Joerg Schilling
2015-Apr-27 16:10 UTC
[CentOS] Real sh? Or other efficient shell for non-interactive scripts
Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote:> > The schily tools act as a container to publish the current code state. There is > > no such maintained web page. > > I was referring to the summary on the SourceForge page, where you just list the contents of the package without explaining why one would want to download it.I thought I don't need to make advertizing for well known software. I manage the only actively maintained portable Bourne Shell and I do so as well for SCCS.> > I would be interested to understand why Heirloom seems to so well known and my > > portability attempts seem to be widely unknown. > > I can think of several explanations: > > 1. The Heirloom pages explain what features each download provides, rather than just give a list of program names.The problem is that the developes page cannot contain much information and in general, I prefer to code than to write advertizing.> If you tell me that I can download ?bsh?, I have no idea why I want bsh based solely on its name. If you tell me that I can download ?od?, I reply that I already have a functioning version of od, thank you very much. :)Bsh is mainly in schily tools to show people how the first shell with an interactive editable history did look like. Bsh != Bourne Shell. It was named bsh because I implemented my history editor at H. Berthold AG while working on a depanded page variant of UNOS.> 2. Many of those who might be interested in your osh are already well served by the Ancient Unix V7 + SIMH combination: > > http://www.in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/ancient/ > > You are left with the subset of people who want to run something other than the shells that come with their OS, and who want it to run natively. > > I should point out that a lot of people using the Ancient Unix images actually don?t want old bugs fixed. > > 3. It?s not clear from the files I?ve peeked into in your source distribution when bsh first became available in an OSI-approved form, but it seems to be sometime in the 2005-2007 range. > > If that is true, then bsh is several years late to fill a gap already filled by ash, in the same way that the prior existence of bash makes the open-source version of ksh93 uninteresting to most people. > > This is why you need a web page to sell your project: to explain why someone should abandon bash, zsh, ash, dash, posh, ksh93u+, mksh?I am not interested in working against ksh93, as this is much closer to POSIX than the current Bourne Shell. The Bourne Shell however is a nice idea for the system shell in /bin/sh because it is faster than bash and as fast as ksh93 but much smaller (if you use the UNIX linker, you can implement lazy linking that causes it to be only 80 kB when interpreting scripts). See: http://schillix.sourceforge.net/man/man1/ld.1.html for the UNIX linker man page, -zlazyload> 4. CDDL annoys a lot of people. Yes, I know, GPL annoys a lot of people, too. But again, you?re going up against ash, which is BSD, which annoys almost no one. :)The CDDL does not annoy people, this is just a fairy tale from some OSS enemies. BTW: I am of course not against ash, I just support the Bourne Shell. J?rg -- EMail:joerg at schily.net (home) J?rg Schilling D-13353 Berlin joerg.schilling at fokus.fraunhofer.de (work) Blog: http://schily.blogspot.com/ URL: http://cdrecord.org/private/ http://sourceforge.net/projects/schilytools/files/'
Warren Young
2015-Apr-27 16:41 UTC
[CentOS] Real sh? Or other efficient shell for non-interactive scripts
On Apr 27, 2015, at 10:10 AM, Joerg Schilling <Joerg.Schilling at fokus.fraunhofer.de> wrote:> > Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote: > >> I was referring to the summary on the SourceForge page, where you just list the contents of the package without explaining why one would want to download it. > > I thought I don't need to make advertizing for well known software.I first learned of its existence last week, and then only by coincidence to the present discussion. I immediately disregarded it for the reasons I?ve already given. If it wasn?t for this thread, I?d still be ignorant of the reasons why I should care about the existence of Schily Tools.> the developes page cannot contain much informationSourceForge gives you a way to link to a page on another site.> I prefer to code than to write advertizing.Well, there?s your diagnosis, then. Successful software requires advertising, whether F/OSS or not. The original Bourne shell was advertised through the pages of CACM, in books, etc. A search for ?Schilling? on linuxjournal.com turns up nothing except for some references to cdrecord. So, why do you expect that I should have stumbled across Schily Tools before now?>> If you tell me that I can download ?bsh?, I have no idea why I want bsh based solely on its name. If you tell me that I can download ?od?, I reply that I already have a functioning version of od, thank you very much. :) > > Bsh is mainly in schily tools to show people how the first shell with an > interactive editable history did look like. Bsh != Bourne Shell.Yes, I realize that osh is closer to the original Bourne shell. My point is that you can?t expect people to just know, without having been told, why they want bsh, or osh, bosh, or smake, or? Most of these tools compete with tools that are already in CentOS. If you want people to use these instead, you?re not going to persuade many people with a tarball. As for the tools that do not have equivalents in CentOS, the file name is not an explanation. You can?t expect people to just blindly download the tarball, build it, install it, and then start reading man pages. You have to entice people first. This thread is accomplishing that to some extent. I just think your time would be better spent writing such thoughts up on a web page somewhere, then linking to that from the SourceForge page. You will reach many more people that way.>> 4. CDDL annoys a lot of people. > > The CDDL does not annoy people, this is just a fairy tale from some OSS enemies.The following irritates me, I am a ?people,? and I am not an OSS enemy: http://zfsonlinux.org/faq.html#WhatAboutTheLicensingIssue> BTW: I am of course not against ash, I just support the Bourne Shell.Like it or not, your shells are in competition against all the other shells that became available earlier than yours. There is only so much free time in the world. You can?t expect people to stop using something they?re already successfully using without some amount of persuasion.
Les Mikesell
2015-Apr-27 16:52 UTC
[CentOS] Real sh? Or other efficient shell for non-interactive scripts
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 11:41 AM, Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote:> > >>> 4. CDDL annoys a lot of people. >> >> The CDDL does not annoy people, this is just a fairy tale from some OSS enemies. > > The following irritates me, I am a ?people,? and I am not an OSS enemy: > > http://zfsonlinux.org/faq.html#WhatAboutTheLicensingIssueIt is really the GPL that has the restriction preventing 'best-of-breed' components being combined, but it doesn't matter, it isn't going to change. I can see Sun being irritated with Linux (and for good reason...) but isn't it time to let it go? -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com
Joerg Schilling
2015-Apr-27 17:01 UTC
[CentOS] Real sh? Or other efficient shell for non-interactive scripts
Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote:> Yes, I realize that osh is closer to the original Bourne shell. My point is that you can?t expect people to just know, without having been told, why they want bsh, or osh, bosh, or smake, or? > > Most of these tools compete with tools that are already in CentOS. If you want people to use these instead, you?re not going to persuade many people with a tarball.Could you explain me why people did write gmake even though smake did exist 5 years eralier already?> > The CDDL does not annoy people, this is just a fairy tale from some OSS enemies. > > The following irritates me, I am a ?people,? and I am not an OSS enemy: > > http://zfsonlinux.org/faq.html#WhatAboutTheLicensingIssueThis is of course completely wrong. I recommend you to read the GPL book from the Lawyers from Harald Welte. They explain why a filesystem is not a derived work of the Linux kernel. This of course in special true for ZFS as ZFS was not written for Linux and works without Linux already. http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily
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