Subject: Re: Sun jumping on Linux bandwagon
To: Mason Loring Bliss <mason@acheron.middleboro.ma.us>
From: Todd Whitesel <toddpw@best.com>
List: netbsd-advocacy
Date: 12/17/1998 03:15:56
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From: Todd Whitesel <toddpw@best.com>
Message-Id: <199812171115.DAA23576@shell17.ba.best.com>
Subject: Re: Sun jumping on Linux bandwagon
In-Reply-To: <19981216084649.H10788@acheron.middleboro.ma.us> from Mason Loring Bliss at "Dec 16, 98 08:46:49 am"
To: mason@acheron.middleboro.ma.us (Mason Loring Bliss)
Date: Thu, 17 Dec 1998 03:15:56 -0800 (PST)
Cc: netbsd-advocacy@netbsd.org
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> Sorry if this seems like anti-advocacy, but I've been disappointed with
> several things related to the NetBSD project lately, and I've invested
> enough time and feeling into NetBSD that I feel let down. I'd like to see
> NetBSD thrive, but it ain't happening now, and I don't see any trends that
> indicate that it will happen in the future. Our Core team is dwindling, and
> the rest of us are doing nothing to promote NetBSD. There *are* people who
> are trying to improve things, but I can't see how *anyone* is going to be
> able to break through the ennui and inertia gripping the project.
I felt this way for much of this year; while it may not really be true, it
certainly seems that way from the outside.
Everyone I talk to at work who knows anything about free unix and actually
recognizes "NetBSD" generally has a blase' attitude towards it, and repeats
some line about how either (a) core are assholes, or (b) they're so quiet are
they dead or just in a coma.
I think a lot of the perceived ennui comes from some very obvious signs that
certain "simple" things just aren't getting done (my opinions only BTW):
1. It seems like a lot of newbie contributed PR's die in committee. This
turns people off, they switch away from NetBSD and give bad word-of-mouth.
While the reasons for this are often complex and usually justified, really
people should be able to expect _a_ response of some kind even if it is to
say "we don't know, and no one has made time to investigate yet; thanks".
2. Outside developers don't care about helping to debug compile errors in
-current. They would be much happier if we could provide regular non-DOA
snapshots, so that when they have a free week, they sync up, hack away,
and then maybe publish their changes for review. I think a lot of grief
would be eliminated if we had a fairly regular schedule for new snapshots
and space on whichever FTP servers to keep a few lying around at any time.
3. The projects page on the web site doesn't appear to get updated much.
Something I have discovered at work is that when people can check a page
full of status information which is updated daily, the sight of things
slowly making progress encourages related development because there is
much less uncertainty as to whether or not something is ready to be
played with. When somebody is supposedly off working on something, the
silence grows more and more ominous sounding as time goes on.
Okay, now obviously I wouldn't have posted all this if I weren't volunteering
to do something about it. :)
1. I don't know anything about gnats, but I am willing to learn if it
means helping to see that all new PR's eventually get sent at least one
response at some finite rate (even one PR per week is okay at first, as
long as people see _some_ progress!!). I am certainly not the best person
to judge most of the PR's, but I can sure as hell send a form email to
people in a few minutes every few days, and search the database for old
PR's to see if something can now be done about them. I think this is
currently done for the PR's that can be solved easily, but for the hard
ones we appear to drop the ball from the outsider's perspective and I'd
like to find a way to prevent that.
2. "snapshot farm." I now have the ability to produce unofficial snapshots
for i386, and (almost) arm32. When a tree is in good shape, my stuff DTRT,
and when it is not, things cleanly fail so I can investigate and continue.
Once things are humming I don't spend much time on it at all; I start a
new kernel build in the morning while I shower, reboot over breakfast, and
make build+distrib+tars while I'm at work. Before I can call something a
snapshot, I think it should complete the above cycle at least three times,
which in the process performs a 3-stage "grandfather test" of the compiler.
I've decided to buy a $99 DEC Multia (NetBSD/Alpha) and run it headless,
to see if this model works for Alpha as well. I will arrange for FTP space
as necessary, since I don't want to confuse anyone looking for official
snapshots on ftp.netbsd.org. Eventually www.toddpw.org will stop giving
404's and I'll have links to all the completed snapshots there, and a page
containing the generation system, HowTo's, etc.
3. Here I think that just having someone massage source-changes into a
daily digest would be a good start. I can do this too but I'd need to
bone up on HTML again. Also I would like to have a version of this page
for public projects that are happening outside of the tree. It seems to
me that just having an email aliases "netbsd-progress@netbsd.org" would be
great, so one does not have to troll _all_ the mailing lists to collect
this stuff. Plus the pages should sort their info by date, so inactive
projects go to the bottom and projects can fight for exposure in the top
10 spots or something :)
Please bear in mind that I am about to squeeze out an arm32 snapshot and
then start cranking on an i387 emulator over the holidays; don't expect the
web stuff to happen for a bit. I'll put prototypes of stuff on toddpw.org
(and probably start with a progress doohicky for the i387 project once it
is hobbling enough to spend substantial time running unit tests).
Todd Whitesel
toddpw @ best.com