Author: JT Smith
HP’s Superdome: One big box
Author: JT Smith
A CRN story talks about the high-end server’s capabilities:
“The system comes in three configurations that scale from two to
64 processors, 192 PCI slots and 256 Gbytes of memory. Initial
editions run PA RISC chips, but the systems can be upgraded to
the IA-64 processor family in the future. The server supports
HP-UX 11, the company’s current Unix version, as well as the
upcoming HP-UX 11i. It also supports Linux and Windows NT.”
“The system comes in three configurations that scale from two to
64 processors, 192 PCI slots and 256 Gbytes of memory. Initial
editions run PA RISC chips, but the systems can be upgraded to
the IA-64 processor family in the future. The server supports
HP-UX 11, the company’s current Unix version, as well as the
upcoming HP-UX 11i. It also supports Linux and Windows NT.”
Category:
- Unix
Creating the Open Source Development Lab
Author: JT Smith
How’d Linux supports get IBM, Intel and other tech heavyweights to back the Open Source Development Lab? LinuxWorld has a story about the lab’s beginnings.
Category:
- Open Source
Linux 2.4: Coding in public
Author: JT Smith
CRN has a story about the coming release of Linux 2.4: “It’s not your father’s way of making an operating system.
Creation of the next version of Linux,version 2.4, the first
version of the OS expected to be widely adopted
commercially, isn’t occurring behind closed doors. Day after day,
far-flung developers are grinding out new source code and
patches for Linux in full public view.”
Category:
- Linux
Using binary packages to distribute software
Author: JT Smith
Linux.com has an article on the transition in recent months away “from the traditional
source distribution of software using tarballs towards a more ‘user-friendly’
approach of binary packages destined for use on a specific platform.”
source distribution of software using tarballs towards a more ‘user-friendly’
approach of binary packages destined for use on a specific platform.”
Category:
- Open Source
London to host ApacheCon
Author: JT Smith
ApacheCon 2000, which may be the largest gathering of Apache ssers in Europe ever, will be in London in October.
The details are at Apache Week.
The details are at Apache Week.
Security hole in screen in Red Hat Linux 5.2 and earlier
Author: JT Smith
The security advisory is at LWN.net: “Screen allows the user to overload the visual bell with a text message that
can be set by the user. This text message is handled as a format string,
instead of as a pure string, so maliciously written format strings are
allowed to overwrite the stack. Since screen in Red Hat Linux 5.2 and
earlier releases was setuid root, this security hole could be exploited to
gain a root shell.”
can be set by the user. This text message is handled as a format string,
instead of as a pure string, so maliciously written format strings are
allowed to overwrite the stack. Since screen in Red Hat Linux 5.2 and
earlier releases was setuid root, this security hole could be exploited to
gain a root shell.”
Category:
- Linux
Report: Sun shipping drivers without source
Author: JT Smith
From a story at LinuxGram: “A gaping hole has been discovered in the GNU General Public License (GPL), the legal
document at the heart of open source, and dear Sun has driven a Mack truck named
Solaris x86 straight through it.
document at the heart of open source, and dear Sun has driven a Mack truck named
Solaris x86 straight through it.
At least that’s how open source demigod Bruce Perens assesses the situation and he’s
the primary author of the “Open Source Definition,” the philosophical basis of the open
source movement.”