Date: Fri, 15 Mar 1996 14:36:38 -0700 (MST) From: Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org> To: current@freebsd.org Subject: A New Era for Linux has Arrived! (fwd) Message-ID: <199603152136.OAA14028@phaeton.artisoft.com>
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- POSIX.1 (FIPS 151-2) Certification A Historic Development!! (Availability : Intel and Digital ALPHA Architectures) Linux has achieved certification against a major International Standard recognised and implemented throughout the computer industry. Announced at the Open Group meeting of X/Open and the OSF in San Fransisco on 9th March 1996 and at CeBIT in Hanover, Germany. The interest in this release from the Application vendors is considerable (this is English understatement :) as this release allows almost seamless porting of almost all UNIX applications to Linux. The POSIX.1 FIPS151-2 certification will directly provide Linux developers and users with both a "Feel Good" and a "Feel Safe" factor. Feel Good : Because they have a measure of Quality. It cuts through the hype of simply putting the term "Commercial" or "Professional" in the product title. Because the developer's and the user's know that the product has actually been tested completely eliminating the so-called "Emperors Clothes" situation surrounding the way that Linux is tested. Because it has passed the POSIX.1 FIPS151-2 Certification testing against a mature, recognised and implemented Industry Standard. Feel Safe : Because the Certification provides them with a known and stable functionality base that provides true portability. Because we have more than just the word of a Distribution that the product has been tested. Because the certification work has provided a higher quality system. You may notice that the above are interchangable - for the first time Linux provides simultaneous "Feel Good" and "Feel Safe". Independant Software Vendors (ISV's) are already welcoming this development as it provides them with a level of stability and consistency previously unavailable. Their rapid support and usage of this Certified technology further increases the attractiveness and depth of use of Linux. The Certified release provides a base reference platform against which quality and functionality can be measured. It eliminates the problems surrounding an Application compiling on one Distribution and not on another. We now have the same reference point used in the UNIX Industry. Why Certify? - ------------ Standards implementation is a "Have" or "Have not" issue. Until now, Linux has not had certification against any particular standard and has been variously mis-described as "mostly POSIX", "POSIX'ish" and even "a superset of POSIX". The former terms indicate that Linux has been developed *towards* POSIX, the latter is meaningless as the "superset" cannot exist without international acceptance and recognition (at which point it becomes part of the standard). Certification against a given level of the POSIX standard completely cuts through the confusion surrounding exactly where Linux fits into the POSIX hierarchy. Linux is POSIX.1 Certified! --------------------------- The Certification has been the result of a large and costly development effort over a considerable period of time. Large : Problems, bugs, code instabilities and enhancements have been made to libraries, the kernel, the compiler and other parts of the system to pass Certication Testing. It took a considerable period of time to get Linux to a point at which the Certification work could begin. Costly: The development group behind this certification effort has made a huge - currently well into 6 figures (US Dollars) - investment in standards and Certification Test Software alone. This does not include the actual development costs which are substantial. This release is based round the 1.2.13 kernel and we are talking to Linus Torvalds about certifying the new 2.0 kernel. Providing a list of all the modules affected by this certification is beyond the scope of this announcement and will be found elsewhere in the documentation packs available soon on the Internet. Will this Release Become a Linux Standard? - ------------------------------------------ We have already been asked this question enough times to make it into the FAQ. The answer is no, it will not *become* another Linux Standard. It already *is* the standard used in the UNIX industry. Is this Certified code GPL'ed? - ------------------------------ Simple answer, formatted for clarity : YES ! Other POSIX Certifications - -------------------------- Products that are certified against POSIX.2, POSIX.4 and POSIX.7 are coming soon. There is a preview of POSIX.2 certified products included in the POSIX.1 Certified release. How is it available? - -------------------- On CD-ROM and by ftp. You will find site details listed at the end of this email. anonymous ftp: Those wishing to mirror should reply to this email in the first instance for the no-fuss way to mirror. More Information - ---------------- This huge step forward for Linux has possibly the smallest announcement. There is simply no way that we can provide full information in this forum - it's simply too large. The full details of this work, the significant impact that this Certification is already having in the Linux world, how you can obtain it, what the future holds etc, etc, will be available both by email, ftp and WWW. An FAQ has been prepared to answer (hopefully) the majority of questions surrounding this significant historic leap forward. Email : info@lasermoon.co.uk info@openlinux.com info@justcomp.com ftp : ftp.lasermoon.co.uk ftp.openlinux.com ftp.infomagic.com WWW : www.lasermoon.co.uk www.justcomp.com www.infomagic.com www.openlinux.com There is a huge amount of material being added to these sites at a time of some major Industry events. We apologise in advance if you cannot find all the material you require immediately. Please return to the site in a day or so or send us an email. We anticipate that everything should be in place by the end of March. Distribution - ------------ Linux-FT Rev 1.2 will be shipping the week of March 18, 1996. Linux-FT is distributed by and can be obtained from the following companies in addition to many quality Linux product resellers. Lasermoon The Forge, Fareham Road Wickham, Hants, PO17 5DE England Phone: +44 1329 834944 FAX: +44 1329 834955 E-mail: sales@lasermoon.co.uk Web: www.lasermoon.co.uk ftp: ftp.lasermoon.co.uk Just Computers! 607 Martin Ave. Suite 100A Rohnert Park U.S.A. Phone: 800-800-1648 Int'l: 707-586-5600 FAX: 707-586-5606 E-mail: sales@justcomp.com Web: www.justcomp.com InfoMagic 11950 N. Highway 89 Flagstaff, AZ 86004 U.S.A. Phone: 520-526-9565 FAX: 520-526-9573 E-mail: info@infomagic.com Web: www.infomagic.com Resellers - --------- Please contact one of the above distributors for resale information. Finally : this is an exciting development for Linux which is causing waves throughout the UNIX industry. Linux has "Come of Age". Welcome to the Future Technology! Linux-FT is a trademark of Lasermoon Ltd. UNIX is a trademark of X/Open. All other trademarks acknowledged. - -- Info - info@lasermoon.co.uk WWW and FTP : www.lasermoon.co.uk Lasermoon Ltd, The Forge, Fareham Road, Wickham, Hants, England. PO17 5DE Voice +44 (0) 1329 834944 Fax: +44 (0) 1329 834955 +++ The UNIX & Linux Freeware Specialists! +++ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2i iQCVAwUBMUcpFIQRll5MupLRAQFL+wP+LW7EH+bhxu6Z4N5dlmoJlSZiQyfezNgZ 9M/CIkwCtyVpZh3Xf5vA9nD4mj9zz3V2HTQF7tQ6RWOM2jWQf85PhDALbRK4Xv/9 Z+FqfMaFFnocUlUhEIT9O6MFzwWwu5zRIY3XAly0E2iV0ShxKQDqXqtXpgKsQZ6X 5068XgQxMxk= =053i -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- This article has been digitally signed by the moderator, using PGP. Finger wirzeniu@kruuna.helsinki.fi for PGP key needed for validating signature. Send submissions for comp.os.linux.announce to: linux-announce@news.ornl.gov PLEASE remember a short description of the software and the LOCATION.
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