Modern Linux Distribution for (Very) Old Computers 79
macemoneta writes "The blueflops floppy-based distribution may be just what many Slashdot users are looking for, to revive old hardware. This is a 2.6.11-7 kernel based tiny distribution, that runs very well on my ancient 486sx25 with just 8MB of RAM. It's text-mode only, at the moment, but it does support hard drive installation, and includes an ssh2 client (dropbear)! Many distributions have moved away from boot floppy support, indicating that the 2.6 kernel is just too big. This distribution proves that where there's a will, there's a way."
My first post is really a first post ! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:4, Insightful)
It could make a rather nice router if the thing isnt too bulky and you can find an ethernet card or two to go in it (I assume ISA slots) you can also pick up the RAM for probably nothing at local PC shops as they tend to stock pile stuff like this
if however he wants to use it as a test bed for learning linux then go ahead this distro seems perfect. you could even get it running X11 with a minimalist window manager for your gui fix if you try.
Certainly would make an excelent project for getting to grips with the system. I cut my x86 teeth on a 386 and later a 486dx so i have fond memorys of those days , that and doom when i was running dos
Other than that if you want a more productive toy , you can cheap old macs (greybox ppc) or pentium 1 or 2s for next to nothing(ive picked up a couple from people for 0.00).
I really do love distros such as these , they are to me the spirit of linux
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Though depending on the model it may not be that bad. obviously compared to some mips or ARM powered router the drain will be astronomical , but alot less than most modern PCs .
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Re:My first post is really a first post ! (Score:2)
Of course, Minix is now free software...
Dumb terminals... (Score:3, Insightful)
Nethack, anyone?
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:5, Interesting)
I forgot aaxine... Would a LAN have the bandwidth to watch DVDs over SSH with aaxine running on the server side?
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2)
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2)
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:5, Funny)
seriously, how many dumb terminals do you need?!?
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2)
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2)
It's more the (valid) excuse for people decreasing resources consumption in applications, though this distro is a bit over-the-top.
If this is actually 2.6, a lot of stuff has got to have been removed from the
This will run SO FAST on a nice new machine with 64MB RAM and a 133Mhz Pentium, won't it?
More than I have (Score:2)
Okay, I don't need any dumb terminals. I don't need computers. I can get everything I need on 10 acres of land: food, clothing, shelter, and even raise offspring on it. (If I can find a girl willing to breed with an uneducated guy who lives in a one room cabin)
I want more though. I having like the ability to read. I like lights that come on with just a flick of a switch. I like getting fresh fish and vegetables flown in, in the middle of winter. I like heat that I don't need to tend myself. I lik
Re:Dumb terminals... (Score:2)
That depends... how dumb are they???
How many of them would it take to screw in a lightbulb?
It's definately not a stock kernel... (Score:4, Insightful)
No EXT2 support (Score:3, Informative)
If he dropped VFAT, he could add EXT2 and get some space back for other uses.
Re:No EXT2 support (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's definately not a stock kernel... (Score:1)
Re:Can you cluster them ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the only way that hardware of that level would be useful in any serious ( not router/firewall/fileserver etc. ) application would be to make it run clustered - and make it run well .
Not sure how a router, firewall, and fileserver aren't serious applications. CPU is rarely the bottleneck in an application. There are lots of other slots in a motherboard besides the one for the CPU. Netwok attached storage device, firewall, router, switch, bridge, modem/fax pool, serial console pool, usb hub, dumb terminal, test station, network monitoring station, wireless access point, the list goes on and on. I don't know about you, but I'm all out of expansion slots on my primary desktop machine. And like I said in another post, I've got 15 IDE drives hooked up to my network, try doing that using one desktop machine. I've got a 386 running off a floppy which is routing my DSL connection and providing an IPv6 tunnel. This is something which just isn't supported by my linksys. I've also got a pentium computer in another room which has a wireless NIC and a wired NIC and acts as a bridge so that I don't have to buy a wireless card for every computer in that room. The list of possibilities goes on and on - but CPU is rarely a factor.
A real use for this.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:1)
Does anyone know of any good sites that talk about the math of clustering vs. single processor systems?
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:2)
Say you do have 12 old Pentiums laying around. 12x133 MHz each, that's only the equivalent of 1600 MHz.
Maybe, but you can still only handle 4 IDE drives (without buying additional rather expensive hardware). I've got 15 IDE drives up and running right now, on machines that I've bought for prices from $3-8 at thrift stores (most of the drives themselves I bought at pretty much full price over the course of many years). Just yesterday I got a Pentium 166 Mhz with a 6 gig hard drive and 256 megs of ram fo
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:1)
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:2)
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:1)
Besides buying the IDE cards I'd have to buy enclosures and power supplies. In the end I'd wind up paying more money for something slower and probably less reliable (IDE is very sensitive about how long the cables are). And I'd be using up expansion slots, which are already full on my primary desktop machine, and which I don't even have on the machine I'm using right now - my laptop. I'd probably save a little bit of money on electricity, though. Never measured just what kind of power these things consu
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:2)
Re:A real use for this.... (Score:1)
Yea playing with old hardware can be fun but at this time almost anything slower than a PIII is not worth messing with.
Is that supposed to be a joke? I don't have a single computer at or beyond a PIII in my whole house. It doesn't take that much power to run Mozilla and putty.
It doesn't add up. (Score:2)
Sorry, but the math doesn't add up. Back when distributed.net was first starting on RC56 I calculated that the cost of electricity to run enough 386s to equal one Pentium pro-200 (Then the fastest chip at the task and you paid for that power) was greater than the cost of the ppro-200 system! I haven't since done the calculations for modern systems, but it still applies.
That is for a task that scales well to multiple CPUs. Most computer tasks do not scale well to multiprocessor systems. So in the re
Re:It doesn't add up. But it can. (Score:2)
If you want to play with clusters, mirroring, or even things like heartbeat a cluster of old cheap systems can be worth setting up. Not for production mind you but for a learning environment.
Re:It doesn't add up. (Score:2)
How long were you going to run the systems for? OVer long enough a time frame, even a watt's difference will overcome any purchase price.
I don't get this one... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:I don't get this one... (Score:2, Insightful)
Its everyone spending $300 vs someone writing fast software.
Re:I don't get this one... (Score:5, Insightful)
Because, believe it or not, a 486 has some good usages. Back in the early 1990s, people were using them with DOS and Windows 3.1 and doing word processing, writing spreadsheets, and other productivity jobs. A 486 with MS-DOS, WordPerfect 5.1, and Lotus 1-2-3 can be very productive. Accessing the Internet is also possible with a 486; no, you're not going to run the latest browser with your Flash animations and Java applets and beautiful CSS stylesheets and the like, but they're adequate for viewing text-based sites, checking e-mail, doing some instant messenging, and some other low-resource tasks.
Today, people use 486s for many different usages. A 486 can make a very cheap and effective firewall, or for a Linux/BSD test machine. It can even run X and a lightweight window manager fairly well. No, KDE, GNOME, OpenOffice, Java, Firefox, and some other programs aren't going to run at great speeds (you'll need at least a Pentium II for that), but they should do nicely for some very basic tasks. Finally, having a cheap 486 would be pretty nice to explore and to hack.
I wouldn't run a 486 as a production machine today, but I can see some of the advantages of owning and writing software for it. If you like programming, pulling your 486 out of your closet and installing Linux and some development tools can be a very fun experience. Besides, the more developers who still hack around with their old 486s, the better that it is for everyone who still uses old machines (I'm typing this on a 266MHz Pentium II). Imagine if all of the open source developers assumed that everyone has the latest Pentium 4 or Athlon processor? It wouldn't be a pretty sight for a lot of people who can't afford the latest and greatest.
Re: web browser (Score:1)
Not just text-based sites, either. The Dillo [dillo.org] browser runs great even on a 486, probably even with only 16M of RAM, and renders most sites quite well. It doesn't support plugins like flash or java of course, but still makes for a useful web browsing experience.
Re:I don't get this one... (Score:2)
Firefox probably wouldn't be at all bad, on a P5 or on a really fast 486.. but.. you'd need a shitfarkload of ram. At least 256MB just to think about it. And I'm not sure if those machiens have that capability
3rd world? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:3rd world? (Score:2)
It's easier to do without or dumpster-dive then it is to put together a proposal that is acceptable to the wife. Plus, I'm usually pretty broke...
Re:I don't get this one... (Score:1)
The drawbacks of this are that old machines still use the same desk space (or floor space), and almost the same amount of electricity, as newer, more powerful machines.
Re:I don't get this one... (Score:2)
Are you sure about that? After all, modern processors consume so much energy that they need monster coolers, while an old 486 needs no processor cooler at all.
Embedded Systems (Score:1)
No Will (Score:3, Insightful)
Text only? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've kept as much old hardware as anyone here, but honestly I'm sitting here looking at a P100 and wondering what it's still good for. A buddy of mine just threw away (in the dumpster) a bunch of running 300Mhz machines. I really can't blame him. Putting a "text only" linux distro on them isn't at all useful.
I can re-purpose old machines as firewalls and routers all day long (no one cares if those are text-only,) but even that's getting to be a waste of time when I can buy a nice tiny new mini-atx box for $200.
Re:Text only? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Text only? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Text only? (Score:2)
Re:Text only? (Score:1)
I'm typing this from a P200 running Debian Testing. It will run KDE, but it's not fun. You have to remember that memory is the limiting factor in machines such as these. Businesses never upgrade memory. New Dells with P4 processors still come with only 128MB. While Windows 98 would do just fine in 64 megs of RAM, very few grap
Re:Text only? (Score:2)
64Meg on my Dell P150 Latitude. SuSE 8.4 + xfce3/Windowmaker run just fine. The only time it acts sluggish is when using mozilla/netscape.
Everything else, compilers, debuggers, web server(thttpd), editors etc, run just fine.
Enjoy,
Re:Text only? (Score:2)
7 out of my 12 machines run at 300MHz or less. Older machines are usefull and interesting to individuals, not businesses, but some of us still want a modern OS to run on them, and they still need software.
Re:Text only? (Score:3, Informative)
I use an old 133MHz machine as my web and email server. It's small, quiet, and uses little power. Since I use X to administer it from my Mac, I don't have a display or keyboard attached but I can still use the GUI. Something of this generation doesn't need a special distro - I use Suse, for instance. Yes, a mini-ATX box would do the job, but no better, so I'll hang on to my money and use the old machine.
Great distro (Score:2, Informative)
A 486 is "very old?" (Score:3)
there are better distros for this (Score:1)
http://www.damnsmalllinux.org/
Puppy Linux (about 100MB)
http://www.goosee.com/puppy/
both have GUI , Puppy has Firefox and dillo
both will run on just about anything
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:2)
installing without a CD (Score:2)
I had a similar project with some AST laptops, I got five in Escondido (east of San Diego) for about 50$ and frankensteined the parts together into three working laptops. They were all 486-DX33's with 500MB-800MB hard-drives. I removed the laptop drives, used a laptopIDE-regularIDE adaptor ($5 or $5.95 at Frys) to connect it onto my 400MHz redhad machine and copied over a small version of slackware onto it.
I booted it up and after approximately ten minutes, I had 6 tty consoles up running slackware w
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:1)
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:2)
Puppy is a great distribution, but it requires a Pentium and 32MB of RAM. I may use that on a more up to date laptop (I also have a Pentium unit with 80MB RAM), but for my old unit, Puppy is too big!
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:1)
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:2)
Minimum of 16MB (128MB to run in RAM), and it doesn't have math emulation on (needed for 486sx and earlier). I tried every small any tiny distribution I could get my hands on; blueflops was the only one with the combination of features that was necessary to (relatively painlessly) get a 486sx or older machine with only 8MB RAM up and running. Once it's going, you can easily upgrade and install whatever you need. Of course, even a slightly better machine (486DX and/or 16MB+ RAM) m
Re:there are better distros for this (Score:1)
Re:A 486 is "very old?" (Score:2)
Re:A 486 is "very old?" (Score:2)
Ten years ago. Didn't you get the memo?
debian woody works on 486dx2(50Mhz) - 16M (Score:2, Interesting)
Apache+php started on it ! -
It's little slow compared with other old hardware i have (k6-2@500mhz)
Is way faster than my very old amd 386sx (woody worked on that too !)
I wonder how to install woody under 4M (another pc)
maybe with Linux-tiny will work
http://www.selenic.com/tiny-about/
Blueflops (Score:1)