The Funtoo Linux project has transitioned to "Hobby Mode" and this wiki is now read-only.
Difference between revisions of "Support Matrix"
(Marked this version for translation) |
|||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
care to ensure ongoing, predictable functionality and a consistent experience for our users. | care to ensure ongoing, predictable functionality and a consistent experience for our users. | ||
=== We Are All Users === | === We Are All Users === <!--T:25--> | ||
<!--T:26--> | |||
Who makes these decisions? Generally, the [[User:Drobbins|BDFL]] curates the overall project goals and also decides what we can say we officially support based on the community testing and usage each part receives. But our ''users'' are the core community of Funtoo, and we don't have a separate set of ''developers''. We are '''all''' users, and even the BDFL considers himself to be a '''user''' of Funtoo, first and foremost. And if you are in our user community, you have the ability to contribute, or 'put on your developer hat'. | Who makes these decisions? Generally, the [[User:Drobbins|BDFL]] curates the overall project goals and also decides what we can say we officially support based on the community testing and usage each part receives. But our ''users'' are the core community of Funtoo, and we don't have a separate set of ''developers''. We are '''all''' users, and even the BDFL considers himself to be a '''user''' of Funtoo, first and foremost. And if you are in our user community, you have the ability to contribute, or 'put on your developer hat'. | ||
<!--T:27--> | |||
So please understand that there is not a separate development team creating Funtoo for you based on a roadmap. We, '''the users''' -- ''those of use who choose to be part of the 'pack' -- are the team''. ''You'' are included in this process if you choose, simply by the fact that you use Funtoo. This means there is an opportunity for you to have a voice, but you have to choose to be involved. You are encouraged to 'howl' on the bug tracker to express your needs and desires in relationship to Funtoo. You will have an opportunity to grow in your knowledge and contribute to the project. See [[Wolf Pack Philosophy]] for more information on how our community works. You will also notice some Funtoo bugs referenced below, which can be used as starting points to get involved and improving certain areas of Funtoo. | So please understand that there is not a separate development team creating Funtoo for you based on a roadmap. We, '''the users''' -- ''those of use who choose to be part of the 'pack' -- are the team''. ''You'' are included in this process if you choose, simply by the fact that you use Funtoo. This means there is an opportunity for you to have a voice, but you have to choose to be involved. You are encouraged to 'howl' on the bug tracker to express your needs and desires in relationship to Funtoo. You will have an opportunity to grow in your knowledge and contribute to the project. See [[Wolf Pack Philosophy]] for more information on how our community works. You will also notice some Funtoo bugs referenced below, which can be used as starting points to get involved and improving certain areas of Funtoo. | ||
Revision as of 22:13, November 21, 2021
This page documents the various technologies that are and are not supported in Funtoo Linux.
Each technology is assigned a grade level -- A, B or C -- or marked as officially not supported. We do take these grade levels seriously, and an "A" grade indicates a technology in Funtoo that receives great care to ensure ongoing, predictable functionality and a consistent experience for our users.
We Are All Users
Who makes these decisions? Generally, the BDFL curates the overall project goals and also decides what we can say we officially support based on the community testing and usage each part receives. But our users are the core community of Funtoo, and we don't have a separate set of developers. We are all users, and even the BDFL considers himself to be a user of Funtoo, first and foremost. And if you are in our user community, you have the ability to contribute, or 'put on your developer hat'.
So please understand that there is not a separate development team creating Funtoo for you based on a roadmap. We, the users -- those of use who choose to be part of the 'pack' -- are the team. You are included in this process if you choose, simply by the fact that you use Funtoo. This means there is an opportunity for you to have a voice, but you have to choose to be involved. You are encouraged to 'howl' on the bug tracker to express your needs and desires in relationship to Funtoo. You will have an opportunity to grow in your knowledge and contribute to the project. See Wolf Pack Philosophy for more information on how our community works. You will also notice some Funtoo bugs referenced below, which can be used as starting points to get involved and improving certain areas of Funtoo.
Architectures
x86-64bit
is used by the overwhelming majority of Funtoo Linux users, and most of our stage3 builds are for this architecture. Thus, it is the best supported architecture. Our x86-64bit
builds are pure 64-bit, and do not include multilib support. We include pre-built debian-sources
kernels in our stage3's for this architecture to improve ease
of installation and maximize hardware compatibility.
We also have official builds for arm-32bit
, arm-64bit
and soon riscv-64bit
. These architectures are functioning but are more challenging to install as they do not include our official pre-built kernel and may require board-specific setup. In general, the steps documented in The Installation Guide apply, except the part on boot
loader, configuring GRUB, etc.
Init System
OpenRC is the official init system of Funtoo Linux, and we explicitly do not support SystemD. Why? For a lot of reasons. We believe that an operating system's init system is one of its distinctive characteristics, and is something we care about. Gentoo used to be a leader in this area, with the first dependency-based init system being created in the early 2000's. Later, this init system was ported to C and became what is now known as OpenRC. We would rather support OpenRC going forward and look at other interesting possibilities than moving in lock-step with SystemD. We believe that the initial startup process is an area where innovation and independence is important.
SystemD has been a contentious topic in the Open Source community, and the issues with SystemD are not purely technical. They are also related to the very aggressive and coercive promotion of SystemD as being the one init system for all Linux distributions. As SystemD absorbs more and more functionality, such as device management, power management, control of your laptop's backlight, and other low-level functions, it becomes more and more embedded in the foundation of the Linux userspace stack, and distributions become more beholden to upstream SystemD changes and future 'acquisitions' of functionality. This erodes the ability of Linux distributions -- and thus Linux users --- of being in control of the low-level technologies used for various aspects of Linux. We believe it's in the best interests of the Linux community to encourage diversity and innovation in this space. We want the larger Gentoo ecosystem -- as well as Funtoo -- to support innovation, not uniformity.
Systemd is not supported in Funtoo Linux. This is a technical decision and we will not be adding systemd support to Funtoo.
Kernels
In Funtoo Linux x86-64bit
, debian-sources
is our official kernel, with debian-sources-lts
also fully supported. Why Debian?
One of the goals of Funtoo Linux is to provide a
system that is ready for use in a production server environment. Debian-sources is used by many people, and thus receives
updates related to system stability that other kernels may not always receive. debian-sources-lts
is akin to using a RHEL kernel, but is more current. It also allows us to use Debian's kernel configurations, which are maintained for us by the Debian project, and enable all hardware as kernel modules. This allows us to pre-build a kernel that works for everyone, which greatly reduces the complexity of a Funtoo install, without having to perform the tremendous amount of work of maintaining our own kernel. For kernels, there is strength in numbers. The more people that are using the kernel, the more issues are found, and the more problems are fixed. In the past, Funtoo has even offered Red Hat Enterprise Linux kernels, though this was primarily
done because we were using OpenVZ containers in production and this was the only supported kernel for OpenVZ.
There may be a kernel that you personally prefer over Debian's kernel, and in an ideal world we would maintain our own Funtoo kernel and kernel configuration
for you. But at this time, debian-sources
happens to be an excellent general-purpose
kernel for nearly all users, both desktop and server, and the more advanced users are free to use whatever kernel they prefer, but then take responsibility for dealing with any issues related to that choice.
debian-sources
is the official kernel in Funtoo Linux, and is included on stage3's for x86-32bit and x86-64bit architectures.
debian-sources-lts
is an alternate kernel that is fully supported and is often used in production server environments.
gentoo-sources is not officially supported in Funtoo Linux but may be used by advanced users. If you are experiencing possible kernel problems, we will ask you to switch to debian-sources
for troubleshooting purposes, since this eliminates kernel variation as a source of potential problems.
Desktop Environments
Multiple desktop environments are supported in Funtoo Linux, with the most well-supported of these being GNOME. This is primarily due to Daniel Robbins using GNOME as his primary desktop environment, so it is always continually tested, and it also has its own official stage3 build. If you are starting out with Funtoo, a pre-built GNOME desktop environment, installed via a pre-built GNOME stage3 is highly recommended as a starting point, even if it may not be your favorite.
Other environments, such as Cinnamon and MATE, are also supported but get somewhat less testing, although they all get built regularly. These environments rely on community testing and bug reports.
KDE has historically not gotten as much attention, although that is changing, and it is likely that we will be offering an official KDE build of Funtoo quite soon. At that point, it will likely quickly move to a 'grade A' level of support.
gnome
mix-in or using our official stage3 builds.
cinnamon
mix-in or using our official stage3 builds.
mate
mix-in or using our official stage3 builds.
lxqt
mix-in. We do not have an official stage3 for it.
kde
mix-in. Support is 'in progress' as it currently pulls in wayland which is not yet supported. We do not yet have a stage3 build so no regular build testing is performed. Follow FL-8510 for status on this.
Display Technologies
Xorg is our official display technology for desktop environments. There is some possibility of adding Wayland support if there is sufficient community support for maintenance and testing.
Wayland is not currently officially supported in Funtoo Linux. This may change at some point as more users are available to test and maintain it. Discussion related to this can happen in FL-9073.