[GRLUG] What is Linux ?
Greg Folkert
greg at gregfolkert.net
Fri Mar 23 23:30:10 EDT 2007
On Fri, 2007-03-23 at 13:43 -0400, Bob Kline wrote:
> Just an out of the way discussion item:
> What is Linux?
[snip]
That is the crux. The question. The need to be defined.
First off, I think I need to be clear, "Linux" is used 3 different ways.
1. Linux is an Operating System Kernel. The heart of an operating
system. Going by "strict" measures... this *IS* what Linux is.
The kernel sits in between the kernel-mode, user-mode and user
programs and the hardware. It communicates with the keyboard,
Video card, hard drive controllers, memory, processor(s). The
programs like "Firefox" or "OpenOffice.org" or "man" are all
managed by the kernel, in some way shape or form.
2. Linux is also used to represent the "Operating System". The
Kernel (see #1) all by itself is not enough to make a "machine"
workable, or functional. This definition is the "Linux as a
foundation" of system tools or programs and bootstrap pieces in
order to form a more perfect machine. Many pieces from other
projects are used as a part of this definition, like the GNU
compiler, gnutools (tar, cpio etc.) and libc sets, or Perl or
straight shell (bash, dash, pdksh... etc). In my case, a minimal
Debian install, before task select is run is what I call this
mode
3. Linux is also used in a third form, that of a distribution. This
is by far the most combinatorial of the definitions. This could
be anything from Coyote Floppy Linux with 3 - 1.44 floppies to
Debian GNU/Linux 4+ DVDs and growing. A distribution of Linux is
what an organization determines what it wants to be.
--
greg, greg at gregfolkert.net
Novell's Directory Services is a competitive product to Microsoft's
Active Directory in much the same way that the Saturn V is a competitive
product to those dinky little model rockets that kids light off down at
the playfield. -- Thane Walkup
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