Episode 3:08: Scaling the Alpine
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Coming up in this episode We're diskless We take a LEAF out of the history book We climb the Alpine mountain Pick a very small editor And we don our hoodies Youtube Link Support us on Patreon! 0:00 Cold Open 1:30 No Disks for You! 10:35 1997, LRP 11:43 2000, No More Money 13:09 2001, LRP Struggles 13:59 2003, LRP Put to Rest + LEAF and GNAP 14:58 2004, GNAP v0.5 15:04 2005, A Linux Powered Integrated Network Engine 16:18 2006, Alpine 1.4 | 2007, Alpine 1.5 and 1.6 16:37 2008, Alpine 2.0 Added Busybox 16:54 2009, Alpine 1.8 and 1.9 17:13 2010, Alpine 1.10 and 2.0 18:05 2011, Alpine 2.2 and 2.3 18:28 2012, Alpine 2.4 and 2.5 18:51 2013, Alpine and the Container Renaissance 20:11 2014, Alpine 3.0 and musl libc 20:43 2015, Alpine 3.2, 3.3 and Some Restructuring 21:19 2016, Alpine 3.4, 3.5 and OpenSSL 21:55 2017, Alpine 3.6, 3.7 and PostmarketOS 22:39 2018, Alpine 3.8 and Raspberry Pi 3 Support 23:01 2019, Alpine 3.9, 3.10 and 3.11 24:08 2020, Alpine 3.12 and the Last LEAF 24:28 2021, Alpine 3.13, 3.14 and 3.15 25:10 2022, Alpine 3.16 and the End of the History 26:45 What is Alpine, Really? 41:34 Our Thoughts on Alpine 1:04:07 Next Time! More Text Ed and a New Distro 1:13:58 Stinger Banter Disks! They're dead, Jim. Dan's 3TB Seagate - not noted for reliability but was reliable. Leo's 240GB Adata SU630 Announcements Give us a sub on YouTube You can watch us live on Twitch the day after an episode drops. If you like what we're doing here, make sure to send us a buck over at https://patreon.com/linuxuserspace Alpine Linux the History Back in 1997, Dave Cineage created the Linux Router Project, or LRP. The Linux Embedded Appliance Framework, or LEAF project was started Oxygen EigerStein The Linux Router Project was done The LEAF project was still there August of 2005, Natanael Copa, while working for a non-profit company on VPNs and firewalls, announced a new distribution on the linux.leaf.devel mailing list. Alpine originally stood for A Linux Powered Integrated Network Engine. The earlier versions are a little cloudy, but we see Alpine 1.4 being developed in 2006, 1.5 in 2007, Alpine 1.6 released on April 30th of 2007 and the switch to development of 1.7 in the days after. Alpine 2.0, the then development branch, first commit "added busybox" Alpine 1.9 - OpenRC shipped and able to install on hard disks. A new website is launched Alpine Linux 2.0 is released The team announced the Alpine Linux Forum. Alpine 3.0 is released, and uClibc is dropped in favor of musl libc. Alpine 3.2 is released and included the MATE desktop. Alpine 3.3 is released with big renames of the editions that already existed. Alpine 3.4 is released with support for running within VM's, better DNS support and running on the Linux Kernel's Long Term Support release 4.4. Alpine 3.5 is released and this marks the first version to drop OpenSSL for LibreSSL. Alpine 3.6 is released with support for 64-bit PowerPC and IBM z Systems. Alpine 3.7 is released and now supports EFI and GRUB. Alpine 3.8 is released a bit behind schedule and marks the only release of the year. Alpine 3.9 is released improved GRUB support, initial support for the newish ARMv7 and the switch back to OpenSSL. Alpine 3.10 is released with lightdm for login and display management, which shows a renewed interest in running Alpine on the desktop. Alpine 3.11 is released with Raspberry Pi 4 support, initial Gnome and KDE Plasma support and the addition of Vulkan, DXVK and the Rust programming language. Alpine 3.12 is released with support for the D programming language. Alpine and others just do it better, so LEAF sees its last stable release at 7.0.1 Alpine 3.13 is released and comes with official cloud images for services like AWS, cloud-init and better wifi support on the software side. Alpine 3.14 is released with fail2ban taking a back seat to sshguard because it... failed... to ban... and ClamAV is now community supported. Alpine 3.15 is released with kernel module compression using gzip, Gnome 41 and Plasma 5.23 land, and disk encryption is now supported right in the installer. Alpine 3.16 is released as the last release of this history with better NVMe support, adding SSH keys at boot, a new admin user creation process and a new setup-desktop script for desktop environment installation. More Announcements Want to have a topic covered or have some feedback? - send us an email, [email protected] Alpine Linux Links Alpine Linux Web Page Alpine Wiki Alpine user handbook Alpine Linux on Twitter Alpine Downloads Alpine Linux Wikipedia page Housekeeping Catch these and other great topics as they unfold on our Subreddit or our News channel on Discord. Linux User Space subreddit Linux User Space Discord Server Linux User Space Telegram Linux User Space Matrix Linux User Space Twitch Linux User Space Mastodon Linux User Space Twitter Next Time We will discuss GNU Nano and the history. We also hope to have a couple of topics and some feedback. Come back in two weeks for more Linux User Space Stay tuned and interact with us on Twitter, Mastodon, Telegram, Matrix, Discord whatever. Give us your suggestions on our subreddit r/LinuxUserSpace Join the conversation. Talk to us, and give us more ideas. All the links in the show notes and on linuxuserspace.show. We would like to acknowledge our top patrons. Thank you for your support! Producer Bruno John Dave Co-Producer Johnny Sravan Tim Contributor Advait CubicleNate Eduardo S. Jill and Steve LiNuXsys666 Nicholas Paul sleepyeyesvince Support Linux User Space