Review of Yoper Linux v2.1 330
Anonymous Coward writes "An interesting review of Yoper Linux has just been posted posted at linuxforums.org. Yoper Linux really does look like it could be the first serious competition Gentoo has had in a long time."
Competion for what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Competion for what? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see gentoo as being "just another distro".
Sure you can make it into a distribution, but portage is more like a collection of recipes for making distributions.
It could be universal to all distributions.. gnu/linux, bsd, hurd, or whatever.
I suppose the init scripts might make it a distribution.
-metric
Re:Competion for what? (Score:5, Funny)
Well I admit that freely, but how does that answer my question?
Re:Competion for what? (Score:5, Insightful)
If Yoper can run as fast as Gentoo, with a fraction of the setup time, and be just as stable, Yoper will be indeed be the Windows-replacer I suggest for our future Installfests on campus. We've been installing Mandrake or Fedora Core 2 and were toying with the idea of getting a few dozen lab computers setup with distcc to make Gentoo installs feasible. Yoper would definitely save us the effort.
I'll still want to see benchmarks for game performance though. This could be my Doom 3 Linux distro of choice as well.
On a different track of thought, perhaps someone in the Gentoo camp will work on making some of Yoper's features available in one of the install stages. It's won't be blatant rip-off, it'll be the bazaar in action.
Re:Competion for what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Configurability, the easy generation of ebuilds (often just copying the ebuild text file to a new version name suffices), not to mention simplicity of tweaking a tar.gz myself or adding a patch file - everything I got out of building myself, but with package management system to keep track of what gets installed.
Then of course there's getting me out of binary dependancy hell for which I'm quite grateful, and there's always revdep-rebuild if some interaction gets lost (due usually to my having done a restricted update, but...).
As for the features, I agree.
Adding the patches to Gentoo will be trivial.
And Gentoo has had things like prelinking for ages - not to mention parallel startup and fancy gcc options.
But I've never seen the linux distro game as that competitive, looks like this one will serve a different market, offering a fully integrated, if less flexible, distro tweaked for speed.
Each distro has its uses. I use Knoppix and Fedora at times, even if every machine at home runs Gentoo.
Re:Competion for what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Gentoo does not IMHO require you to be well versed in the ways and workings of linux; if you can read one of the many languages in which the handbook is written, then I would say you merely require to have sufficient computer literacy to understand the consequences of your actions and the ability to type.
Gentoo makes you work hard to install, as it doesnt abstract you from what you are doing with excessive automation and pretty gui widgets, but it gives clear instructions and reasoning to every step. I find most linux newbies (who are already computer literate, not mousewagglers, but not power users) actually do better for going through a gentoo install and have a fairly good understanding of what they have done at the end.
Course, Im a gentoo supporter, so Im bound to like it.
Gentoo isn't aunt tillies OS by any stretch, but for someone who wants to know what they have done and learn about what they are doing, it is bloody hard to beat.
err!
jak.
Re:Competion for what? (Score:3, Insightful)
I am glad you said what you did. It further proves a point I have been trying to make for a long time. Gentoo is for not-so-knowledgable users who want to FEEL like a l33t hacker because they followed some instructions to build a system.
Gentoo is basically the equivelent of a "build your own AM radio" kit from radio shack. Yeah you have a deeper understanding of how it works, but I personally I would rather go and buy a nice Stereo. Does the kit mean you now have a deep knowledge of amplitude modulation an
Not as good (Score:4, Funny)
Sir, (Score:4, Insightful)
(*) Forget the speed difference some people try to claim, it's a red herring -- like you said, nobody really notices the difference either way.
Oooo! Talk about stuff no one cares about (Score:5, Funny)
In other obscure news about competition that no one cares about, Bob's Fatburger is launching a new ham & swiss sandwich that may prove to be stiff competition against Arby's in the war of the cold cut sandwich arena.
Re:Oooo! Talk about stuff no one cares about (Score:2)
Paul B.
P.S. Yes, I do think that there is place in this world for many burger joints, even obscure ones; as well as for many "experimental" distros. From this article someone will learn about that "prelinking" thing and it might make his day. It's
if their webserver is any indication.. then no.. (Score:3, Funny)
but then, the article is slashdotted..
Re: (Score:2)
Re:if their webserver is any indication.. then no. (Score:3, Interesting)
btw, yes, this is being typed from yoper right now, been using it for a few days, its awesome. Yoper for desktops, debian for servers, thats my story and i'm stickin' to it.
Full Text (Score:2, Informative)
Ok, this is my first review and the kickoff to Linuxforums.org's Editorial Content Section, so lets get started. Yoper Linux is built around the idea of light, compact and wicked fast distro that is available to the average Linux user. Its 100% GPL compliant and the full ISO is free to anyone with an Internet connection. Yoper's popularity has absolutely skyrocketed with the release of v2.1 and is currently sitting at #18 on the distrowatch.com Page Hit Ranking.
Yoper's claim to fame is the spee
Re:Full Text (Score:3, Interesting)
All packages compiled specifically for the i686 against the latest and greatest of the gcc
All the binaries were 'stripped' (ie. all the debug symbols and other nonessential data are removed.) in order to create an even faster base system.
Prelinking
So I wonder - I've done all that on my gentoo-box .. then why should yoper be noticeably faster?
Re:Full Text (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Full Text (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Full Text (Score:2, Interesting)
After downloading the single ISO and burning it, I booted into a BASH prompt. This might sound intimidating to those newer to Linux, but wherever a user is required to type something in there are directions included. In this instance it indicated 'type Yoper to begin setup'. A little fiddling reviled that the prompt had a few basic commands such as mount and access to Vim. Ready to begin the install, I typed Yoper, pressed enter and was greeted by the installer. Overall the feel of the install w
Mod Parent Down (the downmoding one) (Score:2)
different purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
I would not jump to the conclusion that it's competition for Gentoo just because it's also fast.
Re:different purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
This is very true, and I'd like to clarify the reasons. The main one IMHO is that a lot of software options are compile-time. For example I don't use Gnome or KDE, thus I don't want any of the relevant dependencies/bindings compiled into the software I use. Many desktop oriented distros choose nearly every possible binding like this, 'just in case' it is needed. Even when the relevant code is not really used, bigger code is always slower.
The fact that Yoper is compiled for i686 should not make much difference; there are tons of compiler options that go beyond simple i686 capabilities. In fact many compile-time optimizations are due to compiler-independent options as I mentioned above.
It seems Yoper is fast because of prelinking. Gentoo with prelinking should be even faster. But again Gentoo's main point is not that it's fast; it's the ability to control almost every detail of software installation, while avoiding the complications from manual ./configure; make; make install.
Re:different purpose (Score:2)
I salute you, Mr. Gentoo Using Guy Who Actually Gets It.
Link to yoper (Score:5, Informative)
Does anyone else think it's strange that a story about yoper has no link to their home page, but does have a link to gentoo?
Re:Link to yoper (Score:3, Informative)
Gentoo Competition? (Score:3, Funny)
For what? "The worst installer of all time", or "The most time consuming distro ever".
Re:Gentoo Competition? (Score:3, Insightful)
Gentoo users pride themselves upon the fact that there is no installer for gentoo.
But they will insist that the documentation is very nice.
That is --- when they're not compiling. A decent installation (comprable to a stripped-down Fedora/Debian/Knoppix) took about a week to compile on a Duron 800 I used for the experiement.
I think that was what made me convinced that PC users truly are insane and got a mac.
Re:Gentoo Competition? (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
competition (Score:5, Funny)
uhhhh have you heard of Red Hat, Mandrake, Suse, Debian, Turbo, etc...? First real competition...phht! Gimme a break.
Beating Gentoo? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think Gentoo is a great desktop distribution for someone who has a lot of time on their hands and is capable of doing things manually. However, I wouldn't recommend Gentoo for use on an important sever, nor would I recommend Gentoo to use for someone who doesn't have a lot of time or who is incapable of doing some complex things by hand.
I think Gentoo right now is one of the better hobby/tweaking distributions, but I really don't think that's the usershare Yoper is going after.
Re:Beating Gentoo? (Score:2)
Going through a complete Gentoo install from a stage 1 tarball taught me a lot, probably more than I could have picked up out of a book or two.
I still mainly use Windows, but that's because I develop Windows apps for a living. I still enjoy messing around with Linux though.
That's great (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:That's great (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's great (Score:5, Insightful)
We're still getting there. Right now, linux DOES compete with windows, in the 'good with computers' or better class of folks. 5 years ago you had to be much more advanced. Over time, the OS is getting better, but folks (especially linux savvy folks such as yourself) don't help things any by standing around and whining that it's not perfect RIGHT NOW.
Re:That's great (Score:2)
Re:That's great (Score:2)
Pretend for a moment I'm Joe Sixpack. Why do I care whether it's a technology issue or a legal issue? All I know is something doesn't work out of the box, and it worked on Windows. I immediately lose some of my confidence in this new Linux thing.
Re:That's great (Score:2)
Besides, it doesn't matter whether you CARE or not, it's still an important consideration. If MS bundles a player with the OS, it's because they paid the appropriate royalties, and pass that cost on to you. A free (beer) distro can't be expected to do that.
If you want a similar experience, pay for the Mandrake distro that costs $60 or whatever it is, and has 3 extra disks of apps. Royalties paid, rights respected, and an easier user experienc
Re:That's great (Score:5, Informative)
Re:That's great (Score:2)
fair enough but your characterization of installing a DVD player on windows is out of proportion. I just bought a $35 DVD drive that came with a copy of power dvd. Not a great program but it works and all I had to do was stick the CD in and it installed, the S/N was on a sticker right on the sleeve. I was driven to this after spending 2.5 hours trying to get the mother@#$#@!$#$ing DVD player software installed on linux. I tried following the directions
Re:That's great (Score:4, Funny)
Ahhh, you must have followed the wrong directions. Jack [sourceforge.net] is a low-latency audio server, designed for professional audio work. Maybe you should consider KPlayer [sourceforge.net], the wonderful KDE frontend to mplayer [mplayerhq.hu]?
.torrent for latest version (Score:5, Informative)
Help save their gracious FTP mirrors.
Office Speed (Score:3, Insightful)
Yoper's speed is evident mostly in everyday functions, such a opening a OpenOffice document. I have always found OpenOffice.org to open painfully slowly, but the start time in Yoper was impressive. In most systems it can take 15-20 seconds to start the massive OpenOffice, Yoper manages this in about 10 (on my machine, these are not official numbers from OpenOffice, just mine).
His machine is a P4/1.8ghz/512mb box. Is it really noteworthy when an office suite opens in <sarcasm>about 10 seconds</sarcasm%gt; on a machine of that class? Really? Wow. That's
Other than that, the experience looked promising. Does anyone know if it works as well with apt as Debian does? Or as poorly?
Re:Office Speed (Score:2)
It is still a slug though - my work machine takes a good 15 seconds to load it up (P4 2.6ghz, FC2, 384MB, slowish 40GB HD); I use Gnumeric for spreadsheet work, since OO Calc takes so damned long to get going even once it's cached.
Re:Office Speed (Score:2)
Unless its pre-loaded with the quick launcher in windows or you got some pretty fast shit, yeah its pretty great (when its open office!, ms office is a LOT faster to start up)...
Let it be said I have a fast a64 with a lot of fast ram and serial ata hdd, and open office still loads pretty friggin slowly. Yet it does load fast in yoper (the distro i've been using since i discovered it las
Re:Office Speed (Score:4, Informative)
MS Word - 10 sec
OO Writer - 12 sec
Sad? Yes. But specific to OO.org? No.
Re:Office Speed (Score:3, Insightful)
Word 2000: 2 seconds (first time)
Word 2000: 0 seconds (second time) It literally just pops up...something OpenOffice has never done for me.
OpenOffice 1.1.2: 16 seconds (first time)
OpenOffice 1.1.2: 3 seconds (second time)
I include the second time to see how much caching helps, but this has been typical for me since the first OpenOffice. It takes a bloody long time to start.
I don't know what the latest OpenOffice is; perhaps it has sped up quite a bit. But I'm using Word 2000, and I
Re:Office Speed (Score:2)
On my VIA Nehemia 1GHz (which is about equivalent to a Pentium III at 500MHz) with Mandrake 10.0, MS Word on CxOffice starts up in 7 seconds and OpenOfice.org Writer starts up in 8 seconds.
So, on a P4 at 1.8GHz, either word processor should start in about 3 seconds.
not gpl compliant (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:not gpl compliant (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:not gpl compliant (Score:2)
Re:not gpl compliant (Score:2)
Wasn't there some license problems with that?
I mean, most distributions seem to have switched to X.org
I like it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I like it (Score:2)
Nothing ever takes 15 seconds to load, unless there is something wrong, in which case it won't start at all.
I do have 512MB RAM in this little machine, maybe that makes the difference?
Not too intimidating... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh yeah. If you're intimidated by a Bash prompt, you're gonna LOVE vim.
Ok, Lemme just type--
BEEP!
What the...
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!
Ah! I just want to edit the--
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP!!!
AHHHHHHHHH!!!!
Re:Not too intimidating... (Score:2)
but the point is that you can use the yoper install cd as a rescue disc very very easily (i have, when grub didn't work right, i just booted it up and ran lilo)
Remembering the Yoper Jerk (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Remembering the Yoper Jerk (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Remembering the Yoper Jerk (Score:3, Interesting)
Yoper suspicious (Score:4, Interesting)
Since the site is slashdotted, it's hard to see if anything has changed in a year.
Re:Yoper suspicious (Score:5, Interesting)
1. It seemed to launch with huge fanfare and hype, and there was a bit of a backlash when it turned out to be just another "generic distro plus knoppix hardware detection" deal.
2. Source wasn't originally available, so it was infringing on the GPL.
3. They were very reticent about acknowledging the work they'd built on, and responded quite violently to any criticism.
I had a poke about their website recently, the things that now make me uneasy are:
1. Package availability -- according to this declaration [yoper.com], you can only install Yoper-packaged RPMs ("The ones for other distros have to probably be installed with rpm -Uvh --force --nodeps and might break apt.").
2. Lack of decent documentation -- lots of important information seems to be squirreled away in the forums.
3. Amateurish website ("Yoper is one of the most standardised Linuxes that you will find and hardware performancetries to be better better than that of any commercial OS." -- http://www.yoper.com/about.html )
3. Responses to criticism still seem pretty belligerent, not to mention self-contradictory. A forum post from March 2003 says:
We are not a one man distro. Currently we have hundreds of users and several people on the development team and also a new commercial team that does the commercial side here in NZ. ( original post [yoper.com] )
Then, in October 2003:
Some of you compile quite a few packages, which is great!!!! The base Yoper is done by ONE person and this person (ME) has a distro which is now fairly well known even though it is only version 1. Just think of this. Yoper is a one man distro and so many have an opinion on it. ( original post [yoper.com] )
So, is it a one-man distro or not?
Still, it seems they're no longer trying to flog it for 99 USD, which makes me think a little more kindly of it
Re:Yoper suspicious (Score:4, Interesting)
I remember it somewhat differently; unfortunately the posts were deleted by the admin. This is why I think that responding to criticism is preferable to deleting it: there's no way to determine in hindsight whether the criticism was valid.
Would you try installing debs on a SUSE system and expect it to always work?
The difference is that I can expect to find most of the software I want as a SuSE-compatible RPM. Yoper is a far less popular distro, so I'm concerned that not much software is available unless you resort to non-Yoper RPMs, which might break the system.
Give the little guy a chance!
Is he a little guy or not? One minute it's a professional-grade distro with x thousand downloads, a large user base, a substantial development team and a "commercial team". As soon as any criticism arises, it's "well, what do you expect from a one-man distro?". You can't have it both ways.
Andreas is the guy behind the distro, english was not his first language (cut the site some slack) and he's a programmer, not a Public Relations Rep
But he claims to have "hundreds of users and several people on the development team and also a new commercial team that does the commercial side here in NZ". Presumably one of these hundreds of minions wouldn't mind proofreading the website. Shouldn't crafting a decent website be the job of the Yoper commercial team?
I have nothing against Yoper or Andreas. I think it's great that free software is good enough that one person can put together a working distro. And I don't believe that a one-man distro has to be flakey -- look at Knoppix, or Mepis. But most of the good stuff I've heard about Knoppix and Mepis is from independent sources; most of the good stuff I've heard about Yoper is from Yoper's website, which states that criticism will be deleted from its forums. Evenhanded evaluation is thus hard to come by.
Finally! Competition for Gentoo... (Score:2)
You know what they say... Monopoly is never a good thing
first gentoo competitor? (Score:2, Interesting)
I just have to say (Score:5, Interesting)
Yoper really is the next best thing to Gentoo for me, as far as Linux goes.
It really is a slick system, and very deserving of the accolades it's starting to receive. To me, it's the distribution to judge others by (With the obvious exception of Gentoo, and other source-based distros).
If they can continue the momentum and build their software catalog (meaning compiled, optimized packages for Yoper), I can see Yoper easily winning the Desktop Linux race.
Oh, and for the record, if you've heard of any problems with their support, or OSS issues, it appears that this is very much a thing of the past. I was there for the beta testing, and I was one of the those who didn't like what happened after the release of v 1.0, and I can safely say that it appears that Yopers seen the light, and has remedied any problems they may have had. The Yoper community is also very good.
Check it out! You know you've installed dozens of Linux distributions already... What's one more going to hurt? It could change your usage of Linux.
Re:I just have to say (Score:2)
Since Yoper is a "pre-compiled" distribution, you're downloading pre-built components, and replacing the old components with the new. So the process is totally different.
I think a lot of people are confusing the comparisons with Gentoo with how the Yoper system is built, which is more along the lines of a Suse, or Mandrake, or Fedora. Only in this
I don't use gentoo for *speed*, but *flexibility* (Score:2, Insightful)
But I use gentoo on servers because of 1) the flexibility.. finally I can *remove* the crap dependencies like kerberos, etc, on package, and I can add the stuff I need (mbox vs. maildirs, etc).
and 2).. it is SO EASY to make ebuilds, and they really do keep track of the files correctly because of the sandbox concept. On our servers we use custom ebuilds to keep versions stable, we deploy apps to remote sites
Quick convert (Score:2, Interesting)
On top of that, the install is one rather vanilla disc, allowing you to pick and choose other packages you want after installing. Why waste the extra time downloading three or fo
yap yap (Score:3, Informative)
so many people here are saying this is NOT that great but have not tried it. so here
http://iso.linuxquestions.org/download/http/www.t
a nice torrent for you to play with
Gentoo's not the only one (Score:2, Informative)
Stripped binaries != speed up (Score:2, Informative)
Stripping the binaries doesn't speed up anything, except possibly disk seek times because the smaller files take up fewer total cylinders.
Does this person know how to use Gentoo? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not sure what this person is talking about here. Is he talking about KDE again? Well, I use fluxbox and it takes under 2 seconds to get into my X system after typing "xinit". (most of which goes to driving my nVidia card)
I run Gentoo and I don't see where the 'competition' lies, exactly.. I'm sure you can make Gentoo's KDE as 'fast' as Yope's since it can do all those things Yope does with gcc, when you emerge the KDE package. I feel this article misinformed some people really, this distro looks pretty weak in my opinion.
do they package binary-only drivers, ala Gentoo? (Score:2, Interesting)
The name... familiar? (Score:2)
Singing hits like Grandpa Got Run Over By A Beer Truck [dayoopers.com] and Super Dooper Yooper Love Machine? [dayoopers.com]
No? ummm.....
Next out, Yoder Linux... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:2)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:2)
#include IMHO_disclaimer;
Re:Too many Distros (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, we do need them.
The thing you're missing is (as Agent Smith would say) purpose. Many of these distros exist purely because they meet a specific purpose. For example, there are distros used for desktop computers, distros for firewalls, distros for embedded devices, distros for clustering, distros for servers, etc.
Put another way: choice is good!
Now, had you said "we don't need 100's of desktop distros" I might have agreed.
Re:Too many Distros (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, you can take a Debian box and transform it easily into a a firewall/proxy. But if you want some specific functionality, such as single button poweron/poweroff for a headless firewall b
Re:Too many Distros (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:3)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:2)
I, for one, prefer Slackware: it's simpler, and it makes it easier (for me!) to maintain.
Re:Too many Distros (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Too many Distros (Score:2)
Are you implying that "the linux name" has value, or potentially could have value?
Re:eh? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:eh? (Score:2)
That yoper.
Re:Corel Link (Score:2)
Warning: mysql_connect(): Too many connections in
WTF is a Corel link? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are going to post a mirror, post something that works, okay?
Re:Prelinking in Gentoo? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Prelinking in Gentoo? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Prelinking in Gentoo? (Score:2)
There ya go.
CB
Re:Is is LSB 2.0 compliant? (Score:3, Interesting)
So...no.
Re:Is is LSB 2.0 compliant? (Score:3, Informative)
s/apt/deb/ would make your statement look intelligent - assuming it's true, since apt _has_ been ported for RPM.
-Erwos
Re:Confusion... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:*begs to differ* (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ha (Score:2)
Re:How Gentoo won the community (Score:5, Informative)
Check out Mandrake 9.1 vs Gentoo 1.4 [gentoo.org]. IMO there's a big speed avantage over some of distros simply because it's quite easy to tune and tweak a Gentoo install not to load drivers or programs it doesn't need. Comparing Suse 9.1 Pro to Gentoo (I backed up my Gentoo box, wiped the drive, installed, tested and by the end of the day had Gentoo back on), Gentoo won the speed contest hands down.
The only thing they got going for them is the multiple architecture support.
I think Portage is pretty cool. It's the only distro that I've use that could install mplayer correctly the first time (emerge mplayer). Gentoo is hardly perfect but it is a very stable distro with unique features. I've been using it for over a year now and have yet to find anything better for my purposes and in my opinion.
No GNU/Linux distro is the best for everyone. Having choices is a good thing. Gentoo isn't for everyone but is pretty damn good.
Re:How Gentoo won the community (Score:3, Interesting)