Transforming GNOME Into A Linux-Only Project?

Written by Michael Larabel in GNOME on 18 May 2011 at 01:04 PM EDT. 48 Comments
GNOME
One of the mailing list messages making the rounds on the Internet today is concerning the GNOME project and whether they should no longer concern themselves with supporting non-Linux operating systems.

William Jon McCann, a well-known GNOME developer and user-experience engineer at Red Hat, has begged "the future of GNOME is as a Linux based OS" and "I think the time has come for GNOME to embrace Linux a bit more boldly." He has maintained GNOME components such as GDM, ConsoleKit, GNOME Screensaver, and others.

Jon's comments are coming as part of a systemd discussion and whether it should be an external dependency for the GNOME desktop. The message was in response to a comment by Josselin Mouette of Debian that a Linux dependency is "an absolute no-no for us" and that any Linux-only features should be entirely optional.

Jon sees GNOME as something that should be refined to be Linux-only with no longer bothering with support for operating systems like Solaris and BSD. In fact, from his views, GNOME could be transformed into being a Linux-based OS in its own right. Below is the full message from the GNOME mailing list.
For Debian perhaps. However, I don't think this is true for GNOME. The future of GNOME is as a Linux based OS. It is harmful to pretend that you are writing the OS core to work on any number of different kernels, user space subsystem combinations, and core libraries. That said, there may be value in defining an application development platform or SDK that exposes higher level, more consistent, and coherent API. But that is a separate issue from how we write core GNOME components like the System Settings.

It is free software and people are free to port GNOME to any other architecture or try to exchange kernels or whatever. But that is silly for us to worry about.

Kernels just aren't that interesting. Linux isn't an OS. Now it is our job to try to build one - finally. Let's do it.

I think the time has come for GNOME to embrace Linux a bit more boldly.

Jon
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