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OpenSUSE 13.1 Released and Reviewed

sfcrazy writes "The openSUSE team just announced the release of openSUSE 13.1. There are some core points which set openSUSE apart from the popular Ubuntu distro. While Ubuntu has become a more or less Canonical-owned project, openSUSE is becoming more and more community-driven. Looking at the recent controversies around Ubuntu and their move toward mobile platforms, openSUSE seems to be a great option for desktop users."

64 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Third party software by msobkow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder what the status is on third-party software like DB/2 LUW, Oracle, and Sybase ASE. I know Ubuntu can only handle DB/2 LUW. Oracle and Sybase want a RedHat core.

    Ah well, it doesn't matter. I've got DB/2 LUW, PostgreSQL, and MySQL running under Debian, and Oracle, Sybase ASE, and SQL Server on a Win7 box, so my database needs are covered.

    I've run SuSE in the past though, and did like it. To be honest I can't remember why I switched. I think that was an actual dead machine issue -- I lost a couple of boxen in a car accident about 10 years ago.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Third party software by cold+fjord · · Score: 5, Interesting

      From what I've seen in the past, if you're looking to run big "name brand" software, your only real Linux choices are Red Hat and Suse if you want to run on a certified OS. It makes no sense to run software costing $100k+ on uncertified platforms.

      I've always preferred Suse to Red Hat myself. Suse was always much closer to other Unix releases in the way it did things compared to Red hat which tended to go off in its own direction. Unfortunately I almost always end up having to deal with Red Hat anyway.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re:Third party software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pretty much, in the past, I have found all the major DB vendor offerings to run on all the major Linux distros, RH, Suse, Ubuntu. They may not be officially supported but they still run.

      DB2 Enterprise supports Linux
      Oracle Supports Linux
      Sybase Supports Linux
      Informix supports Linux and even
      Ingress supports Linux

    3. Re: Third party software by Archwyrm · · Score: 1

      I'm curious to know in what ways Suse is more like Unix? Once upon a time my company had a bunch of SLES installs, then we moved to Debian, and now we have a couple of RH machines. Maybe it's my perspective but I've found SLES and RHEL to be basically identical apart from all the GUI garbage that gets layered on top.

      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power. -- Mussolini
    4. Re:Third party software by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      I am surprised Debian stable is not supported?

      Corporations and developers hate change and like things to freeze in time witness Solaris, IE 6, Java 1.4.x etc. Debian stable fits the bill well.

      I know Ubuntu has many fan boys here, but it makes a crappy choice for a developer if your platform changes major shit out every 6 months and updates make more radical changes than Solaris or Windows updates.

      Shit Redhat is still based on kernel 2.6 and RHES 5.x is a 2006 era kernel with some patches! Sucks for a desktop (Cent OS 6 is ok as it has somewhat ok device support compared to 5.x) users, but corporate server admins and developers know it is a solid target. CentOS is compatible with other software and a fine OS if you love Gnome 2 still.

      Even Windows 7 which slashdotters think is modern is getting old at 4 years. Amazing what Vista and Windows 8 did to the average slashdotter mindset! To praise a 4 year old OS would get you modded +funny or -1 fast pre-Vista and created XP die hards. ... of course there is also Oracle Linux but lets not count that here :-)

    5. Re:Third party software by LDAPMAN · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is more to support than being stable. With SLES/SLED and RHES there is a level of engineering support you just can't get with the others. They actually pay people to help you get your app running right and they answer the phone when something breaks.

    6. Re:Third party software by Billly+Gates · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I would not bet my job on a non certified OS though.

      If an update to Ubuntu brings down the warehouse and it is found that you were the one who approved the non supported platform where Sybase wont even return your phone calls to restart your business, then do not be surprised if a VP leaves a nice boot imprint on your buttocks as he pushed you out the door after his flight from corporate headquarters.

      SuSE enterprise support many of these products (not all). Of course Oracle wants you to use Solaris or at least Oracle Linux so they have a financial incentive to screw you by only supporting Redhat (because they have too.)

      I run CentOS in a VM at home for this reason as it is very close to what they use at work which is thankfully free. Would not put it on a real server though doing anything important. :-)

    7. Re:Third party software by msobkow · · Score: 2

      "Runs on the Linux distro of our choice" is not the same as "Supports Linux." Most databases with the exception of DB/2 LUW do not run under Debian or Ubuntu, even if you use "alien" to install them. Maybe if you surf the net and futz with them for a few days you could get them to run, but that's not "supporting" the distro. It most certainly is not an acceptable situation for running that DB in anything even vaguely resembling a production environment.

      As per usual, IBM has shown that you can build a platform-agnostic tool. As far as I'm concerned, the other DB vendors are just lazy-assed fucktards trying the leech off the "runs on Linux" mantra that you just spewed. If it requires a particular distro, say so -- you can't claim it "runs on Linux" unless it runs on all the major distros, not just the one you have a contract to support.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    8. Re:Third party software by Fallso · · Score: 1

      There is more to support than being stable. With SLES/SLED and RHES there is a level of engineering support you just can't get with the others. They actually pay people to help you get your app running right and they answer the phone when something breaks.

      True, but you can now get "vendor" support on other distros as well. One that springs to mind is Ubuntu server edition (although as I say that I have no idea why anyone in their right mind would choose that over RHEL/SLES)

    9. Re:Third party software by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen in the past, if you're looking to run big "name brand" software, your only real Linux choices are Red Hat and Suse if you want to run on a certified OS. It makes no sense to run software costing $100k+ on uncertified platforms.

      No problem. Give me any OS and I will "certify" it. For a mere $1000. That's nothing when you run $100k+ software, right?

    10. Re:Third party software by luxifr · · Score: 1

      I run CentOS in a VM at home for this reason as it is very close to what they use at work which is thankfully free. Would not put it on a real server though doing anything important. :-)

      meh... CentOS is not just "very close" to RHEL but in fact the same... they build it out of red hat sources with red hat build configs... basically it's just a recompiled red hat... the only reason I wouldn't use CentOS is that its community (leaders) is somewhat too unstable for my taste... it wasn't that long ago when you couldn't be sure if CentOS would even continue to exist because of internal disputes... that said: there is an alternative: Scientific Linux... it's basically the same as CentOS with some additions to it that all come as optional packages... difference is: it's driven by CERN and the international science community which makes it a pretty safe bet

    11. Re:Third party software by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      SELinux

    12. Re:Third party software by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Point is ass covering.

      That VP or rep for vendor wont listen when you tell them that.

      SL! = centos. Different build process with different libs and gcc settings.

  2. (Six months from now) by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Funny

    sfcrazy writes:

    Hi, it's sfcrazy. Funny story, but after my OpenSuSE submission, I got a job offer from Microsoft. Anyway, Windows 8.2 is out. It's a little more stable than Ubuntu, so if you've been thinking of switching from Ubuntu you might want to give Windows 8.2 a spin. Go on.

    (Twelve months from now)

    sfcrazy writes:

    Hi there, sfcrazy again. Apple's PR department kindly offered me a job a few months ago. Anyway, Mac OS X 10.11 is out, and it's very Unixy. If you're getting fed up with Ubuntu, you might want switch to Mac OS X 10.11 because it's even more Unixy.

    (Continued...)

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:(Six months from now) by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      (Twenty-four months from now)

      sfcrazy writes:

      Hey guys. If you are interested, I have formed a startup which makes a product called sfcrazy OS. It does not adopt existing technologies or paradigms from any other operating systems. We also believe it performs much better.

    2. Re:(Six months from now) by TheGoodNamesWereGone · · Score: 1

      But I *am* fed up with Ubuntu!

  3. Why switch? by rueger · · Score: 2

    I'll likely try running it off of a USB stick at some point this week, but will ask anyhow:
    If I'm generally happy with Mint Linux (64, v. 15) what things in openSUSE might convince me to change?

    1. Re:Why switch? by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 5, Funny

      For starters, OpenSUSE has the GEICO lizard on the box.

      This gives you a calming feeling of security and road-testedness. Plus because SUSE is an acronym.

      --
      Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
    2. Re:Why switch? by Blaskowicz · · Score: 2

      How much software is there? What's good with Ubuntu (and Mint is a wrapper around Ubuntu) is there is a lot of software in the default repositories, so no need to add repositories (to then need to acquire guru skills if something goes wrong with that) or do "make install" for trivial software.

      Is there documentation? the worst thing is having spent years how to do apt-get upgrade, apt-get dist-upgrade, apt-get clean, apt-get autoremove etc. and stuff like service gdm stop, then have to learn all new crap. But at least there's killall gdm, or killall (whateveryourdm)

    3. Re:Why switch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not exactly answering "how much", but apparently there is about 6000 packages on the DVD iso, and there are countless more on OBS which makes it harder to quantify. Trivial, and not so trivial, software not found in the default repos are easily added through the 1-click mechanism (Yast is exemplary with telling you which repos are added in this process so you know which ones to remove later on - in fact during the installation you can choose *not* to subscribe to a repo incase you don't want any further updates).

      Documentation can be found at http://activedoc.opensuse.org/
      Old docs at http://doc.opensuse.org/
      zypper and apt are pretty similiar so migrating from one to the other is not a large hurdle.

    4. Re: Why switch? by Archwyrm · · Score: 2

      FYI, it is very easy to add a users group on Debian/Ubuntu. Having used both systems, I like to have a users group and a group per user. It gives much more fine grained control over things.

      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power. -- Mussolini
    5. Re: Why switch? by shrewdsheep · · Score: 1

      FYI, it is very easy to add a users group on Debian/Ubuntu. Having used both systems, I like to have a users group and a group per user. It gives much more fine grained control over things.

      This. I am an OpenSUSE user and for me it is the best distro overall (polished, great infrastructure: BuildService, ...). The user/group management is very annoying though. I ended up writing my own scripts to support this as the command line tools do not even have any such option. Once I brought this up in the forums. Unfortunately, reactions were quite negative. Please make this an option (even if it's only on the command line).

    6. Re:Why switch? by geckoFeet · · Score: 1

      > For starters, OpenSUSE has the GEICO lizard on the box.

      Why the hell was this moderated "funny"?

    7. Re:Why switch? by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Same boat... I have a laptop running Mint. I find myself switching between OpenSuSE and Mint. In my experience, OpenSUSE generally provides better hardware support and is more stable overall. Mint and Ubuntu have more packages, but OpenSuSE is really catching up.
      I enjoy having access to YAST, which give an identical interface through the console or the GUI. OpenSuSE also doesn't try to dictate the user interface, you can use XFCE, Gnome, KDE, or several other options.

    8. Re:Why switch? by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      You can also pop over to opensuse.org and search for software packages. It's once click to install the repository and the package.

  4. Re:I wonder if you can get wayland working on SUSE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    https://build.opensuse.org/package/show?project=home%3Atobijk%3AX11%3AWayland&package=wayland

    let us know how you fare

  5. Does it matter to end users? by auzy · · Score: 1

    The real question, is, does any of the recent controversies surrounding Canonical affect users in a practical sense (or mainly from a political/development/long term sense)?

    Last version of OpenSUSE I tried was great, but, I kept having small problems (mainly related to installing Nvidia drivers which actually broke the system, steam support and other Yum issues).Technically, the nvidia issue isn't their fault, but on the other hand, it would be expected that Nvidia users need proprietary drivers.

    OpenSUSE definitely deserves a lot more users, and I think long term, it could easily overtake the others. Hopefully this is a step closer in that direction.

    1. Re:Does it matter to end users? by TheGoodNamesWereGone · · Score: 1

      I used SuSE from 2004 until the fall of 2011, when I switched to Mint. I like both of them, and Mint "just works" out of the box better than SuSE. The lack of nVidia proprietary drivers is a showstopper for my purposes, and requiring root privileges to access NTFS drives might be a security feature, but to me it's a headache. I say all this in the spirit of constructive criticism. However, once you get SuSE configured like you want it, it runs like a champ. I love YAST; it's everything all in one place.

    2. Re:Does it matter to end users? by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      I think that was around the earlier 12 versions. Those did have some problems, but those were addressed pretty quickly. I can't wait to see how 13.1 stacks up on my x2go server.

  6. Just My Opinion, But SuSE Rocks. by smpoole7 · · Score: 1

    I've been using OpenSuSE since the 9.0 era. I had tried it prior to that and found it unusable on my system simply because it defaulted to some gosh-awful resolution. The icons were the size of fly specs. I didn't have time to figure out how to fix it, so I went back to my old OS. They fixed this in the 9.0 release and I've used it ever since.

    One of SuSE's key features, whether you're using the community version or the paid/enterprise release, is the configuration tool (YAST, "Yet Another Setup Tool"). That thing is worth its weight in gold. It presents the same configuration options whether you're logged into a GUI or text-based via SSH. Sure, the latter is NCurses-based, but everything is where I expect it. I have been absolutely spoiled by that thing. It's the # 1 thing that I miss when I go to something else.

    Red Hat, for example, while excellent and rock-stable, leaves me using command line tools for configuration when I'm in a secure shell. They've been reducing the utility of those tools (or eliminating them entirely) with each successive release, too. Plus, I don't completely trust ANY "easy-to-use" tools, but insofar as I've been able to confirm, SuSE wins.

    (Example: the 5.x releases from CentOS -- I'm told that this was true with RHEL as well, of course -- would automatically open some ports in the firewall without telling you ... most notably, CUPS. I hate to dump their "system-config-securitylevel-tui" tool and do it myself. Good thing I always run an "iptables --list" before I expose something to the Internet at large ...)

    YAST, YAST, YAST for me. Love it. I realize that a lot of this is just what you get used to, but I'm used to it, and I love it. :)

    --
    Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
    1. Re:Just My Opinion, But SuSE Rocks. by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      CentOS 5.x is 2006 era technology. It is quite dated and is from the same era as Windows Server 2003.

      If it aint broke do not fix it deal is there but CentOS 6.4 has some of things you are talking about with more up to date tools. They are still dated too as 6.x came out in 2009/2010 time frame but closer to today.

  7. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by cbhacking · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I actually consider YAST2 (the "s" stands for "Setup", by the way, though it does much more than OS installation and package management) one of the key reasons to use [open]Suse. All-in-one-place administration of the system, available through several different UIs (QT/KDE3, QT/KDE4, GTK, ncurses, and probably more), is nice. It provides pretty extensive help information explaining each of the options even in the "Advanced" panels. It lets you view the config files it's changing right in the tool, including editing them yourself (in case you can't find the option you're looking for in the UI). It tells you what it's doing at every step (writing this file, running that tool, disabling or enabling interfaces, loading or unloading drivers, etc.).

    It's actually helped me become better at *nix administration in general, because it gives me the ability to see what's possible (not literally every option, but far more than the typical ~20% that is all that 80% of users ever need), and to see what changes it makes to the system when I select those options (so I can duplicate them myself, including on other distros or even on non-Linux POSIX systems in many cases). The preponderance of UIs (more accurately, of UI toolkits; the actual UI always looks about the same) means that even if the X server won't start, or I'm SSHed into the box and don't want to deal with X forwarding, or I'm on the machine of somebody who uses GNOME (I prefer KDE), I can sudo yast2 and get a familiar set of tools. It's a truly handy utility.

    And, as the AC parent indicates, it is of course optional and open-source. If you don't like it, don't use it. If you think there's a problem, file a bug report, or patch it yourself, maybe submit your patch if you want to. But believe me, it beats all the other distros' admin tools (at least, among the many versions of 8 or so reasonably popular distros that I've tried, including quite a few versions of Ubuntu) hands down.

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  8. OpenSuzzy! by Tailhook · · Score: 5, Funny

    I switched! Yes, I did. OMGITSOCOOL!!!1 But the Kay Dee Eee is so busy. Too busy for me. But at least it composites. Not like that Mint+Mate stuff. I got AMD but those drivers suck so I got NVidia after I tried the Intel driver on my laptop and the graphics were good but I could not get fast frames so I put in the NVidia 743 Ti X v2 and IT. WAS. SO. FAST. but then the dual heads would not work and I had to make the xorg.conf thing from a poast but it worked so do You Want To Buy My AMD card? it's really good but the X stuff LOL not so great. Zypper is weird and I like debs more but hey it works and the RPMS don't have any stinky Unity LOL that is some major fail and now I have the LXDE with openSuSE and it's nice with fluxbox BUT remember don't try rat poison I couldn't use that one LOL it had no themes and it covers my whole backgrounds WTF??. The LXDE isn't over busy like the KDE buzzz buzzz buzzzz in my HEAD with all those BUTTONS omg and tabs EveryWhere like wtf I need two mice just to configure this thing. BTW what is Akonadi?? It's trying to get my PIMS? and I had to remove it but now I get errors when I start the KDE but that's ok because I use LXDE LOL. Oh yeah and Klipper. But I tried it cuz some body on SlashDOT told me OPENsuse is for grownups and I was like YEAH that's me way grownup in fact I'm old and can't see good so use BIGGER FONTS please kthx. Can someone tell me what AKANODI is?? oh and Nepomuk. There are MILLIONS of pages on how to remove Nepomuk and Akanodi and I think I need to get them off my OPeNsuse fast or my memory and stuff will be gone..... is it OpenSUse or OPenSUSE or Opensuse or OpensusE or OPENSUSE or openSuse or what? wtf is akanodi? come on guys what is it for? google doesn't know and that's weird because google know everything and all I can find is how to remove it but someone said it would mess up my OPenSUse and I like it so I don't know what to do??????? oh right I already removed it this morning gawd its so hard to remember what I did back then but I remember it tried Kali last night and wow that is creepy its got all this cr4ckzor stuff for breaking passwords which is good because I forget them a lot so yea, just don't get spooked by the black theme and all but yeah try openSUse because I did and I did it before you noob LOL and its good stuff.

    Lates.

    --
    Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    1. Re:OpenSuzzy! by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      I have a stomach ache in my head after reading this.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    2. Re:OpenSuzzy! by waibati · · Score: 1

      This is less about the OS than it is about choosing the wrong caffeinated beverage...

    3. Re:OpenSuzzy! by yusing · · Score: 1

      Hah! After a year of reading the Reddit Linux everyday? Made my day!!
      Yeah I'll quit doing that.

      --

      "You must try to forget all you have learned. You must begin to dream." -- Sherwood Anderson

    4. Re:OpenSuzzy! by EETech1 · · Score: 1

      I make my Duncan Turbo with Water Joe TYVM!!!

  9. Re:Sad. Very sad. We OpenSUSE has major issues. RP by mellon · · Score: 1

    Wow, you must have a lot of free time if money is the only reason you're running Linux.

  10. Still no MonoDevelop 4.2 by KlomDark · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When are we gonna get a Linux distro with the modern version of MonoDevelop.

    Call it a trap all you want, it's still a dream of mine to write MVC 4 apps under Linux, using the most recent version of MonoDevelop.

    1. Re:Still no MonoDevelop 4.2 by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      When are we gonna get a Linux distro with the modern version of MonoDevelop.

      Call it a trap all you want, it's still a dream of mine to write MVC 4 apps under Linux, using the most recent version of MonoDevelop.

      If you need MonoDevelop then you are ostensibly a developer. As a developer, can you not build and install it yourself?

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  11. Fonts are ATTROCIOUS by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    YUCK.

    This is related to the Novell/Microsoft deal from last decade before Novell sold its assets including Suse.

    Just look at the text in those pictures? I feel like its Linux 2002 all over without the font hinting.

    1. Re:Fonts are ATTROCIOUS by Burz · · Score: 1

      In that respect also, its like Fedora.

  12. Re:Sad. Very sad. We OpenSUSE has major issues. RP by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

    Not to mention Windows does come with a PC anyway so it is not like you save anything. ... no system76 does not count as saving as they do not get the bulk OEM discounts that Dell or Samsung get even with the Windows tax. ... but the GP is correct with annoying repositories. SuSE has a legal agreement with Microsoft. Actually the company that owns it does through the Novell acquisition which limits font use, font rendering, mp3 support, and other annoyances which is why I do not use SuSE. Other distros like Ubuntu can not offer it with the distro but you can manually add it later which is still gray legal wise.

  13. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by LDAPMAN · · Score: 2

    YAST is also one of the reasons I love Suse. It handles MOST of the configuration tasks that MOST people need. Does it do everything..no, but it does mean you don't need to start hacking config files 90% of the time.

  14. "An OS for grown-ups"? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    openSUSE 13.1 review – an OS for grown-ups

    If you have to call it "an OS for grown-ups" it makes it sound like it really isn't.

    Did you mean hipsters?

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    1. Re:"An OS for grown-ups"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It was a terrible "review" anyway. It was a cut-paste job of the release notes, interspersed with ads for the blogger network, and occasional comments of "I use it and it's great!".

    2. Re:"An OS for grown-ups"? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      It's simply a distribution for people with a job to do, wonkey monkey.

      Then call it "an OS for professionals."

      "Grown-ups" sounds, ironically, childish.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  15. Excellent installer! by emblemparade · · Score: 4, Interesting

    openSUSE's brilliance is that it allows to choose the desktop you want during installation. This is vastly preferable to Ubuntu's requirement of downloading different flavors (Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Lubuntu, GNOME Remix). I also imagine that it's easier for devs, because it involves less packaging and distribution work.

    I'm sticking with Xubuntu myself, because I much prefer the Debian way of doing things. Still, it's heartwarming to see that some things *can* be done better.

  16. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    You're already at -1, so I'll save my mod points.

    I've been using [open]SUSE nonstop since 9.0 or so. Way back when, I did notice a few issues where YaST would occasionally get out of sync with conf files when trying to deal with USB-connected networking devices. But I've not seen anything like this happen the last 4 or 5 years. On 12.3, I have been using YaST pretty much interchangeably with Apper and the other KDE config tools, and haven't seen a slip-up yet with package management/dependencies, USB devices, networking, or anything else.

    The ncurses version of YaST is very handy when you want or need to update something (e.g. proxy when I'm in the office) *before* starting the desktop manager.

    It's actually kind of a slow day at work, for a change, so I may go ahead and upgrade this arvo.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  17. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    Crap, I wish I'd not posted just now, or I'd mod you up. Very well said.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  18. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    BTW, I have set up many, many disks using the partitioning and formatting tools in YaST (which IIRC are just a UI on top of gparted, yes?) and I've never had a screwup that was not my own fault for trying to do something very stupid.

    I know you're not me, AC, but... Just sayin'...

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  19. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by baileydau · · Score: 2

    For those of you who've ever dealt with SuSE of any flavor, the "YaST" tool is the biggist millstone chained to the neck of hte users. It does a dozen vital tasks, and gets *very single one of them wrong* by conflicting with, and ignoring, features of the underlying tools it tries to weld into a giant crutch. DNS,SMTP, disk partitioning, package management, display configuration, and network configuration, it does *every single one* of those taks in fundamentally wrong ways. It can't read settings from the configuration files, and it overrides settings that can only be set by direct configuration file editing.

    Don't get me *started* on the firewall and web server configuration component. B-r-r-r-r-r-r.

    WTF are you on about ...

    Have you actually ever used YaST? You can't have, well not within say the last 5 years or so, probably longer. Well, I've been using it since early 9.x days. If it ever was like you describe, it *must* have been before then.

    YaST is very well behaved. It definitely knows how to read and write the appropriate conf file entries without borking anything. It doesn't mind if you use it this time, edit by hand next time, or another conf tool another time. It plays nicely with everyone.

    In all the years I've been using it, I've only ever seen it miss reading an existing setting once, and that was over 5 years ago. I've never had to go and fix a conf file up afterwards because it had done bad things to it.

    --
    Ever stop to think ... and forget to start again?
  20. How are the packages? by umafuckit · · Score: 2

    I like SuSE. It was the first Linux distro I seriously used but in the end I switched to Ubuntu because often found myself having problems finding software on SuSE. If a piece of software or a newer version wasn't available through main repos, I recal spending ages on sites such as Pacman trying to find the right packages and resolve dependency issues. Is the situation better now? If so, I'd be tempted to switch back.

    1. Re:How are the packages? by umafuckit · · Score: 1

      Oooh. It's been years now. Probably not used it seriously since '08 or '09. I installed it on a virtual machine today and the package manager went faster than I remember it and it found most things I wanted. The main problem I ran into was the clusterfuck when I tried to install the Tex meta-package. It tried to install about 1,500 packages, mostly containing stuff I clearly won't need.

  21. Open SuSE is more community-driven? by codeusirae · · Score: 1

    "While Ubuntu has become a more or less Canonical-owned project, openSUSE is becoming more and more community-driven."

    I recall something about Microsoft promising not to sue developers as long as they acknowledge Microsofts patent claims against Linux and agree they don't own their own code and undertake not to work on OpenSuSE in company time. Not much community driving going on there that I can see.

    Microsoft’s Patent Pledge for Individual Contributors to openSUSE.org

    1. Re:Open SuSE is more community-driven? by lbbros · · Score: 1

      I did not acknowledge anything (I'm an openSUSE community member working on KDE), I only acknowledged a manifesto and code of conduct when I signed up to be an openSUSE member.

      --
      A CC-licensed illustrated horror novel
  22. Attempted last night by themushroom · · Score: 1

    Maybe I'm doing something wrong yet I'm following the FAQ directions, but I always wind up with a Frankenbuild -- part 13.1 and part 12.3, in this case. The boot screen still says 12.3 but some components are 13.1. It works, however an OS should be an all-or-nothing upgrade deal. I'll do a clean install tonight... I tried, man, I tried.

  23. since 10.3? by themushroom · · Score: 1

    I don't doubt you, however they went from GRUB to GRUB2 at some point so I want to know if that worked out. My screen would offer the old GRUB listing for OpenSuse (which worked) and the GRUB2 listing (which did not work, couldn't find the partition). Wasn't until I went clean that, oh, so this is what GRUB2 is supposed to look like?

  24. Re:Sad. Very sad. We OpenSUSE has major issues. RP by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    Wow, you must have a lot of free time if money is the only reason you're running Linux.

    The reason I'm running Linux on the tower is partly because of free time. Windows is slower and takes more clicks and/or typing to get the same job done as Linux. I don't have Patch Tuesday with Linux, where the machine is out of service for half an hour, when it has patches one click and you keep doing what you were while it patches itself. No crapware to remove after installation.

    After 4 years, Windows 7 crashed on my notebook. I had to take the battery out to get it started again. That's not happened once on my 10 year old kubuntu tower. Lot better than previous Windows, but still not as stable as Linux.

    And there are Windows' missing features as well.

  25. OpenSuse:Centos::Suse:Redhat by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    Suse is just a European Redhat.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  26. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by houghi · · Score: 1

    The disadvantage of YaST used to be that it had its own language. With that being solved and YaST written in ruby it would be great if other distro's start using it.

    Even if only for some tasks it would be great to see what others can do with it.

    Also adding your own modules is a lot simpler because of ruby.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  27. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by pnutjam · · Score: 1

    Yes, YaST maintains extensive logs. You can look through them and figure out alot of problems. It's funny that as a Linux/MS guy I always go to the logs when there is a problem with a Linux or WIndows servers. That doesn't appear to be the first instinct for many WIndows Admins and that is probably because the logs are so much less useful.

  28. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by pnutjam · · Score: 1

    I'm also pretty sure that if YaST clobbers your changes it creates a .bak file that contains your old config.

  29. Re:Yet Another Stupid Tool by vilanye · · Score: 1

    It is also much faster now with Ruby.