OpenDarwin 7.2.1 Released 42
Ed Waldmire writes "I am pleased to annouce to the /. community that the OpenDarwin community has released OpenDarwin 7.2.1. This release corresponds to Mac OS X 10.3.2 and includes many bugfixes and additions. Most notable are ncutil, YUM, and a tulip NIC driver."
Re:Comments, anyone? (Score:2)
Re:Comments, anyone? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Comments, anyone? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:fixes? (Score:1, Funny)
I was writing my paper.... (Score:1, Funny)
POSIX? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:POSIX? (Score:4, Insightful)
cr
Re:POSIX? (Score:1, Funny)
I love how dipshits always get this wrong. If you could care less, then you still care. What you meant to say was "I couldn't care less".
dddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddickhead
Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm very curious about it.
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:5, Interesting)
OpenDarwin isn't intended to be very speedy and reliable on x86 hardware. We have FreeBSD for that.
OpenDarwin isn't intended to support every x86 motherboard or weird peripheral. We have NetBSD for that.
OpenDarwin isn't intended to be the most secure OS out there. We have OpenBSD for that.
OpenDarwin isn't intended to form the center of a large and growing religious cult. We have Linux for that.
Use OpenDarwin if you want to check out the foundation upon which OSX is built. It has some very cool technologies that other OSs do not.
For example, it replaces rc.* scripts (BSD) and run-levels (SysV) with SystemStarter. Second, the driver model was designed with OOP in mind and has been branded I/OKit. Third, instead of littering the filesystem with lots of "dot-files" it uses the SystemConfiguration framework to store configurations.
Using OpenDarwin-x86 + GNUStep + WindowMaker (or AfterStep) gets you a machine that looks like OSX on x86.
Take a look. You might like what you find.
cr
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:2)
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:4, Informative)
Given that SystemStarter is run by a command in /etc/rc (and that there are rc scripts for various run levels in SV-style inits), you presumably meant "augments rc.* scripts with SystemStarter".
There's documentation on the developer.apple.com site for the startup process in OS X [apple.com].
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:3, Interesting)
cr
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:5, Informative)
The problem is that you just get the base OS, which isn't any better than say, FreeBSD, but not too much worse either, but you don't get the GUI, which after all is the difference (from FreeBSD, Linux, whatever) that you'd want from Apple in the first place.
--
Kirby Reviews [generalhouseware.com]
Isn't "Darwin + a good GUI" called Mac OS X? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:3, Informative)
Umm... Not something anyone would really want to use much. It might be interesting if you wanted to have maybe OS X front-ends and x86 machines for a cluster. Not sure how that would work, but that's the only real use for it I can think of.
Nope. It's mostly just FreeBSD, with a different kernel (tcsh and all).
Most definately! You can't even get text-mode working unless you have a supported vi
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:2)
Re:Darwin on x86 -- QUESTIONS (Score:1)
It's based on the Mach microkernel, not a boring (? ;) monolithic like some other BSD's. (The hurd was supposed to use Mach)
It supports multiple format binaries (ppc & x86) which i found cool, plus the same cd boots on either PC or mac.(nifty if you haven't seen it before (i think b
Is BSM implemented? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is BSM implemented? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is BSM implemented? (Score:2)
I'm sorry. I must not have been clear. Both Darwin 7.4 and OpenDarwin 7.2.1 seem to have (at least some of ) the kernel level functionality needed for BSM, but from neither package can I find any userspace utilities to activate it or read the accounting logs. I'm not so much interested in when it appeared or which versions support it, but rather if it is, or will be usable.
I'm not sure if the problem is that I'm looking for programs with names like bsmconv [sun.com] and auditd [sun.com] and the audit configuration is handled
Re:Is BSM implemented? (Score:3, Informative)
Can somebody test it under vmware3? (Score:2)
Last time it looked promising but it hung very fast after looking promising.
Re:Can somebody test it under vmware3? (Score:5, Informative)
I ran into a guy at WWDC who was planning to rewrite the framebuffer code to work with vmware. I've got his card around here somewhere...
cr
Re:Can somebody test it under vmware3? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Can somebody test it under vmware3? (Score:2)
cr
anyone use this? (Score:1, Redundant)
Question (Score:1)
Is OpenDarwin a usable OS all by itself? Is there a defauly GUI? Does it include Apple's "Finder"?
LK
Re:Question (Score:3, Informative)
There is no default GUI other than X and whatever window manager you decide to install. You can use fink or darwinports to install a whole bunch of different ones (AfterStep, BlackBox, twm, etc.).
The Finder is not included. This isn't MacOS X; just the UNIX bits underneath it.
cr
Configuring Airport Under Darwin (Score:2)
So which is it?