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Starch Linux: OpenBSD Atop Arch's Linux Kernel

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  • #31
    Originally posted by Ultrich View Post
    It's fake project. In repository only packages utilslinux and coreutils, nothing form OpenBSD.
    look closer.

    The "coreutils" is not the GNU coreutils but rather an assembly of suckless.org "sbase" and OpenBSD utilities.

    I guess they have used the name "coreutils" for Arch compatibility reasons.

    Last edited by staalmannen; 25 January 2013, 11:28 AM.

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    • #32
      Originally posted by staalmannen View Post
      look closer.

      The "coreutils" is not the GNU coreutils but rather an assembly of suckless.org "sbase" and OpenBSD utilities.
      Look at github.com/StarchLinux/coreutils
      In it only few utils like bsd tr and sed, nothing more.

      Main utils based on util-linux from kernel.org
      github.com/StarchLinux/starch-ports/blob/master/core/util-linux/PKGBUILD

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      • #33
        Originally posted by Kristian Joensen View Post
        Does this mean that some people will hate it for the Linux kernel while others will hate it for the OpenBSD user space?
        It's for people who hate GNU, but like Linux.

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Ultrich View Post
          Look at github.com/StarchLinux/coreutils
          In it only few utils like bsd tr and sed, nothing more.

          Main utils based on util-linux from kernel.org
          github.com/StarchLinux/starch-ports/blob/master/core/util-linux/PKGBUILD
          I looked through the packages in my starch chroot and the majority of the unix utilities originate from sbase.

          For the util-linux utilities: It is natural that some of those will have to be included since the distro is dealing with a Linux kernel (and thus Linux file systems).


          The significant remainders of GNU would be GCC, gmake, gfindutils
          Strangely enough bash is still included but mksh should (become?) the default system shell.

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          • #35
            i see everybody including Michael missed the point so il' put it bold


            ITS A PROJECT FOR A STATIC VERSION OF ARCH LINUX !!


            its not about BSD or linux or what libc it uses, its just a project for making a statically linked userspace

            musl is chosen cuz glibc dosent fully support static linking
            bsd tools are chosen cuz GNU are made with glibc in mind
            etc etc


            y'all should at least check their web site before ranting nonsense

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Cthulhux View Post
              They do. But actually they review it before doing so. I maintain some ports myself, I know that.
              And you think Red Hat, Suse, Oracle don't do this? Go home.

              So why did KDE recently have a 10 years old bug fixed? More people looking at it, eh?
              FAILed QA.
              Much more than on BSD. In contrary there were 25+ year old bug in bsd.

              It just does not need them like your Linsux does.
              Oh, it does need the same protection genius, but it's meaningless OS, so nobody cares to make it secure.

              Because Americans are too stupid to handle Unix?
              Because they're too smart to use Unix or Unix like OS while there's Linux. However, they're not smart enough, because many of them is using Windows.

              How?
              Described in another thread already.

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              • #37
                Originally posted by ncopa View Post
                Linux chroots were never intended as a security feature and should never ever be used as such. bsd jails is more like linux containers and linux containers are like chroot, not intended for security isolation so use those with care.
                It's exactly opposite. Even Linux chroot is more secure than bsd jails. Not to mention containers. There's also many more options on Linux that are more secure.

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                • #38
                  Originally posted by ncopa View Post
                  This is directly false.

                  They were pretty early with propolice and stack smashing protection. They implemented W^X and they are pretty good with privilege separation. (read about why they wrote their own ntpd and invented BSD auth instead of PAM and the privilege separation ideas they implemented there).

                  Basically, they assume that the software that runs is buggy and tries to make it hard to exploit those bugs. Thanks to this they have discovered many bugs in 3rd party apps and thus contributed that Linux userland has become safer.
                  Don't make us laugh mentioning thing that are something common. It's Linux that made bsd userland far more secure, because 99.9% of bugs in applications are fixed thanks to Linux. Ask KDE why bsd is worthless to them when comes to fixing bugs.

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                  • #39
                    Starch Linux piqued my interest, so I took the time to actually install it in a chroot. It is minimally functional and it needs a great deal of work. However, what Starch Linux's developer(s) have accomplished so far is a fairly good start for a distribution that is doing something genuinely different. This is especially true when you consider how limited the man power behind Starch Linux is.

                    Originally posted by kraftman View Post
                    It's exactly opposite. Even Linux chroot is more secure than bsd jails. Not to mention containers. There's also many more options on Linux that are more secure.
                    chroot is insecure by design. You can get a perl script that demonstrates this:



                    Originally posted by kraftman View Post
                    Don't make us laugh mentioning thing that are something common. It's Linux that made bsd userland far more secure, because 99.9% of bugs in applications are fixed thanks to Linux. Ask KDE why bsd is worthless to them when comes to fixing bugs.
                    Various *BSD port trees usually lag behind KDE upstream, so any bugs that the *BSD maintainers fix likely are no longer relevant. :/

                    The same can be said for RHEL and other Linux distributions that tend to lag behind upstream.
                    Last edited by ryao; 25 January 2013, 01:59 PM.

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                    • #40
                      Originally posted by ryao View Post
                      Various *BSD port trees usually lag behind KDE upstream, so any bugs that the *BSD maintainers fix likely are no longer relevant. :/

                      The same can be said for RHEL and other Linux distributions that tend to lag behind upstream.
                      Wrong, RHEL and other Linux distros contribute fixes that often also effect the current development version of KDE as they do not lag very much behind.

                      BSD ports tree lacks so far behind that the bug fixes made to them were already done in Linux. And even more, they do not contribute back to KDE, they keep the fixes to themselves.

                      Thus they are holding KDE (and for that matter, all open-source projects) back. But luckily, GNOME has taken the smart decision to ignore BSD and focus on linux instead. This gave them the choice of implementing linux-specific features which give superior performance and characteristics like udev and systemd.

                      it's interesting cos the majority of BSD desktop users are gnome users so they be forced to switch to linux which is good.

                      I also strongly think that all other open-source projects should forget about BSD and should implement feature which require the linux kernel so that would make it hard or impossible to port them to BSD. So BSD with have no apps and thus can die quicker. If they don't like it, I'll give them a noose.

                      It should serve them right for holding back linux and at the same time spreading anti-Linux FUD.
                      Last edited by BSD SUCKS DICKS; 25 January 2013, 05:54 PM.

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