Georges: If you do not feel confortable using Bering, please do not use it. Bering has been developped by me and Eric as a hobby, on our spare time & outside of our regular jobs. Bering is also based on the tremendous work done previously by the LRP & LEAF community: Dave Cinege, Charles Steinkuehler to name a few and also includes as a key element Tom Eastep's Shorewall which is - to my opinion - one of the best designed and supported iptable based firewall product. A lot of a effort has been put in the doc: see the installation & user's guide. Most of technical related questions are answered (if time permits) with the help of the LEAF community through the mailing list. A developper's manual is on my todo list but it also a fact that people are for some strange reason always quicker to criticize that to help writing up a chapter of the user's guide ... Jacques
Le Samedi 13 Juillet 2002 07:55, George Georgalis a écrit : > Is Bering GNU? > > I'm beginning to have my doubts. Where is /usr/src/linux/.config? Where > are the other compile time options for other binaries? Just how was > Bering_1.0-rc3_img_bering_1680.bin made? > > After spending a good part of a week, and _all_ day Friday getting up a > Bering router before a deadline -- subsequently missing the first day of > a conference http://h2k2.org -- I looked back at what was the problem. I > discovered I was hacking around a product (the Bering image) much like > the manner of before I used Linux. I have this disk image, that I mount > to find, compressed archives, containing finely tailored scripts and a > handful of binaries. Together they make up the GNU Bering. (And maybe > other leaf versions as well.) > > I have hunted all over http://leaf-project.org and > http://leaf.sourceforge.net/ for the source, or even a file that says > version xx.yy.zz of busybox was compiled with the following patch and > compile time options. Or maybe a tgz of the /usr/local/src/bering where > the image was made? Nothing. I find myself writing scripts to extract > and compress lrp files. Surely everyone doesn't gzip -c9 what they made > by tar cf after mounting and extracting their first floppy image? Is > this the intended way to indoctrinate new developers to the old school? > > I even asked a few well read LUG groups what the lrp format was, or > how I could run the lrcfg that I read about without actually booting > the distro. Nobody knew because the design is not conducive to group > development, it's intended use is like that of proprietary software -- > take the binary, configure it with the configuration menu and be like > everyone else. > > Okay, I just found the developer.rtf and scanned the whole thing. > Formidable task, but I only see part of the forest and none of the > trees. I already know linux and there seem to be some very specific LRP > details in there, but will it be done before it's out of date? I'm > not saying produce a `./configure && make && make image` but if the > environment for building the release was published, or easier to find, > I'm sure there would be a lot more community support. At one point I > kicked myself for not looking in CVS before, but when I got in there, > was in disbelief -- no source, only doc. > > So now I have problems with my image to resolve, why do those Belkin > cards detect as reltek under RH but, none of the Bering modules will > work with them??? How will I ever get my tulips back from my boss so I > can test an image at home? What am I going to do about making an image > and quickly changing a few parameters (ssh host keys, network, firewall > and other site information) or major structure (LaBera, ppp, ipsec, > dns) without spending a ton of time hand extracting and compressing > components? I'm going to make my own distribution. reBering. Complete > with scripts to mount and extract all the subcomponents, global > configure, mix'n'match packages, compress and unmount. Only I don't > think I can call it GNU because since I'm in a hurry, I won't have time > to reverse engineer the compile time options and source. I'd rather work > on putting it on an eprom anyway. > > In all sincerity, Bering is very cool. It could just be a lot better > if it was more in the spirit of _encouraging_ open source development > rather than barley qualifying, actually I bet if it was audited, it > wouldn't pass. If there are scripts to tar and gzip a lrp package, > why aren't they part of a tools.tgz right beside package_src.tgz and > compile_configs.tgz next to the Leaf_UML packages and extraction > instructions for odd archives? I know asking for doc is a lot, but > maintaining a file of command lines used to make the binaries from > source would be an excellent first step. > > // George ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf ------------------------------------------------------------------------ leaf-user mailing list: [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/leaf-user SR FAQ: http://leaf-project.org/pub/doc/docmanager/docid_1891.html