Tribblix – The Retro Illumos Distribution

(tribblix.org)

89 points | by bilegeek 21 hours ago ago

31 comments

  • rollcat 14 hours ago

    I was just thinking this morning, to write a blog post with a small tour of niche-but-functional operating systems. Tribblix and Dragonfly BSD were at the top of my list. I've been also thinking Haiku, RISC OS, 9front, MINIX... They've all been around for decades, and usually fly under the radar.

  • shrubble 14 hours ago

    I really like (and have used in production) the ability to run Solaris Zones (containers) and "LX zones" which are Linux containers side by side on the same hardware.

    Many installation problems show up in the handling of USB3 and related quirks; I have a lovely AMD 8350 system that I can't install from USB onto because of some XHCI problem. The USB stick will boot the kernel, but then the kernel can't properly handle the USB stick after it has booted and can't see the installation media. I suppose I should bite the bullet and burn a CD to boot from, which should fix it.

    • ptribble 13 hours ago

      That shouldn't be a fundamental problem with current Tribblix - due to this sort of problem the installer got modified so that once the bootloader has pulled the ramdisk off the usb stick it doesn't need it again (although if it can't see it it won't be able to install any packages from it, falling back to dragging them across the network).

  • gr4vityWall 16 hours ago

    The Illumos' family is an interesting one. I wish it was easier to get it installed on modern hardware. Any of my attempts with distros like OpenIndiana, Tribblix and OmniOS didn't go further than the boot menu.

    I wonder how far a compatibility layer for Linux drivers could go to help other UNIX kernels' usability. Maybe the Oxide folks know more of what would be involved in such an effort.

    • sunshowers 9 hours ago

      I run our (Oxide's) Helios distribution on a headless Ryzen 7900x with an ASRock Rack B650D4U motherboard. I use an Intel X520 NIC for 10GbE.

      In general I'd expect Zen 3 and 4 to work, and Zen 5 either right now or very soon.

      See https://github.com/oxidecomputer/helios-engvm

      • gr4vityWall 9 hours ago

        Thanks for the reply, I appreciate the link! Do you know if people are using it for workstations?

        • sunshowers 8 hours ago

          Not entirely sure what you mean (do you mean Threadripper, which some of use?), but this is purely a work machine for me. I regularly build and test our software on my Helios box.

          It isn't exactly the same as our production machines (as you can imagine we have shared environments for this), but we've written in-memory simulators for most of our hardware components so it's good enough for most use cases.

          • gr4vityWall 8 hours ago

            Oh my bad, I meant "workstation" as in, a full desktop with a working desktop environment like XFCE, audio support, GPU acceleration for AMD iGPUs, etc.

            Thanks again for the informative reply.

            • sunshowers 8 hours ago

              Ah gotcha! I asked internally, and the initial answer is "no", but if someone says yes I'll let you know.

    • JdeBP 15 hours ago

      That's the wrong solution to the problem, as it means learning a second kernel and all of its stuff and making compatibility shims, whilst still facing the real problem that is not software at all.

      The right solution is actually explained the headlined WWW site, where Peter Tribble points out (in the About page and in the Use guide) that the significant constraint is that xe does not own the actual physical hardware to develop against. It's the usual story with small projects: good donated hardware, and developer time (and workspace, and food, and water, and housing, and electricity supply (-:), needed.

      • gr4vityWall 9 hours ago

        I agree with you in principle, and I understand the existing constraint. But I don't see developer time scaling up without those operating systems reaching (again) critical mass, and then having upstream wanting to write drivers for even more operating systems.

        Which is fine per se. But I wish people could buy relatively new hardware (say, last 3 years) and be able to run FreeBSD or Illumos with most things working.

    • yjftsjthsd-h 11 hours ago

      > I wonder how far a compatibility layer for Linux drivers could go to help other UNIX kernels' usability.

      It might be easier to take them from NetBSD; it wouldn't introduce the GPL licensing issue, and courtesy of their rump kernel system they're actually kind of designed for it.

    • ori_b 13 hours ago

      > I wonder how far a compatibility layer for Linux drivers could go to help other UNIX kernels' usability

      This isn't very interesting. It means you're constrained to the Linux design decisions, and you're wasting time debugging mismatches and poor design decisions.

      • msgodel 13 hours ago

        It also creates a licensing issue. Part of the reason Linux has so many drivers is because the GPL requires all of the kernel code be provided to users under the GPL as well. If you link to that in your OS/distribution now all of your code must be published in the same way.

        • gr4vityWall 9 hours ago

          Can't an hypothetical cross platform driver be MIT licensed and be part of both?

          Although I'd be more than happy with other OSes/distributions defaulting to GPL.

          • yjftsjthsd-h 9 hours ago

            > Can't an hypothetical cross platform driver be MIT licensed and be part of both?

            Yes, but if the goal is to reuse existing code that already exists in Linux then there's no reason to expect it to be under a permissive license. Some of it actually already is if I recall correctly, but you shouldn't expect that.

            > Although I'd be more than happy with other OSes/distributions defaulting to GPL.

            Illumos isn't GPL and and in the legal views of many people can't be compatible with it; CDDL/GPL (in)compatibility is a very long running issue, usually in the other direction with CDDL ZFS drivers in the GPL Linux kernel. (IANAL; I'm not asserting specifically that it is or is not actually compatible, just that a lot of people consider it to be incompatible)

  • 0xCafeBabee 13 hours ago

    Sometimes it feels like keeping old systems alive is harder than keeping an old car running.

  • Crontab 13 hours ago

    One thing I am curious about is its version of ZFS. Would it be incompatible with OpenZFS from a Linux/FreeBSD system?

    • ndiddy 12 hours ago

      You would have to look at the feature flags that your pool uses and see whether they match the flags that illumos supports. OpenZFS's feature flags are a superset of illumos's, so you'd be able to use a pool created on illumos on Linux/FreeBSD if that's what you're asking. https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Basic%20Concepts/Feat...

    • vermaden 10 hours ago

      You can create ZFS pools that are more or less compatible with anything.

      Details here:

      - https://vermaden.wordpress.com/2022/03/25/zfs-compatibility/

    • sugarpimpdorsey 12 hours ago

      Solaris was the reference implementation of ZFS. Are you wondering if you could migrate disk pools from BSD/Linux to Solaris ZFS?

      • yjftsjthsd-h 11 hours ago

        Illumos hasn't been Solaris for a long time. In particular, illumos uses pool version 5000 plus feature flags, while the proprietary version is still on version 28 or so without feature flags. OpenZFS is also much closer to the exact code in illumos, as far as I know there are some differences these days because they don't stay exactly in sync but they're close-ish.

    • unixhero 13 hours ago

      Zfs on linux is its own project with a lot of development to make it run well on Linux

      That answers the Linux part of your question

      • ndiddy 12 hours ago

        ZFS on Linux has effectively taken over as the standard version of ZFS. It got renamed to OpenZFS a few years ago after the FreeBSD project chose to start using it for their ZFS support rather than upstream illumos ZFS due to how much more active the ZoL project was than upstream.

  • hulitu 19 hours ago

    > lightweight window managers are preferred over heavy desktop environments, the primary desktop option is Xfce, and MATE and Enlightenment are also available, plus many others

    I would expected CDE as a first class citizen and maybe OpenLook.

    And it says that it it maily for 32bit SPARC and 32bit X86 and later that "Important: 32-bit hardware support now completely removed.".