat Linux"
Follow the money, that is where the control will be found.
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
Try one of the mini distros like damn small and similar. They work pretty good on older machines, given enough RAM that is, say 128 for those 50 megger distros. I have found RAM is a lot more important than CPU speed. Heck, I was running FC4 on an old PP200 until a year ago when the machine fried, all I did was boost the RAM enough, 226 megs in that case. I went right from RH7 right to FC 4 on that same machine. My backup machine now is a 333 mghz (cob job odd parts machine) with 256 megs RAM, runs mepis just fine, although I haven't tried the new one yet, waiting until it gets out of Beta.
As to the older distros going away, I imagine there are any number of millions of copies of this or that out there still. If someone really needs old versions I bet they can find them.
As to Fedora now, I can see their point, but I *wish* they did a single Cd base install and only did one release per year. I think that would take pressure off the devs and allow for more thorough testing, etc.
Unlike most people I don't reinstall the OS on my laptop every couple of months. Thanks to Fedora Legacy I'm happily running FC 3 and had no plans to reinstall. But now I think I'll have to look seriously at CentOS (RHEL repackaged without the copyrighted material like logos and such). RHEL (and thus CentOS) is supposed to be less "cutting edge" and more about stability over the long term. And because CentOS is just RHEL you know it's going to have more vitality than a community driven project.
That's a shame. Any Fedora Distro after FC1 I have not been able to sync Evolution's address book with via bluetooth with my bluetooth phone. The bluetooth support changed in later versions of Fedora that seriously broke the bluetooth plugins for multisync. It's been over 3 years now and it still doesn't work as well as it used to.
To me this is yet another signal that Linux really isn't ready for Enterprise based computing. I mean, get real here: FC4 is hardly a year old and now its already on the deprecated list? Yes, I'm well aware that FC isn't aimed at Enterprise based computing and that I'm, in some sense, comparing apples and oranger. But bear with me here...
Enterprise based computing, to me, means that you have to be prepared. Sometimes insanely prepared because when things do go wrong you can be sure it'll be nasty. This also means that you have to keep track off the things happening around you. While a nic can do its job perfectly well, it doesn't hurt to keep an eye out for other people's experiences. When you suddenly see several threads about a certain nic starting to go haywire popping up its probably a good idea to plan a replacement sometime.. So with that in mind I'm also interested in this kind of news. While Fedora isn't aimed at Enterprise based computing, products like RHEL, SLES and CentOS are. But really: What is the big difference between them when looking at the software it provides? Different packages, different setup and you have some specific vendor packages. Sure.. Its still Apache, Postgres, , etc.
And that doesn't mean that those guys won't basicly have to perform the same things the guys in the FC legacy project did. Enterprise is all about grabbing a product and keeping it stable for a long time because customers aren't going to upgrade to new software versions just because you think they should. They want to keep their systems stable, and as long as possible. When a product does eventually reach its end of support time you'd better keep your customers well informed about it, thus allowing them to properly prepare.
This team of enthousiasts couldn't handle it. What guarantees do we have that CentOS will?
And to end the year with a little trolling: Here we have Linux enthousiasts whining about MS moving to Vista while "they don't want to" and are "being forced to use Vista". Ofcourse, even Windows 98 only ended this year, years after hardly anyone ever uses it. And a specific Linux release can't be maintained for more than a year? What am I missing here?
Legacy users ought to fork the Fedora project in order to support their releases. Surely, there has to be enough talent out there to do this...oh wait, let me guess, you want other people to do the hard work for you, for free? Hrm...better try Ubuntu.
No, seriously, I don't use Fedora so I don't really care that much. But those feeling burned by this ought to unite and take over the legacy support.
This is interesting. I've been slowly moving from the Unix world (Sun/Solaris) to Linux for a while. As part of that, we have been porting applications to Fedora/Red Hat. Lately though, I've been more and more impressed with Solaris 10 (and OpenSolaris). Frankly, I don't see much of an incentive anymore to run Linux on a production server. The only thing Linux seems to deliver better at the moment is x86 driver support and desktop apps. While I don't think we'll necessarily stop our efforts to create a more platform neutral set of applications, I suspect we'll be staying on Solaris for some time. Incidentally, I have no trouble receiving patch support for any of Solaris 10, 9 or 8 production servers. I like the longer support time lines that Sun offers (and much of it for free by the way).
Are you aware that Red Hat got lots of code from the people who worked on Fedora for free? It worked both ways.
Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
My home gateway is an old Pentium 133, with a modest 96Mb of RAM. It runs Debian Sarge fairly well, not a bit slower than the distro that it used to run, Red Hat 9. These two distros have a few years between them, so I must say that Linux doesn't get slower over time, stuff like GNOME and KDE might though...
I think it's mostly the RH 9 and earlier users that are going to feel it. Like I said in my submission, I'm sure I'm not the only one who still has alot of RH 9 boxes out there. I think my decision to stick with RH 9 back then rather than Fedora 1 was good one. Fedora Legacy has done a great job of supporting the distro. It's just alot of us are going to miss them. RH 9 was (is?) really a great distro, at least suitable for non mission critical stuff back then. Obviously most of us prefer a Redhat based distro have moved on to CentOS or similar, it still really sucks that a great project like Fedora Legacy and a great disto like Redhat 9 is finally going away.
Yup - the latest FC distros really grind on my old 333 Celeron with 512MB RAM.
:(
Older RH and Suse distros ran fine and were impressive when compared to Win98 that the machine came with. But then I wouldn't really expect XP to run on the same machine, so I guess I really should just upgrade the hardware (getting a new version of Windows for 'free').
That said, even command line things in FC6 like yum take an age to run, which I didn't find with the old up2date in RH 7.x. I think the problem is that things are now written in Python or other scripting languages whose overhead is really noticeable on old hardware.
One one hand I wish that these things were written in C or compiled to native, but then on the other the portability and speed of development probably benefit me through reliability. Maybe something like psycho (http://psyco.sourceforge.net/) could bridge the gap?
But yes - I agree that it does seem like old hardware is for the bin, even under Linux. Surely this only benefits MS
I tried to do an install of Fedora Core 6 this weekend - 3 TIMES! I hate the install process it blows! It seems if you change it's "default install" setup for partioning it doesn't like partioning/formating to do the install. I also DO NOT like the software selection process - that blows as well! I had been a Red Hat user up to V6.0 when I upgraded to V6 the new Gnome stuff fucked up everything! So I switched to Suse and have been using it since V6.3, I was on V10.0 and when the Novell thing happend I decided to dump Suse and to try Fedora Core. NEVER AGAIN! It seems since V6.0 Red Hat Linux has become a major piece of CRAP! I'm not sure which distro to try next. I wish Novell had left Suse alone! It was a good distro until Novell stuck it's dick into it! They destroyed the "Good old German Engineering".
Anyone have a good suggestion for a different Distro?
I need one to be more of a development distro. I do a LOT of development with web development, Java technoligies. I use JBoss, Apache, etc..
A good server grade distro would be nice.
Thanks!
The Truth is a Virus!!!
Fedora == RHEL Beta
I'm surprised you can get video playing at all on such a machine.
I have an old Compaq Deskpro 4000 as a second backup machine, CPU upgraded to 400MHz, with 256MB of RAM, and I wouldn't even bother trying to run video on it.
However, I recently managed to get Slackware 10 loaded on it, and while it's hardly spry, it's functional.
This machine used to run Red Hat 7.0 and Windows 98 (still runs Windows 98 - which will crash every few days even if NOTHING is being done on the machine except the wallpaper changer!). I couldn't install any other distro on it because I thought there was an issue with the Compaq BIOS not reporting the disk geometry correctly. However, I discovered the real issue was the later distros were trying to force DMA on the drives, which simply didn't work. By adding ide=nodma to the boot command, I was able to get Slackware to install and run. Seems to run fine, although again, not spry enough for continuous use as a primary machine. 15-second startup for things like Kword and Kspread.
Yes, Linux distros are getting bloated. Compared to Kubuntu, Slackware 10 has everything but the kitchen sink thrown in in terms of preloaded apps.
I'd say it's no big deal if FC 2 is no longer supported. Most machines that ran it okay will probably run a later version or some other recent distro which is supported. Your example of running on an old 450MHz K6 is a bit extreme. Such a machine would more likely have run a Red Hat way before Fedora.
Also, old hardware can be converted to other purposes such as a Linux firewall.
There does come a time when old hardware should be pitched. When I upgrade my current desktop to a newer machine, the current desktop will become a file server and my backup machine - and the Compaq will be stripped for parts and pitched. And good riddance.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Hahah,,,what a stupid comment....as if Redhat has its own magic projects for which it is taking the code of contributors. Dumbass.
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
>Are you going to complain next that Microsoft isn't supporting Vista's beta 2 anymore? It's pretty much the same thing.
/.ers expect everything to be supported forever for free.
Obviously you don't remember the pissing and moaning here about the end of support for Windows 98 and 2000. Lots of
Old RedHat's didn't disappear. They moved them off of the main FTP server and added a README file to give you the new address. Everything back to the 1.0 release is at ftp://archive.download.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux /.
How 'bout "what is a fed oral egacy? Sounds kinda kinky..."
Skivvy Niner? Email me!
HEY! Look left just ONE MORE TIME!
Might I recommend the small and nimble Damn Small Linux distribution? I think it is still based on the 2.4 kernel.
Bearded Dragon
Red Hat is listed corporation. As such, they have to make money to their shareholders and they seem to be doing well, so far.
Huge amount of its workforce time, expertise, money and infrastructure is contribution that RH provides to Fedora Project, free OS of high quality. Everybody is free to join and contribute in many different ways, regardless of technical ability. Although decision making process within the Project was in RH hands, this is changing drastically and Fedora is close to becoming true community effort.
Red Hat made great deal of contribution to wider FLOSS community over time by releasing code, hosting projects, open-sourcing acquired proprietary code, etc.
Fedora Core IS NOT RHEL beta. It makes sense for RH to base its enterprise product on the code tested by wide user base, familiar with RH way of doing Linux.
Fedora Legacy was never RH project. Sure, RH people work on it but that is on their own time. Interest for it vanished. It does not make sense anymore. End of story.
Red Hat is not out there to screw anybody - not you, either. That's what Microsoft and their puppets are for.
If you don't believe this, do join one of the Fedora / RH mailing lists and you'll quickly find out that Red Hat employees are the harshest critics of their own work. Plenty of smart people on those lists, you may even learn something.
Personally, if I had written code that were adopted as a part of a RedHat distribution (or any other), I'd be delighted that the code were being widely distributed and used.
When I've written and released GPL code in the past, I've never had any expectations as to how it will be used outside of the restrictions placed by the GPL; that's part of OSS. Maybe you don't get that, but then, you are an AC - probably never to see this reply.
-- Mike
Just run Windows 2000 Professional on that machine, it works like a charm and the preinstalled Windows Media Player 6.4 was the best version they ever made, if you provide it with some decent codecs.
I run that on an old Dell Laptop 166MHz Pentium(No MMX) with 96MB of ram, if I only use it for viewing movies, Office 2000 work, and webbrowsing using Internet Explorer 5, it is pretty damn decent.
Linux is turning into the same kind of bloatware like games from Firaxis games!!!
-H
Yes, it really does cost something. I've seen kernel developers claiming they can backport 2.4, and later 2.6, kernel drivers to their 2.0 kernels "becuause that's what they wrote their modifications in" Never mind that that their modifications are proprietary crap: they think they can backport all the drivers, features, etc. of the newer software releases, including the glibc, gcc, kernels, modutils, sysutils, elfutils, etc. back to the older Os.
Yes, if you paid them enough money, they could install an afterburner on a mule. But eventually, what's the point? The developer OS's need development support, which means rapidly evolving tools, not wasting their time on legacy software and hardware.
Um we are discussion a distribution here, not linux in general. While i wont debate the validity of the general statement that its not ready ( or is ) , reviewing a single *expiremental* distro and generalizing that linux is not 'enterprise ready' is sort of silly.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Part of the problem is that kernel developers need to use larger data structures to handle 64bit computing, larger file systems, and various other requests from the community. In order to fully support new hardware, more memory needs to be used and thus older systems run slowly. You must also consider the complexity of offering several performance hacks for each type of cpu generation. After awhile, just including a basic C function is much easier for older hardware since it gets harder to test over time.
Graphical applications for X11 tend to get much larger and resource intensive as time passes. Developers think they need to add more eye candy than apple or microsoft to get people to use Linux or BSD. Eye candy is not what most of us want.
I noticed that someone mentioned gentoo. I noticed during a project last april that a vanilla 2.6 kernel seemed faster than an gentoo patched kernel on two systems I was testing. Granted I custom compiled the kernel so arguably it should be faster. It could also mean some people are having different experiences based on how much they customized the kernel or possibly how much work went into kernel patches by each distro.
On topic, this shutdown might be a problem for the BSD projects which use fedora core userlands for their linux emulation. FreeBSD had a SoC project to gain Linux 2.6 compatibility with linuxolator so that they could track newer fedora core versions. It might not be an issue for them post RELENG_6_2_0_RELEASE. Other projects might have more trouble tracking newer versions which in turn decreases security over time. I don't see an immediate solution for MidnightBSD.
MidnightBSD: The BSD for Everyone
This bums me out. I have been running server very successfully for years with RedHat 7.3. :-(
I've received many updates from legacy. I don't want to change this machine. In fact last time I tried an update Anaconda failed
Or install Free or netbsd. Infact Netbsd is highly recomemnd(though I do not use it). They are alot lighter and do not use the bloated glibc.
Also rh6 uses libc which I liked alot better than glibc because it was alot faster and uses alot less ram. The BSD's have not changed much in terms of driver support and code bloat.
http://saveie6.com/
I've often wondered about this. Redhat pissed off many of their biggest fans, myself included, with the move to commercial Redhat and free (beta) Fedora. Like many other linux users, I skipped Fedora entirely in favor of CentOS and Ubuntu, etc.
Redhat has stockholders to answer to and did what they thought was the best thing at the time to maximize shareholder value. They're still making money, which is their primary concern, but according to the page rankings on distrowatch.com (not scientific, I know) Redhat/Fedora is now less popular than either Ubuntu or OpenSUSE.
I wonder if Redhat had a do-over if they'd still commercialize Redhat they way they did.
The latest compilers, with the default settings, produce code that's bloated for the tiny machine you describe. I suspect GCC 4 with "-Os" would do better, as long as you were going Gentoo anyway. Also, what happened most likely was that your video setup was suboptimal and had minimal or no acceleration. In general, I find it very hard to believe that a system with the later 2.6 kernels, GCC4, and properly configured video and multimedia packages would have trouble beating an old 2.4 system, especially if it's Gentoo, not saddled with a bunch of services starting by default.
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I can close my eyes and try to visualize what kind of tool would have called the Microsoft 'support line' for issues they were having with DOS 6.22. Nope. I can't think of anything. Now, Windows 3.1 or 3.11 running on top of DOS I can see.
Then again, I used to work with an engineer who seemed to live to sit on hold in tech support calls to all the half-assed companies from that era. I think he even harped on tech people from products like 'PopUp DOS' the free application manager they used to bundle with Logitech mice.
I can run the latest NetBSD release on my Macintosh SE/30 and get actual servicible use out of the machine.
Mind you, that is with the Tab Window Manager (twm), not the latest croftly kludge WMs rolled together using object-oriented code glop. And about what you can do with an SE/30 with that OS is maybe play some GNU Chess graphically under X, and use it as a terminal to connect to other boxes. But an SE/30 is a really REALLY old machine.
I can either run my home Fedora 3 server unsupportable, upgrade to a recent version of Fedora (a fairly fraught process if the crappy FC 1 -> 2 -> 3 process is any indication), or bite the bullet and go to Debian or Ubuntu server.
The answer isn't looking good for the last RH box in my house.
I've been using RedHat since 5.0, and remember the great service they did with the 1.0 disk drives pre-loaded you could order.
But lately it seems like RPM has stagnated, and Fedora appears to be confused as to its direction, and finally, the upgrades have been getting harder lately. Ubuntu is one of the first Debian derivatives that seems to work as well as RedHat has done, with well-done installers, etc. I suspect that with the handwriting on the wall about upgrade support from the Legacy project, my next upgrade will be to Ubuntu.
Could someone explain the differences between the stock linux kernel, RHEL kernel and say, Debian kernel? If Redhat does add improvements and fixes, why aren't these changes ported back to the stock kernel?
./configure), or hunting down a binary package specifically created for that distro. This is extremely stupid and inefficient. Only the linux distro companies like RedHat, Suse, etc. benefit, the users find it very painful to use.
For applications like vim, etc., why isn't there a binary installer that works on all distros of linux. It's irritating that when I install apps, I have either the choice of compiling from source, (which is failure prone if I forget some option to
If linux is ever to become mainstream, it needs a single binary package standard. The packages created by this standard should be installable on all distros. No stupid vim for RHEL, vim for Debian and vim for Mandriva.
Fedora is supposed to be a bleeding edge distro of Red Hat technology that is frequently rebuilt and released. Fedora Legacy, although well intentioned was sort of misplaced for this technology Why would you want legacy support for a very experimental software distribution. If you need real enterprise stablity you should be using true Red Hat Enterprise or CentOS. I would never use Fedora for any server or workstation that I wouldn't want to manage rigorously.
Fedora does a lot of good for the Open Source Community as well as Red Hat itself but lets not mistake it for a long term solution to enterprise technology. If Fedora Legacy wants to learn anything I think there is a place for a Fedora that has less agressive upgrade path. They should do what Red Hat does with Fedora which is build from the best of Fedora. Maybe they something try for a distro that mimics an "even release" sort of way.
fork what you want
fsck the rest
happy new year.
What goes around comes around, kid.
This decision is bad! There are many websites, tech articles, blogs like mine [Ocean Of Technologies] http://victwu.blogspot.com/ that reference to the link http://download.fedoralegacy.org./ I spent quite a fair bit of time on this blog and now I have to keep an eye on when the fedoralegacy goes disappear. Can anyone suggest me the alternative reference? Victor Wu
It seems like fedora had too rapid new development i think.. within 6 month (if we want to be updated) there new release.. Its good but for newbie like me upgrade FC seems a difficult process bcoz of the hardware problem etc... but their support are great.. i've solved many problems by refering to them.. too sad this is happen and i been using fc4..
.. i donno what to say :(
So, may be after this i will consider to openbsd but it seems more difficult to configure. My last word here
Just yesterday, I upgraded my home PC from FC4 to FC6. This went smoothly as always (I did upgrades since RH5.0).
It took me half day, however, because I first copied the system to a new hard drive in case something goes horribly wrong. I wish anaconda had a way to first clone installations before upgrading. Using fdisk and cpio works, but is not the simplest way for everybody. As usual, many 'rpmnew' files are installed and need to be sorted out manually. For a mission critical system, I would always migrate like this. Making the system dual boot in two identical copies of the system, then upgrading one of them.
So why not CentOS or RHEL (the later we use at work)? I like to tinker with things, really. This way I keep up with the changes in Linux and the knowledge is important for my work. I used debian before, and was quite disappointed by it's old software (woody). Probably a good choice for a cheap server running on old hardware. Used SuSe for a while and didn't like some aspects (i.e. yast2).
What I like about Fedora is, that they try out new innovative ideas (i.e. stateless linux). Yes, occasional you get bitten and you have to upgrade often. I wished they would give up the point release idea, and instead make incremental updates.
Having only 13 month of security updates is not great. It's a pity that legacy is shutting down. This also kind of shifts the balance between stability (patches) and quirks (new features) in the wrong direction. We will see how it goes, or if Fedora starts to decline. At the moment the quality is quite high in my opinion. It also reminds us that nothing is guaranteed: Fedora Legacy originally promised to extend support to older versions but they could not keep up with the large number of releases. Maybe they should focus on one or two old releases.
If I would run a server at work with FC4-, I would now upgrade to RHEL or CentOS (but I would rather prefer to pay for the redhat network service). Running a server with FC makes only sense if you have the time to upgrade it every year -and- you need some cutting edge software / hardware support on it.
Running FC on older hardware? Not really a good idea. I have an older laptop running RH9, because it cannot upgrade (not enough memory to run anaconda). Sometimes the best solution is to uninstall the software packages which creates security problems.
I agree with the other Anonymous Coward. I like recycling old computers and I think it is more important to make computers work then to have the bleeding edge eye-candy. I don't use Fedora (I do BLAG and Debian) but I think it's a shame for the people who do use it.
Hans (aka Anonymous Coward)
I've typically skipped every other version of Fedora and only installed the "even" numbers. The point is, it's not practical to reinstall a desktop os every six months. Not even if your a geek with nothing to do. everyone bags on Microsoft for keeping XP around so long, but I for one am in no hurry to upgrade or reinstall an os "for fun". It's a lot of work, and the cost/benefit is rarely ever worth it.
this is something Linux distros in general should think about. there will never be mainstream acceptance if the product life is measured in months not years.
www.itjerk.com
Build a tool even an idiot can use and only an idiot will want to use it. -S.O.B.
Why couldn't they have dropped support for some of the really old releases (RH7.3, RH9, FC1/2) and kept supporting FC3/FC4 for a while? Why the rush to kill EVERYTHING, unless they'd like those eyes to fix bugs in the new (FC5/6) releases? Perhaps they forget that killing the old releases too soon makes it less desirable to tinker with the new releases (knowing they'll be hard to maintain in a year.)
In the future I will put Ubuntu 6.06 LTS on my "serious" machines and Ubuntu 6.10 on my "play" machines. My gateway/router is FC4, as is my co-lo box, so it's past time to rebuild those machines...
Dropping support after 3 years is not a mistake, but a plan. Look at how micro$$ is now cozying up to Novell now that they have stolen SuSE by buying off '10 percent controlling interest' shareholders and leaving the rest to twist in the wind. This is a plan to hijack Red Hat just like SuSE, only at the Red Hat corporate level. The message...don't buy red hat products, and especially do not download any 'fixes' to red hat's existing older products. This close out is actually probably a blessing as it is putting the world of linux users on notice that Red Hat is turning into a covert agent of Microsoft for DRM.
Nope - has to do with Windows 98 running out of "resources" - a known issue with 98.
It's the Windows 98 equivalent of "memory leaks".
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
bloat == functionality, in this case. Applications under Linux tend to be smaller because there's a shared library that supports more of the functionality that they want. Under the BSDs, this functionality needs to be replaced on a per-application basis by code that doesn't even have to exit the pre-processor on Linux.
It's a trade-off, and both are valid. I happen to like the way Linux works out, but there's nothing wrong with going the other way if you understand the scaling implications.
Bull$h|t!! Back in 1999-2001 I used to run a similar system, played mp3's, some videos and did all the hell I wanted with 128 MB of ram. I upgraded it to 256MB and did all those things on Windows XP.