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When four become one: UnitedLinux

LinuxPlanet.com offers its own take on today’s news: “The new UnitedLinux distro will be targeted for business and enterprise-level platforms and will feature a single, unified code base that combines select packages of all of the participating distributions. Each distro will likely feature the same libraries and same installation tools as the others, though the technical details have not been ironed out yet.

But that is where the unification stops, according to information released to analysts in a meeting yesterday morning. Each distribution company will market, sell, and package their own versions of UnitedLinux under their respective labels.

And, though the code base for UnitedLinux will be the same, each company will have the option of inserting their own value-added software into their own releases.”

Caldera, Conectiva, SuSE, Turbolinux partner to create UnitedLinux

It’s up already at http://www.conectiva.com/: Linux Industry leaders Caldera International, Inc. (Nasdaq: CALD), Conectiva S.A., SuSE Linux AG, and Turbolinux, Inc., today announced the organization of UnitedLinux, a new initiative that will streamline Linux development and certification around a global, uniform distribution of Linux designed for business.
UnitedLinux
addresses enterprise customers’ need for a standard, business-focused Linux distribution that is certified to work across hardware and software platforms, accelerating the adoption of Linux in the enterprise. Under terms of the agreement, the four companies will collaborate on the development of one common core Linux operating environment, called UnitedLinux software. The four partners will each bundle value added products and services with the UnitedLinux operating system and the resulting offering will be marketed and sold by each of the four partners under their own brands.

Nearly every vendor supplying a piece of the technology infrastructure used by businesses has expressed support for UnitedLinux, including systems and software vendors AMD, Borland Software Corporation, Computer Associates, Fujitsu Siemens, Fujitsu Japan, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intel, NEC, Progress Software, and SAP. Independent hardware and software vendors spend considerable effort certifying their products and services on individual Linux distributions to ensure product compatibility for their customers. UnitedLinux will significantly diminish the number of distributions that vendors are asked to certify and will provide a true standards-based Linux operating environment.

Customers Benefit Through Unity

According to research firm IDC, a 2001 survey of 800 North American and Western European companies found that 40% of the respondents were either using or testing Linux in their organizations. UnitedLinux will help further speed enterprise adoption of Linux by providing businesses with a greater choice in the number of applications and hardware certified to work on the uniform version of Linux. Customers will also benefit from the global sales, localization, education, support and services that all four UnitedLinux vendors will collectively provide.

The collaboration of the four leading Linux companies will result in an enterprise Linux offering, which is truly global by virtue of the companies’ ability to provide local language support, training and
professional services, in addition to the support of strategic partners. UnitedLinux will provide one unified Linux code base for IBM’s complete
eServer product line, AMD’s current 32-bit and forthcoming 64-bit AMD Athlon and AMD Opteron processor-based platforms, and Intel’s x86 32-bit
and Itanium processor family platforms. UnitedLinux supports LSB, Li18nux, and GB18030 standards, as well as enabling installations in English, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Simplified Chinese and Traditional Chinese languages.

In addition UnitedLinux unleashes a massive research and development organization for Linux in the enterprise. Effectively, the four
companies involved in this process will shift dollars and resources once allocated to creating and maintaining custom Linux operating environments and divert them to new R&D on Linux enterprise software.
UnitedLinux is dedicated to bolstering the enterprise readiness of the platform, but in the same collaborative spirit from which Linux was founded and continues to flourish.

Participation and Availability
While today’s announcement outlines the founding members of UnitedLinux, the initiative is open for additional Linux companies to participate.
The four partners currently plan to each offer their own server products based on UnitedLinux by the end of 2002. For additional information on UnitedLinux, contact Caldera, Conectiva, SuSE or Turbolinux or go to www.unitedlinux.com

About UnitedLinux
UnitedLinux is a standards-based, worldwide Linux solution targeted at the business user and developed by Caldera, Conectiva, SuSE, and Turbolinux. Designed to be an enterprise-class, industry-standard Linux operating system, UnitedLinux provides a single stable, uniform platform for application development, certification, and deployment, and allows Linux vendors, Independent Software Vendors, Independent Hardware
Vendors, and Original Equipment Makers to support a single high value Linux offering. For more information, go to www.unitedlinux.com

Category:

  • Linux

Linux at work

Government Computer News runs this piece espousing the viability of Linux on government desktops. Their verdict is that Linux isn’t nearly as geeky as it was before, but we’re not there yet. Big revelation? Not to you, but maybe to GCN readers.

Category:

  • Linux

Nat Friedman: Boston GNOME Summit – July 2002

Hi everyone,

This is a quick mail to announce the Boston GNOME Summit that we are
planning for mid July. Some information about the summit is available
on our web page:

http://www.gnome.org/summit

The astute among you will quickly ascertain that much information is
missing.  Forgive us.  We wanted to get this announcement out soon so
that people who know that they want to attend can start planning their
travel arrangements. 

Overview 
-------- 

To be held on July 18th, 19th and 20th, the Boston GNOME Summit will be
an intensive working laboratory during which members of the GNOME
project will get together to discuss development issues, demonstrate
their work, and generally continue the upward trend in the project's
momentum.  The goal for this set of meetings is to accelerate the
development and planning work that will lead to GNOME 2.2. 

The intent of the Summit is to be a get-together and a hackfest, not a
formal planning event.  If you cannot attend, this does not mean that
you are left out of the GNOME 2.2 planning process.  That said, we would
ideally like as many of the key GNOME developers to attend as is
possible. 

Attendance 
---------- 

The Boston GNOME Summit is open to GNOME Foundation members.  If you
would like to attend the Summit and are not yet a member of the GNOME
Foundation, you should apply for membership. 

A system of registration for the Summit has not yet been established.
This will be available as soon as we figure out what it will be.  Until
then, please hold on to your "horses." 

The summit currently has a maximum of 75 attendees. 

Next Steps 
---------- 

If you are interested in attending the Summit and are a foundation
member, check out the summit web page and start planning your travel. 
Don't worry about registering or anything like that for now.  We'll let
you know when you can register later. 

The GNOME Foundation is in need of money to help pay for this event.  If
you are interested in contributing, mail fundraising@gnome.org. 
Representatives are standing by. 

Finally, if you are in Boston and would like to help plan and host this
event, please send me email. 

Further announcements will follow as events warrant.  Stay tuned. 

Best wishes, 
Nat 

IBM announces support for uniform version of Linux

IBM today announced support for the new
uniform version of Linux*, known as UnitedLinux, across its broad portfolio
of key hardware, software and services offerings.
In an effort to unify the various distributions of the Linux operating
system, four of the leading distributors, Caldera, Conectiva, SuSE and
TurboLinux, joined together to create UnitedLinux. By creating a unified
version of the open source platform, UnitedLinux will make it easier for
businesses, independent hardware and software vendors, and business
partners to standardize on fewer versions of Linux, instead of porting
e-business applications to a variety of different Linux distributions,
which can be time-consuming and costly.

IBM will also continue to support Red Hat Linux across its key hardware,
software and services offerings.

“IBM fully supports this new, UnitedLinux, which will make it easier than
ever before to create a wide variety of Linux-based solutions for any size
e-business,” said Steve Mills, senior vice president and group executive,
IBM Software Group. “UnitedLinux brings together the best technologies and
capabilities of these four companies, delivering a single international
Linux distribution that will make it simpler for solution providers to
utilize and customers to deploy. Our support for UnitedLinux spans our
entire Linux software, hardware, and services portfolio — already the
broadest in the industry — giving our customers and business partners what
they need to move more business workloads onto Linux.”

For additional information regarding IBM and its longstanding commitment to
Linux, please visit: www.ibm.com/linux.

About IBM

With 80 years of leadership in helping businesses innovate, IBM is the
world’s largest information technology company. IBM is a leading provider
of e-business solutions and is dedicated to helping companies, Business
Partners and developers leverage the potential of the Internet and network
computing across a wide range of businesses and industries. The company
offers a host of cross-industry and industry specific solutions designed to
meet the needs of growing companies. For more information, visit
http//www.ibm.com.

Category:

  • Linux

Michael’s minutes: Inside the Insider program

Many of you are eager to know what Lindows.com has in store in the coming months. I
can tell you the Lindows.com team has been hard at work on the next LindowsOS
Sneak Preview – SPX. Insiders can expect several improvements, including better
browser support, an improved graphical interface, a sleeker more functional email client,
enhanced compatibility with Microsoft Windows applications, dozens of new
applications in the Click-N-Run Warehouse, as well as overall improvements
throughout. This latest version will be waiting in the Insiders’ my.lindows.com locker
the moment SPX is ready in early June.
While the Lindows.com staff works away, also helping out are our Insiders. Thanks to
the global team of Insiders who are providing us with their feedback and insights on our
Sneak Preview versions. Check out this map for a graphical view of where Lindows.com
Insiders live – hint: they come from every corner of the globe!

Enthusiastic Insiders from all over the world have sent us images of their customized
LindowsOS desktops. Here’s a sampling of some of the customized screenshots our
Insiders have sent in to our Screenshot Gallery. Their contagious zeal for choice has
sparked a firestorm of creativity (check out the Flash movie sent in by one Insider, also
found in the Screenshot Gallery.)

The Lindows.com Insider team is the force that will leverage change in the market place
and choice on the desktop. Insiders debate and learn from each other in the Insider
forum; here’s a couple of posts from Insiders.

“The prospect of a long weekend gave me time to
properly install SP2, and I’m impressed. Having
experimented with various versions of Linux in the
past, I was pleased first with how painlessly
Lindows installed — I booted from the CD and had
it going in just a few minutes, no partitioning, no
fiddling with xconfig, no guessing and hoping, not
even enough time to play a little arcade game like
several other Linux distros offer during
installation these days.

“Checked the usual stuff on the Linux side just to
be sure, then tried a few tests of what makes
Lindows more than just another Linux by grabbing a
few MSWindows-based programs to give them a whirl.

“I didn’t try every function of every program so I’m
not to the point of submitting a report, but what I
tried worked without a hitch, and at the same speed
I’d have expected if they were running under
Windows itself. In fact, though I didn’t get out
the stopwatch I think some functions were actually
more responsive, particularly mouse-based things
like drag-‘n’-drop editing.

“I’ve still got a few minor issues, probably the
fault of my not exactly plain-vanilla hardware, but
that side of the balance sheet is virtually empty
compared to the positives Lindows has shown me so
far.

“I can hardly wait for the next Sneak Preview
(though it’s really hard to believe this is still
considered “pre-beta” — I’ve purchased commercial
releases of other software with more rough edges)
but until that comes I think I could do actual
serious work on this machine with SP2. When
LindowsOS 1.0 hits the streets, I anticipate a lot
of cheering.

“Gary”

“What can $99.00 get you? In my case a new lease on
life! I would like to explain. I have tried many
test products over the years (some successful…
some not) Never have I been involved in a project
that I BELIEVE IN as much as Lindows.
I have had very good results so far, and have
watched the progress!

“I am convinced that I am dealing with some very
good People, and we have a good shot at being
successful!

“I haven’t been able to do EVERYTHING I am able to
do with Windows, however, there have been many
times that this Pre-release software actually did a
better job.
With the help of other insiders and the support
staff I have accomplised more than I have done with
some of the other Full Products I have tried!

“My wife came to me this weekend and told me that I
have her support 100%. She is not technical, but
has heard enough to think that My Philosophy and
Lindows is a perfect fit.

“I agree, and am anxiously awaiting the next
release!
I just want to thank the Staff and The Insiders
that have helped me!

“I am glad I was willing to give Lindows a try! Now
I’m not looking back!

“Thanks! ..Geo”

Insiders, like Gary and Geo, are the first to receive Lindows.com products and the first
to sound off when they have concerns. You can visit the Insiders’ sign-up page to view
all of the benefits of membership. If you haven’t joined by now, consider the impact
your voice and support will have in the future. Lindows.com only becomes a viable
company with your support.

Michael Robertson

Lindows.com just launched http://support.lindows.com for
Insiders and Lindows.com visitors. Please feel free to visit
http://support.lindows.com to get the answers to your
questions you may have about LindowsOS or Lindows.com.

Bringing choice to your computer!

Lindows.com has released LindowsOS Sneak Preview 1 and 2 to a
select group of Insiders. The Sneak Previews are not fully
completed products but showcase many of the unique features
such as a “Friendly-Install” alongside an existing Microsoft
Windows operating system, a streamlined installation process
which requires no computer knowledge and the ability to run
popular Windows-based programs. This will be followed by the
final version due out later in the year. For more information
see www.lindows.com/products

LindowsOS and Lindows.com are trademarks of Lindows.com, Inc. Linux® is a registered
trademark of Linus Torvalds. Microsoft® Windows® operating system is a registered trademark
or service mark of the Microsoft Corporation.

Linux kernel 2.5.19 released

Linux kernel version 2.5.19 has been released. It is available from:

Patch: ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.5/patch-2.5.19.gz

Full source:
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.5/linux-2.5.19.tar.gz

Sizes in bytes                  Compressed      Uncompressed
------------------------------------------------------------
Patch                               464760           2054321
Full source                       34344851         153190400

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The following files were changed in this release:

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 b/drivers/char/ip2main.c                    |    6 
 b/drivers/char/rio/rio_linux.c              |    2 
 b/drivers/hotplug/Makefile                  |    2 
 b/drivers/i2c/Makefile                      |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/Config.help                   |   25 
 b/drivers/ide/Config.in                     |    7 
 b/drivers/ide/Makefile                      |   13 
 b/drivers/ide/aec62xx.c                     |  661 +---
 b/drivers/ide/alim15x3.c                    |   37 
 b/drivers/ide/amd74xx.c                     |    5 
 b/drivers/ide/ata-timing.h                  |    1 
 b/drivers/ide/atapi.c                       |   70 
 b/drivers/ide/buddha.c                      |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/cmd64x.c                      |    5 
 b/drivers/ide/cs5530.c                      |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/falconide.c                   |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/gayle.c                       |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/hd.c                          |   12 
 b/drivers/ide/hpt34x.c                      |   10 
 b/drivers/ide/hpt366.c                      |    9 
 b/drivers/ide/icside.c                      |    9 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-cd.c                      |   29 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-cs.c                      |    3 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-disk.c                    |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-floppy.c                  |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-pci.c                     |  284 --
 b/drivers/ide/ide-pmac.c                    |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-pnp.c                     |   53 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-tape.c                    |   19 
 b/drivers/ide/ide-taskfile.c                |   60 
 b/drivers/ide/ide.c                         | 1917 --------------
 b/drivers/ide/ioctl.c                       |  285 ++
 b/drivers/ide/ioctl.h                       |   15 
 b/drivers/ide/it8172.c                      |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/macide.c                      |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/main.c                        | 1537 +++++++++++
 b/drivers/ide/pcihost.h                     |   18 
 b/drivers/ide/pdc202xx.c                    |  478 +--
 b/drivers/ide/pdc4030.c                     |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/piix.c                        |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/probe.c                       | 1247 +++++++++
 b/drivers/ide/q40ide.c                      |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/qd65xx.c                      |  203 -
 b/drivers/ide/rapide.c                      |    2 
 b/drivers/ide/serverworks.c                 |   44 
 b/drivers/ide/sis5513.c                     |    6 
 b/drivers/ide/sl82c105.c                    |    7 
 b/drivers/ide/via82cxxx.c                   |    2 
 b/drivers/ieee1394/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/input/Makefile                    |    4 
 b/drivers/input/gameport/Makefile           |    4 
 b/drivers/input/serio/Makefile              |    4 
 b/drivers/isdn/Makefile                     |    4 
 b/drivers/isdn/capi/Makefile                |    4 
 b/drivers/isdn/capi/kcapi.c                 |  499 ---
 b/drivers/isdn/capi/kcapi.h                 |   46 
 b/drivers/isdn/capi/kcapi_proc.c            |  269 +
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/avmcard.h       |    6 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/b1.c            |   33 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/b1dma.c         |   14 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/b1isa.c         |   76 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/b1pci.c         |  207 -
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/b1pcmcia.c      |   99 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/c4.c            |  174 -
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/t1isa.c         |  116 
 b/drivers/isdn/hardware/avm/t1pci.c         |  114 
 b/drivers/isdn/hysdn/hycapi.c               |  104 
 b/drivers/isdn/hysdn/hysdn_defs.h           |    2 
 b/drivers/macintosh/Makefile                |   11 
 b/drivers/macintosh/mediabay.c              |   10 
 b/drivers/md/Makefile                       |    2 
 b/drivers/md/md.c                           |    6 
 b/drivers/media/Makefile                    |   11 
 b/drivers/media/radio/Makefile              |    9 
 b/drivers/media/video/Makefile              |    9 
 b/drivers/message/Makefile                  |    2 
 b/drivers/misc/Makefile                     |   11 
 b/drivers/mtd/Makefile                      |   12 
 b/drivers/mtd/chips/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/mtd/devices/Makefile              |    2 
 b/drivers/mtd/maps/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/mtd/mtdblock.c                    |   11 
 b/drivers/mtd/mtdblock_ro.c                 |    2 
 b/drivers/mtd/nand/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/net/Makefile                      |    8 
 b/drivers/net/irda/irda-usb.c               |    2 
 b/drivers/net/tulip/Config.in               |    2 
 b/drivers/net/wireless/airo.c               |   10 
 b/drivers/parport/Makefile                  |    9 
 b/drivers/pci/Makefile                      |    9 
 b/drivers/pci/hotplug.c                     |    3 
 b/drivers/pci/pci-driver.c                  |  125 
 b/drivers/pci/probe.c                       |   13 
 b/drivers/pci/setup-bus.c                   |    8 
 b/drivers/pcmcia/Makefile                   |    2 
 b/drivers/pnp/Makefile                      |    2 
 b/drivers/s390/Makefile                     |    9 
 b/drivers/s390/block/Makefile               |    2 
 b/drivers/s390/char/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/s390/misc/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/s390/net/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/sbus/Makefile                     |   19 
 b/drivers/sbus/audio/Makefile               |    2 
 b/drivers/sbus/char/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/scsi/Makefile                     |    3 
 b/drivers/scsi/ide-scsi.c                   |  211 -
 b/drivers/sgi/Makefile                      |    4 
 b/drivers/sgi/char/Makefile                 |    7 
 b/drivers/telephony/Makefile                |   10 
 b/drivers/usb/Makefile                      |  110 
 b/drivers/usb/class/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/core/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/core/hcd.c                    |   24 
 b/drivers/usb/core/hcd.h                    |   16 
 b/drivers/usb/core/hub.c                    |    3 
 b/drivers/usb/core/usb.c                    |   16 
 b/drivers/usb/host/Config.help              |   10 
 b/drivers/usb/host/Config.in                |    3 
 b/drivers/usb/host/Makefile                 |    3 
 b/drivers/usb/host/ehci-dbg.c               |   10 
 b/drivers/usb/host/ehci-hcd.c               |    8 
 b/drivers/usb/host/ehci-sched.c             |  152 -
 b/drivers/usb/host/ehci.h                   |    8 
 b/drivers/usb/host/hc_simple.c              | 1074 +++++++
 b/drivers/usb/host/hc_simple.h              |  231 +
 b/drivers/usb/host/hc_sl811.c               | 1358 +++++++++
 b/drivers/usb/host/hc_sl811.h               |  385 ++
 b/drivers/usb/host/hc_sl811_rh.c            |  526 +++
 b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uhci-dbg.c           |    4 
 b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uhci-hcd.c           |   70 
 b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uhci-hub.c           |    6 
 b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uhci-mem.c           |   23 
 b/drivers/usb/host/usb-uhci-q.c             |   81 
 b/drivers/usb/image/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/input/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/media/Makefile                |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/misc/Makefile                 |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/net/Makefile                  |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/serial/Makefile               |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/Makefile              |    1 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/debug.h               |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/isd200.c              |    2 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/scsiglue.c            |    5 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/transport.c           |   85 
 b/drivers/usb/storage/usb.c                 |  248 -
 b/drivers/usb/storage/usb.h                 |   23 
 b/drivers/video/Config.in                   |   92 
 b/drivers/video/Makefile                    |   21 
 b/drivers/video/anakinfb.c                  |  182 -
 b/drivers/video/cfbcopyarea.c               |  222 +
 b/drivers/video/cfbfillrect.c               |  209 +
 b/drivers/video/cfbimgblt.c                 |  133 
 b/drivers/video/chipsfb.c                   |    4 
 b/drivers/video/clps711xfb.c                |  158 -
 b/drivers/video/cyber2000fb.c               |    5 
 b/drivers/video/fbcmap.c                    |    2 
 b/drivers/video/fbcon-accel.c               |    2 
 b/drivers/video/fbmem.c                     |   26 
 b/drivers/video/fm2fb.c                     |  416 ---
 b/drivers/video/g364fb.c                    |  479 +--
 b/drivers/video/hgafb.c                     |   42 
 b/drivers/video/hitfb.c                     |  446 ---
 b/drivers/video/hpfb.c                      |  314 --
 b/drivers/video/matrox/matroxfb_accel.c     |   11 
 b/drivers/video/matrox/matroxfb_accel.h     |    1 
 b/drivers/video/pm2fb.c                     |    3 
 b/drivers/video/pm3fb.c                     | 3832
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 b/drivers/video/pm3fb.h                     | 1284 +++++++++
 b/drivers/video/q40fb.c                     |  351 --
 b/drivers/video/skeletonfb.c                |  668 ++--
 b/drivers/video/tdfxfb.c                    | 3673
+++++++++++++-------------
 b/drivers/video/tridentfb.c                 | 1305 +++++++++
 b/drivers/video/tridentfb.h                 |  169 +
 b/drivers/video/vesafb.c                    |  421 ---
 b/drivers/video/vfb.c                       |  806 ++---
 b/drivers/zorro/Makefile                    |    9 
 b/fs/Config.help                            |   15 
 b/fs/Config.in                              |    7 
 b/fs/Makefile                               |    6 
 b/fs/binfmt_em86.c                          |    2 
 b/fs/block_dev.c                            |    2 
 b/fs/buffer.c                               |   69 
 b/fs/dcache.c                               |    2 
 b/fs/dquot.c                                |   62 
 b/fs/driverfs/inode.c                       |  115 
 b/fs/exec.c                                 |   97 
 b/fs/ext2/dir.c                             |    2 
 b/fs/ext2/ialloc.c                          |    5 
 b/fs/ext2/inode.c                           |   89 
 b/fs/ext2/ioctl.c                           |    3 
 b/fs/ext3/ialloc.c                          |    7 
 b/fs/ext3/inode.c                           |   45 
 b/fs/ext3/ioctl.c                           |    3 
 b/fs/ext3/namei.c                           |   16 
 b/fs/ext3/super.c                           |   12 
 b/fs/fat/inode.c                            |    3 
 b/fs/fs-writeback.c                         |   22 
 b/fs/inode.c                                |    9 
 b/fs/iobuf.c                                |    2 
 b/fs/jbd/checkpoint.c                       |    2 
 b/fs/jbd/journal.c                          |   31 
 b/fs/jbd/transaction.c                      |   10 
 b/fs/mpage.c                                |  547 +++
 b/fs/msdos/namei.c                          |   15 
 b/fs/namespace.c                            |    1 
 b/fs/nfs/dir.c                              |   10 
 b/fs/nfs/nfs2xdr.c                          |  179 -
 b/fs/nfs/nfs3proc.c                         |   51 
 b/fs/nfs/nfs3xdr.c                          |  173 -
 b/fs/nfs/proc.c                             |   50 
 b/fs/nfs/read.c                             |   40 
 b/fs/nfs/symlink.c                          |    6 
 b/fs/nfs/write.c                            |   28 
 b/fs/partitions/check.c                     |    4 
 b/fs/proc/array.c                           |    6 
 b/fs/proc/proc_misc.c                       |    8 
 b/fs/quota.c                                |  395 --
 b/fs/quota_v1.c                             |    6 
 b/fs/quota_v2.c                             |    6 
 b/fs/reiserfs/buffer2.c                     |    2 
 b/fs/reiserfs/journal.c                     |    1 
 b/fs/vfat/namei.c                           |   14 
 b/include/asm-alpha/errno.h                 |   38 
 b/include/asm-alpha/ide.h                   |    2 
 b/include/asm-alpha/siginfo.h               |  212 -
 b/include/asm-alpha/signal.h                |    3 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-anakin/ide.h         |   10 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-arc/ide.h            |    2 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-cl7500/ide.h         |    6 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-ebsa285/ide.h        |    2 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-rpc/ide.h            |    2 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-sa1100/ide.h         |   10 
 b/include/asm-arm/arch-shark/ide.h          |    2 
 b/include/asm-arm/errno.h                   |  128 
 b/include/asm-arm/siginfo.h                 |  230 -
 b/include/asm-arm/signal.h                  |    2 
 b/include/asm-cris/errno.h                  |  130 
 b/include/asm-cris/ide.h                    |    2 
 b/include/asm-cris/siginfo.h                |  229 -
 b/include/asm-generic/errno-base.h          |   39 
 b/include/asm-generic/errno.h               |  100 
 b/include/asm-generic/siginfo.h             |  254 +
 b/include/asm-i386/errno.h                  |  128 
 b/include/asm-i386/hw_irq.h                 |    1 
 b/include/asm-i386/ide.h                    |   15 
 b/include/asm-i386/pgtable-2level.h         |    1 
 b/include/asm-i386/pgtable-3level.h         |    5 
 b/include/asm-i386/pgtable.h                |   27 
 b/include/asm-i386/siginfo.h                |  230 -
 b/include/asm-i386/suspend.h                |    6 
 b/include/asm-ia64/bitops.h                 |    6 
 b/include/asm-ia64/efi.h                    |   11 
 b/include/asm-ia64/elf.h                    |    2 
 b/include/asm-ia64/errno.h                  |  128 
 b/include/asm-ia64/ide.h                    |    2 
 b/include/asm-ia64/kregs.h                  |  121 
 b/include/asm-ia64/machvec.h                |    9 
 b/include/asm-ia64/machvec_hpzx1.h          |   39 
 b/include/asm-ia64/offsets.h                |    1 
 b/include/asm-ia64/page.h                   |   34 
 b/include/asm-ia64/pci.h                    |   12 
 b/include/asm-ia64/perfmon.h                |    3 
 b/include/asm-ia64/pgalloc.h                |    4 
 b/include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h                |   20 
 b/include/asm-ia64/processor.h              |  139 -
 b/include/asm-ia64/siginfo.h                |  145 -
 b/include/asm-ia64/signal.h                 |    2 
 b/include/asm-ia64/system.h                 |   36 
 b/include/asm-ia64/tlb.h                    |    6 
 b/include/asm-ia64/unistd.h                 |    1 
 b/include/asm-m68k/errno.h                  |  128 
 b/include/asm-m68k/siginfo.h                |  176 -
 b/include/asm-m68k/signal.h                 |    2 
 b/include/asm-mips/errno.h                  |   37 
 b/include/asm-mips/ide.h                    |    2 
 b/include/asm-mips/siginfo.h                |  156 -
 b/include/asm-mips64/errno.h                |   37 
 b/include/asm-mips64/ide.h                  |    2 
 b/include/asm-mips64/mmzone.h               |    2 
 b/include/asm-mips64/siginfo.h              |  155 -
 b/include/asm-parisc/errno.h                |   36 
 b/include/asm-parisc/ide.h                  |    2 
 b/include/asm-parisc/siginfo.h              |  225 -
 b/include/asm-ppc/bitops.h                  |   12 
 b/include/asm-ppc/errno.h                   |  127 
 b/include/asm-ppc/hardirq.h                 |    2 
 b/include/asm-ppc/i8259.h                   |    5 
 b/include/asm-ppc/ibm4xx.h                  |    8 
 b/include/asm-ppc/ide.h                     |    2 
 b/include/asm-ppc/io.h                      |   38 
 b/include/asm-ppc/irq.h                     |   40 
 b/include/asm-ppc/pgalloc.h                 |    3 
 b/include/asm-ppc/pgtable.h                 |   12 
 b/include/asm-ppc/serial.h                  |    2 
 b/include/asm-ppc/siginfo.h                 |  227 -
 b/include/asm-ppc/spinlock.h                |    2 
 b/include/asm-ppc/time.h                    |    4 
 b/include/asm-ppc64/errno.h                 |  127 
 b/include/asm-ppc64/siginfo.h               |  228 -
 b/include/asm-s390/errno.h                  |  129 
 b/include/asm-s390/siginfo.h                |  156 -
 b/include/asm-s390x/errno.h                 |  130 
 b/include/asm-s390x/siginfo.h               |  156 -
 b/include/asm-sh/errno.h                    |  128 
 b/include/asm-sh/ide.h                      |    2 
 b/include/asm-sh/siginfo.h                  |  229 -
 b/include/asm-sparc/errno.h                 |   37 
 b/include/asm-sparc/ide.h                   |    2 
 b/include/asm-sparc/siginfo.h               |  164 -
 b/include/asm-sparc/signal.h                |    2 
 b/include/asm-sparc64/errno.h               |   37 
 b/include/asm-sparc64/ide.h                 |    2 
 b/include/asm-sparc64/siginfo.h             |  172 -
 b/include/asm-sparc64/signal.h              |    3 
 b/include/asm-x86_64/errno.h                |  128 
 b/include/asm-x86_64/ide.h                  |   15 
 b/include/asm-x86_64/siginfo.h              |  229 -
 b/include/linux/atapi.h                     |    9 
 b/include/linux/auto_fs.h                   |    2 
 b/include/linux/binfmts.h                   |    1 
 b/include/linux/blk.h                       |   11 
 b/include/linux/blkdev.h                    |    8 
 b/include/linux/buffer_head.h               |    4 
 b/include/linux/device.h                    |   63 
 b/include/linux/driverfs_fs.h               |    5 
 b/include/linux/ext2_fs.h                   |    9 
 b/include/linux/ext3_fs.h                   |    6 
 b/include/linux/fb.h                        |    6 
 b/include/linux/fs.h                        |   15 
 b/include/linux/hdreg.h                     |    9 
 b/include/linux/ide.h                       |   41 
 b/include/linux/irq.h                       |    2 
 b/include/linux/isdn/capilli.h              |   79 
 b/include/linux/jbd.h                       |   13 
 b/include/linux/jiffies.h                   |    1 
 b/include/linux/mm.h                        |    8 
 b/include/linux/mmzone.h                    |    4 
 b/include/linux/mpage.h                     |   18 
 b/include/linux/nfs_xdr.h                   |   54 
 b/include/linux/page-flags.h                |    2 
 b/include/linux/pci.h                       |    3 
 b/include/linux/pci_ids.h                   |    4 
 b/include/linux/quota.h                     |   24 
 b/include/linux/sched.h                     |    1 
 b/include/linux/signal.h                    |    4 
 b/include/linux/sunrpc/xdr.h                |   64 
 b/include/linux/sunrpc/xprt.h               |   29 
 b/include/linux/suspend.h                   |    2 
 b/include/linux/swap.h                      |   10 
 b/include/linux/sysctl.h                    |   14 
 b/include/linux/tqueue.h                    |    2 
 b/include/linux/writeback.h                 |    2 
 b/include/video/tdfx.h                      |  191 +
 b/init/Makefile                             |    8 
 b/init/do_mounts.c                          |    2 
 b/ipc/sem.c                                 |    1 
 b/kernel/exit.c                             |    2 
 b/kernel/ksyms.c                            |    1 
 b/kernel/sched.c                            |   37 
 b/kernel/signal.c                           |  146 +
 b/kernel/suspend.c                          |   75 
 b/kernel/timer.c                            |   12 
 b/mm/filemap.c                              |  210 -
 b/mm/memory.c                               |    2 
 b/mm/mempool.c                              |    2 
 b/mm/mmap.c                                 |    4 
 b/mm/numa.c                                 |    4 
 b/mm/page-writeback.c                       |   31 
 b/mm/page_alloc.c                           |  112 
 b/mm/pdflush.c                              |    5 
 b/mm/readahead.c                            |   40 
 b/mm/swap_state.c                           |    8 
 b/mm/vmscan.c                               |   33 
 b/net/atm/pppoatm.c                         |    2 
 b/net/core/dev.c                            |    6 
 b/net/core/skbuff.c                         |   30 
 b/net/ipv4/ipconfig.c                       |    6 
 b/net/sunrpc/clnt.c                         |   20 
 b/net/sunrpc/sunrpc_syms.c                  |    5 
 b/net/sunrpc/xdr.c                          |  195 +
 b/net/sunrpc/xprt.c                         |  219 -
 b/scripts/Makefile                          |   74 
 b/sound/core/memory.c                       |   16 
 b/sound/oss/Makefile                        |    2 
 b/sound/pci/rme9652/rme9652_mem.c           |    6 
 drivers/acorn/Makefile                      |   15 
 drivers/ide/ide-features.c                  |  363 --
 drivers/ide/ide-geometry.c                  |  145 -
 drivers/ide/ide-probe.c                     |  904 ------
 include/linux/quotacompat.h                 |   86 
 scripts/pathdown.sh                         |   13 
 611 files changed, 27002 insertions(+), 22695 deletions(-)

Category:

  • Linux

Ximian news, May 29, 2002

1) Get StarOffice 6.0 FREE with Ximian Desktop Professional Edition, Red
     Carpet Express
2) New Red Hat 7.3, Mandrake 8.2 and Yellow Dog 2.2 Distribution Support
3) Solaris Users:  Get Connected to Exchange 2000
4) Getting Help: Visit http://support.ximian.com
5) Tip: Using Ximian Evolution with KDE and Solaris (CDE)
6) Customer Spotlight:  Zumiez
7) Upcoming Ximian Events
(1) Get StarOffice 6.0 FREE with Ximian Desktop Professional Edition,
      Red Carpet Express

    Ximian is now including Sun StarOffice 6.0 for Linux with Ximian
    Desktop Professional Edition and the Red Carpet Express premium
    high-speed software updating service. StarOffice 6.0, which has a
    suggested retail price of $75.95, is a new, significantly enhanced
    version of the Microsoft Office compatible productivity application
    application suite for word processing, spreadsheet, business
    graphics and drawing/diagramming. Tightly integrated with Ximian
    Desktop, StarOffice 6.0 provides one-click email attachment handling
    of Word, Excel and Powerpoint files.
    
    StarOffice 6.0 is bundled with:
    
    * Ximian Desktop Professional Edition, priced at $59.95, including
    90 days of web-based technical support.
    
    * Red Carpet Express, with subscriptions priced at $9.95 per month
    and $99.95 per year.
        
    * Red Carpet CorporateConnect, which includes a license for
    StarOffice 6.0 included with each paid seat, priced at $150 per year
    per seat.
    
    To order your copy of Ximian Desktop Professional Edition, visit the
    Ximian store at:
         https://store.ximian.com/xproddetail.php?sku=XD200502-PRO-E
    
    To subscribe to Red Carpet Express:
    https://store.ximian.com/redcarpet/rcx-signup.php
    
    Read the official announcement:
    
http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/soffice_6.html
        

(2) New Red Hat 7.3, Mandrake 8.2 and Yellow Dog 2.2 Distribution
Support

    Ximian recently delivered new versions of Ximian Evolution, Red
    Carpet and Ximian GNOME certified for use with the latest Linux
    distributions from Red Hat (7.3); Mandrake (8.2) and Yellow Dog
    2.2.  Ximian Desktop software can be purchased on CD at:
    
        https://store.ximian.com 

    or downloaded for free at:

        http://www.ximian.com/download. 
    
    Watch the Ximian web site for upcoming distribution support,
    including SuSE 8.0.


(3) Solaris Users:  Get Connected to Exchange 2000

    Ximian Connector, which enables Ximian Evolution to function as a
    Microsoft Exchange 200 client for email, group scheduling, global
    address book access, and other important corporate functions, has
    been extended to support Solaris 8.0 systems. Now, in corporations
    who have standardized on Microsoft Exchange 2000 for messaging and
    calendar functions, Linux and UNIX users alike can use Ximian
    Evolution to collaborate with their colleagues running Windows.
    
    "After installing Ximian Connector, I became a full-fledged member
    of the my employer's calendaring community. My responses to meeting
    requests initiated by Outlook users worked correctly and
    consistently. Best of all, installation was trivial - right-clicking
    on the license that I received via email gave me the option to
    install the Connector license, which worked flawlessly." Bill Von
    Hagen, Linux Planet.
    
    Learn more about Ximian Connector for Microsoft Exchange:
    http://www.ximian.com/products/connector/


(4) Getting Help: Visit http://support.ximian.com

    Did you know that Ximian offers a free knowledge base to help you
    find answers and solve problems?  Visit http://support.ximian.com to
    learn about free and premium support options from Ximian.


(5) Tip: Using Ximian Evolution with KDE and Solaris (CDE)

    Ximian recently shipped new installers that dramatically simplify
    the process of using Ximian Evolution on systems running KDE and
    CDE.  Now, you no longer have to install all of GNOME if you want to
    use Ximian Evolution.  Just choose "Install Evolution only" from the
    Ximian Desktop installer, and only those packages required by
    Evolution will be installed.


(6) Customer Spotlight:  Zumiez

    From upstate New York to Seattle, Zumiez stores are the place to
    find the latest snowboarding and skateboarding hardware, clothes,
    and shoes.  In a retail sector where "bleeding edge" threads and gear
    have driven rapid growth, this 89-store chain, based in Everett,
    Wash., can't open outlets fast enough.  To manage this rapid
    expansion, Zumiez is bringing Linux, and Ximian software, into the
    mall.
    
    By the end of May, the 1,200-employee, privately held chain will
    have installed open-source software on the PCs at all its retail
    locations to enable managers to browse the intranet, do email,
    manage company calendars, and complete their financials.  Those
    computers are using of Ximian Desktop software customized by Zumiez,
    including Ximian Evolution, Gnumeric and Mozilla on systems running
    the Red Hat version of the Linux operating system. They will also
    run the Zumiez point-of-sale (POS) retail-management system.
    According to Zumiez' retail-systems manager, Rory Hudson, the shift
    to open-source software will cut the tech budget by between $250,000
    and $500,000 a year.  
    
    See Business Week Online: 
    
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/may2002/tc20020515_3938.htm


(7) Upcoming Ximian Events

    Ximian will be attending or supporting Technical Conferences/Linux
    User Group meetings in Monterey, CA (USENIX: June 10-15) New
    Hampshire (June 26), and Jacksonville, Florida (ITEC: June 12&13). 
    If you are organizing an upcoming LUG meeting, let Greg
    Mancusi-Ungaro, Ximian Director of Marketing Communications, know by
    emailing him at gregmu@ximian.com.

KDE ported to OSX

alfredo writes: “The guys at FINK have announced the first release of the KDE3 Port for OSX.

I wonder how Liquid will look with Aqua?”

Category:

  • Unix

Mid-range Linux: Slowly, very slowly, Linux is coming to the AS/400

By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

Everyone knows about Linux on IBM Intel servers, most people know that IBM is doing well positioning Linux on mainframes, but few people know that IBM is also pushing Linux on the mid-range AS/400 (iSeries) lines.
It’s an uphill battle, in part because while there’s long been some interest in porting Linux to the AS/400, it’s always been a lower priority than other projects for both the Linux community and IBM. But now Linux on the AS/400 is beginning to heat up. Dan Powers, IBM’s v.p. of Linux Solutions, says that recently, “we’ve have had a lot of customers ask for Linux on the iSeries and it’s only been in the last few months that our partners are coming out with it.”

Rick Kearney, CEO of Mainline Information Systems, a major zSeries and iSeries IBM solution provider and value-added reseller, agrees. “Somewhere in the fourth quarter of 2001, CIO and CEOs got Linux evaluations on their ‘to-do’ lists now, so they’re calling us now to ask what can we (do) to move enterprise services to Linux,” says Kearney. “People are just waking up to the power of Linux.”

IBM and its partners are ready for them. Today, Red Hat, SuSE, and Turbolinux have distributions that are available on the iSeries. As on the mainframe, SuSE appears to have the most mature Linux available. For example, SuSE has the only 64-bit distribution. Turbolinux is running second with an early lead in China, where it appears as though the AS/400 platform could prove very popular. Red Hat’s iSeries offering lags behind its Intel offerings. The company offers Red Hat 7.1, not 7.3, for the AS/400.

Some customers are retrofitting Linux on their older machines. Craig Johnson, IBM’s iSeries Linux product manager is on record saying that more than 100 iSeries customers are trying out iSeries Linux in pilot projects. So far, these have been small- and mid-size businesses on smaller systems like the iSeries Model 270s and 820s.

The analysts agree, with reservations. Bill Claybrook, the Aberdeen Group’s research director for Linux and Unix, says that while he can see how companies “might be interested in using the AS/400 for server consolidation, it’s hard to imagine people buying a new AS/400 just for Linux.” He believes that “AS/400 Linux will play only on the existing installed base.”

Stacey Quandt, Giga Information Group’s Open Source analyst, is more optimistic. She says that the “iSeries has a lot of potential. It enables the dynamic balancing of workloads across multiple partitions, which is of the value to companies that want to allocate resources as needed.” She wonders if companies currently going ga-ga for blade servers, 2002’s red-hot server architecture craze, might not be better off with an iSeries approach.

The Linux distributors hope the small- to medium-sized businesses that make up the bread and butter of iSeries customers agree. Anita Kratka, Turbolinux’s director of alliances and channel sales, says: “We can see AS/400 in the future and it looks good.”

Mike Hampton, v.p. of business development for Red Hat, also believes there’s “reasonably strong global interest developing in the AS/400 world.” Half-joking, he adds, “If you told me two years ago that IBM would be sexy, and Microsoft’s biggest threat would be Linux, I would have thought you were crazy.”

Crazy like a fox, maybe. IBM has also, according to Powers, persuaded independent software vendors (ISVs) to port their products to AS/400 Linux. For example, Symantec will bring its enterprise firewall program to this platform. This is not a small deal. Claybrook believes this first step is vital if IBM’s Linux is to be successful is getting ISVs to invest in porting their applications to IBM’s Linux platforms.

One ISV and integrator, the eOne Group, is making a major play on AS/400 Linux. Steve Romweber, its v.p. of channel development, says the company’s flagship program, eOne Commerce, a Java Web e-commerce package, runs on multiple operating systems, but eOne was persuaded to move to Linux when it tested its application on NT, AIX, and OS/400 for a customer. The company found that while “it was running OK, when we decided to try the application with Red Hat Linux and the performance went through the roof.” Since then, eOne Group has been an IBM Linux believer.

It’s more than performance, though. Romweber cites IBM middleware such as the Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition WebSphere application server and the DB2 database as reasons that his company supports Linux on the AS/400. And, last but not least, “AS/400s just keep running and Linux just keeps working.”

Romweber says the company recently sold its application running on an iSeries and Linux to a major national company based in Atlanta. He thinks this will make eOne’s customer, “the first people to deploy an eCommerce site on an AS/400 running Linux.”

While ISVs are coming on board, getting hardware resellers to see the advantages of Linux to their bottom line is proving harder.

IDC analysts, Julie Gage and Kevin Restivo, in their report, “Resellers Lukewarm on Linux,” say resellers, while interested in Linux, don’t see any short-term gains in putting time and money in Linux when they have little of either. In informal interviews with several mid-Atlantic AS/400 VARs, we found the same attitude.

Mainline’s Kearney, though, would consider this hesitancy foolish. “We’re equating this to Windows. When Windows 3.0 came out, people said it was cute, but ‘it will be a long time before I run accounting on Windows.’ Now, you have billion dollar companies running accounting on NT. Today, it’s the same thing, people see Linux as this cute little server operating system for file sharing and Web serving; that’s going to change.”

He also believes Linux on the iSeries is where Linux was on the zSeries a year ago: interesting, but unproven. Soon though, Kearney says, “Mainline will be able to show real-world results with office production setups with up to 50,000 users on one physical box and high-end, but inexpensive, applications like customer relationship management that will be as very bit as viable as the high priced guy, but they’ll be cheaper and run on Linux.”

Come that day, when Mainline and other companies show that Linux and AS/400 make a potent one-two, Kearney thinks existing AS/400 customers and firms considering Solaris and W2K, will start considering this mid-range Linux for their companies.

Kearney realizes that the iSeries and Linux might not fly. From where he sits, “it’s still early in the game, AS/400 Linux is either going to work quickly or it will die quickly like network stations and OS/2.”

No matter how profitable Linux gets, or doesn’t get, on the AS/400, Powers says that “OS/400 isn’t going anywhere; it has some of the most passionate and loyal customers around.” So Linux on the AS/400 will always be “an add-on, not a replacement for the native operating system.” IBM and partners just hope that it will be an extremely successful add-on.

Category:

  • Linux