Hello all,
While there have been significant developments in the
RHEL-derivative world lately, be cautioned against any kind of
knee-jerk reaction to such news. The reality is that significant
change has not yet occurred, and many news articles will be as
inflammatory "click-bait" as possible. This message is meant to be
an anti-inflammatory, please read it as such.
Springdale is a community project, as was CentOS, as was
Scientific, and as were countless other projects over the years.
Some live on as-are, some change, some die. Such is life in an
open source ecosystem.
The Springdale community has no plans to go anywhere. Taking
source code and re-compiling it is not in any way a novel or
unique concept. We have the resources to remain independent and
this has set us apart, for now.
Keep abreast of the situation, and keep in mind this storm has been brewing for a long time if one has followed the news of acquisitions over the years. If you're just battening down the hatches now, you've missed the weather reports.
For all open source projects, it comes down to person-hours. On this side, we (mostly Josko) spend countless hours endeavoring to produce a bug-for-bug compatible RHEL derivative. It gets more difficult with each release, for example AppStreams with 8. If you learned exactly "how the sausage is made" behind the scenes, you might see us for what we really are, some friendly people working together to benefit ourselves. If in this process you can be of benefit, even better.
There have been many messages over the years about Springdale lacking features, or having issues, or not building a DVD for every release. What there *has not* been is a time investment other than writing to this list. This is not a call to arms, again, anti-inflammatory. You can choose to gripe about a situation over which you have no control, or you can be the change you want to see. We endeavor to do the latter to the best of our abilities and with the time we have available. We will not get political or engage others who attempt to make it so.
If Springdale works for you, great. If not, that's fine too. Do
not look to us to solve your OS issues for you, but if our product
is useful to you, have at it. We encourage you to sublimate any
angst you may have over the situation into productivity.
TL;DR: Be excellent to each other.
Ben
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Hello,
The School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study has
been using Springdale (formerly PUIAS, then PU_IAS) since its
inception. All of our *nix servers and workstations (yes,
workstations) are running Springdale. On the server side,
everything "just works", as is expected from a RHEL clone. On
the workstation side, most of the issues we run into have to do
with NVIDIA drivers, and glibc compatibility issues (e.g Chrome,
Dropbox, Skype, etc), but most issues have been resolved or have a
workaround in place.
Ben is right that Springdale is a community project and that it mostly comes down to the hours (mostly Josko) that we can volunteer to the project. The way people utilize Springdale varies. Some are like us and use the whole thing. Others use a different OS and use Springdale just for its computational repositories.
Best,
Theresa
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Springdale Linux was originally created for internal use at
Princeton University, and the Institute for Advanced Study. It has
been used for years at both institutions. It is currently being
used for all the HPC clusters at Princeton University, and in a
number of departments. I worked with Springdale Linux for 4.5
years at IAS, and now I'm using it again for HPC clusters I assist
with managing at PU.
It is a good alternative to CentOS. However, do not expect much
in the way of user support. The team that maintains Springdale are
very good at what they do, but it is a small team, and and
Springdale was meant mainly for internal use, so they don't have
the staff or time time to provide much support to the community at
large.
Prentice
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