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Re: [tlug] State of "Linux" documentation [C&C]
On Tue, 10 Jun 2008, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
... My point is
that *unlike cars* almost all of what is under the paint (including
the metal of the hood!) of one GNU/Linux is the same as all the
others. So when "skinning" the system the distro vendors have done
their users a disservice by making it ever harder for them to see how
that is being done, or even for a geek buddy who has memorized the
manpage for ifconfig(8) on 6 different systems to figure out how eth0
gets its IP address.
When I installed my first Gentoo system many years ago, I was forced to
make decisions on things which I never realized were even open to any
decision. Who would have thought that there were multiple ways to write
the system log -- or multiple versions of cron? Not just "versions" in
name only -- very different implementations with different config files.
I picked syslog-ng and vixiecron. I'm satisfied with my choices but I'm
not convinced any of the others would not have been just as satisfying. In
fact, I'd be willing to bet someone out there is reading this and saying
to themselves (if not to the list, eventually): "No... <whatever>-cron is
far more advanced than vixiecron". And, given the number of years that
have passed since then, they're probably right. But I know these tools
well by now, they work for me, I know the config format. Why change?
My point, I guess, is that there isn't quite as much in common under the
hood as one might suspect. There is no "standard" for how ipconfig should
work so when someone gets a new idea to make it work better, they write a
new version. If everyone *else* thinks its better, the old one falls into
obscurity. That leaves me free to pick whatever variation I like from the
choices available at the time. And, presumably, someone does exactly that
for each of the major distros. If all the UIs and config files were cast
in stone, there would be no room for innovation.
The downside is that it's no longer possible (if it ever was) to document
a complete "common" Linux system because everything but the kernel can be
swapped out whenever something better comes along (in all fairness, the
kernel can be swapped out too -- ie: BSD, etc -- but doing so takes the
system out of the realm of the current "Linux" discussion ;-). About the
only things for which there are *not* multiple implementations (AFAIK) are
the compiler toolchain and the basic shell utilities like "cp" and "mv".
And I suspect that the only reason those are common among all distros is
because nobody has gotten annoyed enough at how they work to re-implement
them to work any differently. But, if someone did, there goes that common
Linux documentation out the window.
(New users, by the way, don't generally *want* to know about "cp" and
"mv". Whether that's a good thing or not could certainly be debated.)
... GNU/Linux could provide a lot of introspective
capability into the common implementation, and the distros could
provide UIs that organize it and make reliable and accurate access to
most important aspects.
I'm not so sure that's something to lay on the distros, specifically.
Anyone could implement a system config UI and release it as open source.
In fact, I believe there are a few already. That they are not in common
use across the board probably speaks more to their lack of popularity or
maybe to users preferring the status quo than to any failure on the part
of the distro maintainers. Why isn't Webmin, for example, used as the
primary config UI for all distros? Would that be preferable? I don't think
so, but... I'm one of those who can find my way around without the book so
I'm not likely to use the UI anyway.
On Tue, 10 Jun 2008, Edward Middleton wrote:
The point is that basically all computers are the same, at both a hardware
and software level. If you look at Unix's they are all extremely similar.
Similar, sure. Alike, no -- not enough alike to not confuse beginners. Not
when you consider the whole constellation of utilities that can easily be
layered on top of the common kernel (which a beginner shouldn't have to
deal with anyway). And if we're not talking beginners, then there's tons
of books on various bits and pieces of the Linux infrastructure. Too much,
in fact, to ever stuff into a single volume. So you have distro-specific
hand-holding books to get you started and, once you start to grok the bits
and pieces, you scan the O'Reilly catalog for in-depth material on the
specific "common" pieces in which you're interested. I'm not sure how we
could do any better.
You can obviously learn about a particular Unix by focusing on the unique
implementation of some features, which is what you will get in a distribution
specific book. If you do this, every new Unix you learn will be a wonderful
mystery ride, but who has the time for this?
When you've just unpacked your system and you're trying to get the printer
to work, who has the time to read the entire sordid history of printing on
Linux? For a beginner, it would be a disservice (IMHO) to give him much
more than some screenshots, step-by-step instructions for the distro he
has in front of him, and maybe an appendix called "Once you're ready to
swim in the adult pool, read these...".
Also, one could argue that if you end up buying more than one of these
distro-specific books, you're probably not the type who's likely to learn
the common stuff anyway ;-).
IMHO, as always...
---
Joseph L (Joe) Larabell Never fight with a dragon
http://larabell.org/ for thou art crunchy
http://thelemicleague.org/ and goest well with cheese.
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