back to article Fedora cooks up new Linux for Raspberry Pi

Raspberry Pi users have another operation system option, after the folks behind Fedora Linux changed their recipe and issued a “remix” of the OS for the tiny computer. Pidora 18, as the release is known, is not the very first of its kind, as two previous versions are available but weren't optimised for the ARMv6 architecture. …

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  1. Cliff

    Never thought of vi as an easy to use text editor myself... but vi on pi, you must, really.

    1. jake Silver badge

      @Cliff

      vi is the *nix text editor. Become one with it. It'll make your life a lot easier if you want to run *nix.

      1. Rampant Spaniel

        pico \ nano ftw :-) Had to use vi the other day, it's useful but I find pico quicker and easier. vi is probably a lot easier if you use it all day everyday but I do struggle to find a reason to start using it.

        1. Robert Moore
          Linux

          @Rampant Spaniel

          Reason I use vi.

          I figured sooner or later I would encounter a broken system without my preferred text editor, and EVERY *nix system has vi.

          It happened about 3 months after I made the decision to embrace vi. An old Solaris system that I had inherited with the job, decided to fail on a Wednesday afternoon. Payroll was run on Thursday, and of course the payroll system was tied to that Solaris box in a way no one understood anymore. (System was built by the guy who left before the person I replaced.)

          Took me a couple of hours to figure out what was going on, correct the issue, and get a working system again. It would have been a much longer process if I had not gotten comfortable with vi.

          I was a hero to the payroll people. :)

          vi for ubiquitousness.

          1. Rampant Spaniel

            Re: @Rampant Spaniel

            Thanks. So basically it's best feature is that it's pretty much guaranteed to be installed. At least thats a decent reason to learn it.

          2. handleoclast
            Thumb Up

            Re: @Rampant Spaniel

            "vi for ubiquitousness."

            Ummm, ubiquity, I think. Either way, I agree.

            Once upon a time I used VAX/VMS. I customized EDT (the original, not the broken TPU emulation) within an inch of its life. Which left me with problems when I had to use somebody else's login to show them what to do, because none of my clever tricks worked (worse, some of the keystrokes I'd defined they'd defined differently with hilarious results).

            Which is why I no longer try to customize editors. Why I avoid emacs like the plague (I know I'd customize it to hell and back and I can't afford that luxury). Raw vi. Well, maybe not the raw vi cygwin gives you if you don't touch .vimrc, but otherwise unadorned vi. It's a crappy editor, but it's a KNOWN CONSTANT crappy editor.

            It works the same on all the systems I deal with. CentOS. Ubuntu. Cygwin on various flavours of Window$. Even the bastardized flavour of Debian on ReadyNAS. If I ever have to deal with some other flavour of *nix I'm confident that vi will be the same. Just as tedious and unpleasant and unproductive to use, but consistently so.

          3. Long John Brass
            Mushroom

            Re: @Rampant Spaniel

            vi for the win!

            vi has saved my life a few times for the same reason

            vi will run on even the most ancient systems, over the oldest crustiest dumb terminal

            nano gives me the shits & I hate that Debian now makes it the default editor

            First thing I always do is purge nano from every machine

            I will admit that vi is a shit to learn; but once you've come to grips with it you won't want anything else :)

          4. No, I will not fix your computer
            Thumb Up

            Re: @Rampant Spaniel

            It's not just the "it's there" - which of course is enough of a reason (managing 4000+ servers with a mix of 4 flavours, multiple versions of *nix, plus all the mini roots/console/single user varieties), but it's also the times when you're working with a different keyboard, unmapped keys (or termcap files), no cursor keys? no 'End' no 'Home'? no problems! hjkl, no dos2unix? %s/.$//g need to add/remove some binary? control codes?

      2. Lee D Silver badge

        Re: @Cliff

        I've tried, over many years, myself.

        Fact is, it's quicker to download, compile and install something like nano or pico than it is to faff around with vi. And they are at least half-intuitive.

        Sure, I can edit a crontab in vi and know how to do so and write out the resulting file, but really? What a pain in the backside.

      3. Ian Johnston Silver badge
        Thumb Up

        Re: @Cliff

        Napier bones are the way of multiplying numbers together. Become one with them. It'll make your life a lot easier if you want to use numbers.

        Now, where did I put my buggy whip?

        1. 1Rafayal

          Re: @Cliff

          nano has always been my editor of choice for some reason, no idea why..

        2. jake Silver badge

          @Ian Johnston (was: Re: @Cliff)

          Well I dunno about you, but my buggy whips are stored in the tackroom of the buggy barn with the rest of the driving tack. Seemed logical to me ...

      4. Peter Gathercole Silver badge
        Boffin

        @Jake

        Come on Jake.

        Hardcore UNIX users use ed!

        1. jake Silver badge

          @Peter Gathercole (was: @Jake)

          I've used ed and ex nearly every day for over a third of a century. Mostly in scripts. But my goto for shifting ASCII from my brain into my computer has been vi (with the help of a Model M and a serial attached so-called "dumb" terminal) ... to the point where I have a user-name "write" that uses vi as the shell. When I'm writing (code, documentation, contracts, dead-tree letters), I don't like distractions.

      5. Geoff Lamb

        Re: @Cliff

        And you will find vi navigation and commands in so many on-line and browser apps. j & k work for up and down navigation in so many pages - like Facebook, google reader. /f brings up find in most browsers.

        1. Anonymous Coward 15

          Re: @Cliff

          JOE ftw.

  2. Bill the Sys Admin

    VIM

    I would never had thought it as a easy text editor. But its most certainly worth the learning curve! Once your past the rage induced comas at the start, the time saved on the little things is just great. And its universal to nix* :)

    1. This post has been deleted by its author

    2. FrankAlphaXII

      Re: VIM

      >>I would never had thought it as a easy text editor.

      None of the better ones are easy. If you want easy, use KWrite (even though you can use VIM methods with KWrite as well, and [I think, correct me if I am wrong] Emacs chords). And don't get me wrong, I'm not hating on KDE or anything, I've only been using it 10 years since I first tried a Linux Distribution, but for a simple text editor KWrite just works. I'm sure Xfce, Gnome, LXDE, MATE and such all have something like it as well.

      But yeah, Vi and Vim may be odd sometimes but they sure as hell beat the strange button combinations and chords in GNU Emacs, though just to make it clear, vim (and the predecessor, vi) does have their own weird quirks to their respective programs as well.

      Some users also find Emacs easier to use, though I'm not entirely sure how, as sometimes its like playing twister or Beethoven on a computer keyboard. Emacs's combination obsession really makes me wonder if RMS or one of the senior GNU developers was ever a pianist.

      1. Peter Gathercole Silver badge

        Re: VIM @FrankAlphaXII

        If you want to get the best out of Emacs without learning all of the meta key combinations, you need to learn the Electric modes. Once you get the hang of them, Emacs can be a doddle.

        The reason why vi (pronounced vee eye, not vie or six according to the yellow book) is a little hard to use is because it dates back to a time when the only keys that you could guarantee were on a terminal keyboard were the alphabet and number keys, a limited amount of punctualtion, as well as an ESC key and a control function. As long as the terminal had a program addressable cursor, and a small number of other features (and really not too many of those), and a termcap definition (yes, termcap in the original BSD, not terminfo), vi would work.

        There were some terminals that were too broken, however. I remember comments in the original BSD termcap about some beehive terminals, and a Ann Arbour Ambassidor that were deemed just too brain-dead to be able to write a meaningful termcap entry.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: VIM @FrankAlphaXII

          HP, in their infinite wisdom, had a serial console that you were supposed to use for console access to their servers. The only problem was that the UK version never had the '#' key.

          For those not familiar with 'nix the '#' character is used to comment out lines in config files and, more importantly, as part the "shebang" sequence (#!) in the initial line in scripts. Not having one on the keyboard can be a severe handicap when trying to get a server back online.

          1. Wemb

            Re: VIM @FrankAlphaXII

            [No hash key] Oh, like a Mac. Much fun and games when my Snow Leopard machine decided to ignore alt-shift-3 or whatever the chord for '#' was. Bloody stupid - instead they did give you a 'paragraph' key instead. Very useful.

        2. jake Silver badge

          @Peter (was:Re: VIM @FrankAlphaXII)

          I still run termcap, works better for some of my older kit and older code that's hardwired for it. Part of the reason I run Slackware is that it's still BSD-like instead of SysV-like, although you can also use terminfo with Slack. For a trip down memoryNightmare Lane, dig through /etc/termcap-BSD. For example, this entry:

          # 9.11.2 (Tue Nov 7 00:21:06 EST 1995):

          # * Exiled some utterly unidentifiable custom and homebrew types to the

          # UFO file; also, obsolete small-screen hardware; also, entries which

          # look flat-out incorrect, garbled, or redundant.

          The UFO file would probably be fun reading today, but I never bothered back in the day. Part of my job back then was tracking down bugs in the BSD system scripts; reading them for fun was out of the question! :-)

          1. Peter Gathercole Silver badge
            Boffin

            @Jake

            My journey was V6->V7->SVR2->SVR3 and onwards, so I was mostly isolated from BSD (I did have a BSD 2.3 or 2.6 distribution for my non-I&D PDP11 running V7, for Ingres, and it did have vi on it, but it would not compile in 56K, even using the experimental overlay loader that was also on the tape (this used one segment register in the PDP11 to switch different 8K pages into the process text address space to allow you to have more than 56K of memory in an executable, and it required a new system call to be added to the kernel to allow the dispatcher routine to request that the correct page was mapped in to the process before actually calling the code).

            I only really came across vi when I moved on to SVR2 (I had used an Ultrix machine before, but not too much). Up until that point, I had been using ed almost exclusively (although I did also use an extended ed editor called em, tagged as Editor for Mortals which I believe came from Queen Mary College in the UK [hint - watch you don't mistype the "e" as an "r", very annoying])

            For some time, I worked for what is now part of Alcatel-Lucent (then AT&T and Philips Telecommunications), and became the terminal 'expert' in their UK system support team, so was intimately acquainted with terminfo (it was SVR2&3 after all), and to a lesser extent termcap (some of the AT&T exptools packages used termcap, even though terminfo was available on almost all systems), and I looked after many different terminal types including AT&T 4425, 5620 and 630, HP2932, adm3 and adm5, Wyse 30 and 50s, almost all DEC terminals from 52s to 420s and compatibles, and even on ibm 3151 (yeugh). I missed out on the days when you had to encode time delays in the various commands, however.

            While there, I also had a source-code license for Gosling Emacs, which had it's own (buggy) termcap.

            The youngsters of today really don't know what it used to be like. I still get really annoyed when I see people hard-coding ANSI escape sequences into programs rather than using termcap or terminfo, or even Curses. It's just wrong!

      2. grommile

        Re: VIM

        Stallman and his friends had keyboards with 742 modifier keys. So they used them.

  3. jake Silver badge
    Pint

    arm.slackware.com

    Not perfect, but we're working on it ...

    Beer. It gets folks together & happy :-)

  4. Bog witch
    Paris Hilton

    joe vs. vi

    Am I alone in preferring joe over vi? I know, the wordstar-like commands clearly demonstrate my age but I find it SO much easier than vi. It's also laziness, not wanting to learn a new set off key sequences!

    Also, a tip of the hat to Slackware since they're mentioned above. Slackware user since 1993.

    Paris as we're talking about something easy to use.

    1. Peter Gathercole Silver badge

      Re: joe vs. vi

      It does not show your age, as vi preceeded wordstar by at least half-a-decade.

      What it does is to indicate that you learned computing on some piddling little micrcomputer, rather than a mini or a mainframe running UNIX.

      1. jake Silver badge

        @Peter (was: Re: joe vs. vi)

        Not certain how I missed this yesterday ... Wordstar was 1978. EMACS & vi were 1976.

        Agree with the rest of your commentardary, though.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: joe vs. vi

      +1 Joe

    3. Wil Palen
      Thumb Up

      Re: joe vs. vi

      joe FTW!

  5. proto-robbie
    Pirate

    This works better on the headless front...

    http://zenit.senecac.on.ca/wiki/index.php/Pidora-Headless-Mode

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Pidor-a

    For those who haven't yet heard, consider the amusement in Russia where Pidor is rather offensive :)

    http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=pidor

    1. eulampios
      Happy

      Re: Pidor-a

      Pronounce it 3.1415926535897932...dora (Пайдора) and you'll be fine! ;-)

  7. Paul Johnston

    Updating

    If it's based on Fedora 17 does that mean you will have to move to one based on 18 as soon as 19 comes out?

    I do like Fedora but the release cycle is quite fast IMHO.

    1. FrankAlphaXII
      Linux

      Re: Updating

      If they stick to how mainline Fedora goes, immediately after 19 is released (July 2nd from what I understand) you'd have to upgrade if its based on Fedora 17 because Fedora 17 will go legacy at that point and lose support.

      Their breakneck speed upgrade schedule isn't for the faint of heart or for people who don't like to test. Remember that Fedora is RHEL's upstream for all intents and purposes, Red Hat Inc. doesn't come right out and say that anymore AFAIK, but it is the case. Not everything makes it, a good portion does.

      Fedora isn't for everyone, I like it because I have a light QA background and because Fedora is among the first to get the newest stuff that'll eventually be in RHEL as I said, and given RHEL is the vast majority of the reason that I can afford to pay rent AND eat, it certainly behooves me to know how to use new tools and features when their original iterations come out if they wind up in RHEL or CentOS.

      But not everyone likes that, and I'd never use Fedora for production, dear God no, its gone wrong on me way too many times for that. Test, Education, and desktop use are great with Fedora, but not a production server. But really, if you want ultra-stable Red Hat type distros, there are always CentOS, RHEL and Oracle Linux. Or you can switch factions and use Debian, or really go off the reservation and use a BSD. I love GNU/Linux* (though I am OS Agnostic. In my jobs I have to be I use Windows, GNU/Linux, BSD, a proprietary UNIX, and z/OS a lot as well as some shit that I don't even know what the terminal is really running on. The Army Reserve, my other job, has some ancient and/or interesting equipment as well), but for me OpenBSD and later FreeBSD was my first UNIX-like love, and I'm surprised more people frustrated with certain things about Linux don't try it. Apple's Darwin must really turn people off or something.

      Anyway, I wonder if fedup works on pidora. Does anyone know? The article says it has most of the RPMs in the official repo and that yum works, but not a word about fedup, and any Fedora user sure as hell wants to know if fedup works because we'll be upgrading, and soon. If it does have fedup, then upgrading's pretty easy. It works much better than PreUpgrade did (or didn't, as in my case every time I used it).

    2. Richard Dale

      Re: Updating

      Pidora is based on Fedora 18

  8. justincormack
    Pint

    OS purity

    "Those who would rather their Pi OS conform to higher standards of OS purity will therefore have to look elsewhere."

    You mean not buy a Pi that is - these non free components are needed to boot the thing alas.

    Beer for purity (if German).

  9. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    “The GUI in particular is slow, because the 2D graphics (the X Window System) are not yet connected to the 3D graphics processing unit on the SOC.”

    If you're the kind of crackerjack wanting to install Fedora on a RasPi, switching to the soon to be released GPU-accelerated Wayland stack over X should be absolutely no bother. Once you take the 2d GUI drawing + compositing jobs out of the equation, the machine really begins to shine, as anyone who has been using it without a GUI should know.

  10. Salts
    Joke

    vi vi vi

    The number of the beast

  11. jake Silver badge

    As a side-note, not withstanding the above ...

    ... I don't really care what OS or editor anyone but me uses ... as long as it's right for you & your current project's needs, use it. Same for hardware platforms, telephones & etc (cars, bikes ... ). Arguing over "which one is over-all best" in this kind of thing is a fool's errand. And I should know ... I frittered away gawd/ess knows how many hours in the vi/EMACS wars back in the day, and then even more time on the C/C++ flame-wars on Usenet. Total fucking waste of time.

    Advocate what you like, but don't bad-mouth what somebody else is using.

  12. Shagbag
    FAIL

    GUI - the 'WTF?' moment

    "The GUI in particular is slow, because the 2D graphics (the X Window System) are not yet connected to the 3D graphics processing unit on the SOC."

    Why include the GUI then? It's taking up storage space.

    Really, if it's not ready for prime time then just don't release it.

    1. James Hughes 1

      Re: GUI - the 'WTF?' moment

      Released because it works well enough - being a bit slow is not the same as being full of bugs.

      Also turns out that accelerating X with things like OpenVG and OpenGL is almost impossible, as X really doesn't lend itself to it, with lots of very small pixel operations, and of course, if your app is doing lots of rendering in SW, you cannot accelerate that anyway (unless the app actually uses OGLES or OVG). Best you can do is whole window operations (compositing etc) which actually doesn't use that much CPU compared with, for example, a HTML renderer.

  13. Andus McCoatover
    Windows

    For the X system, this caught my eye..

    http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/4053

  14. Andy The Hat Silver badge

    vi for me too ...

    :wq

  15. Androgynous Cupboard Silver badge

    Flash IP address?

    Or you could just have it install avahi by default, then just "ssh pi.local". Zeroconf is brilliant, it's the first thing I install on a new system, and it's an absolute hassle-saver for home or SME setups. Funny how it doesn't get more kudos.

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