[SGVLUG] Memories of SLS Linux
Braddock Gaskill
braddock at braddock.com
Sat Mar 14 21:12:04 PDT 2015
I got SLS Linux 1.05 circa April 1994 installed and running in qemu. It
was neat to go through the old process - actually easier than I thought.
I (eventually) followed a very good guide here:
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/node/2097
This is probably the oldest Linux distribution available. There is an
earlier SLS 1.03 on biblio, but it appears to be incomplete and fails on
installation. I tried VMWare before qemu without success.
It would be an interesting project try to get networking support. You'd
either have to SLIP over the emulated serial port, or recompile a very old
version of the kernel if the emulated network hardware was by chance
supported in 1994 (which I doubt).
Another interesting project would be getting X windows to work. startx
failed out of the box, as I expected. I recall getting X windows running
at the time as a very difficult and frustrating process.
But I probably won't go further into this.
-braddock
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Braddock Gaskill <braddock at braddock.com>
wrote:
> James was talking tonight about installing an "old" linux distribution for
> fun. It brought me back to my first encounter with Linux, which I thought
> I'd share. Maybe others can share their experiences.
>
> The fall of 1993 was the start of my freshman year at college. I spent
> all the money I'd earned at my first programming job the prior summer on a
> new 486DX2, even though I had been raised on an Amiga.
>
> MSDOS on the 486 was a bore compared to the Amiga. The DEC Unix
> workstations in the lab were far more interesting.
>
> My dorm-mate Mark had received a big box of used floppy disks from his
> mother's work. We went to the computer lab and started downloading SLS
> Linux from MIT's ftp server. Slowly. One floppy at a time. To speed
> things up we commandeered half a dozen lab computers at once, looking over
> our shoulder in case the campus IT department got mad at our flagrant abuse
> of machines and precious bandwidth. We were sure we'd get in trouble.
>
> One by one we downloaded all 50 floppy disks of SLS. I still remember the
> prompt coming up on my freshly installed 486 and thinking I finally had a
> real machine. Linux was at version 0.99. There was no ethernet in the
> dorm, we had to run SLIP over a serial line.
>
> I only had 4MB of RAM, which wasn't really enough to run X - although Mark
> hacked on my computer all night to get the modelines correct to at least
> start it up. The rule of thumb was you could open one window per megabyte
> of RAM over 4MB. The next summer I upgraded to 8MB and could even run
> Mosaic - I recall fondly feeling like I had a real workstation.
>
> I haven't stopped running Linux since. I see there is a vintage copy of
> SLS on ibiblio, so maybe I'll give it another try.
>
> -braddock
>
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