Geany: June 2008 Archives
The extremely lightweight Swiss GNU/Linux distribution Slitaz burst upon the scene in March of this year promising to be easy on system resources yet possessing enough power in the form of basic applications to actually get things done.
In my original non-review, I couldn't really get Slitaz running on any of three PCs, so I ended it this way:
Hopefully they'll get it right with SliTaz 1.1 (or 2.0), but for now, it's a distro with a lot of promise but not a whole lot of delivery -- at least for me.
But there was also this:
I'll try it in the $15 Laptop (based on a Pentium II MMX and with the Orinoco WaveLAN wireless card) ...
Coincidentally, I've been looking for new distros to run on the $15 Laptop (Compaq Armada 7770dmt), and I decided to finally give Slitaz a spin in it.
It works.
And so far, it's quicker than anything I've tried on it before. The closest thing I can compare it to is Damn Small Linux.
As of DSL version 4.4, both have the "Bon Echo" version of Firefox, with Slitaz using a more-recent build of what basically is Firefox.
Having Firefox named Bon Echo presents one problem: It's harder to install Google Gears, which would enable Google Docs to function in offline mode. I'm sure there's a way to do it, but so far that's been the big stopper for me with DSL (and now Slitaz).
Another stopper: Slitaz seems to want the user to store data on a USB-connected drive. But this laptop, made somewhere around 1999, doesn't have USB. Hell, it doesn't have Ethernet. My connectivity comes via a Orinoco WaveLAN Silver PCMCIA card, and even if I did have a WiFi signal, which I don't, I'm not sure Slitaz 1.0 supports wireless connectivity. Otherwise, I'd be trying some packages from the Slitaz repository.
But in its "raw" configuration, Slitaz is a 25 MB ISO — smaller than Puppy Linux and Damn Small Linux, and with fewer apps as well.
The beauty of it is that Slitaz 1.0 is running entirely in RAM — and I've only got 144MB on this laptop.
Again: 144MB and running entirely in RAM. I don't think there's a system out there with X that'll do this without tapping into Linux swap (although Damn Small Linux might be coming close).
Like Puppy and DSL, Slitaz is based on the JWM window manager, which has plenty of features and lots of speed to go with it. Right-clicking gets you a small menu, but for the full menu, you need to left-click on the Slitaz spider icon at the top of the screen.
Slitaz is lean but does have enough apps to get by.
Besides Firefox/Bon Echo (version 2.0.0.12 on the live CD), there's:
- My favorite development editor Geany
- The mhWaveEdit audio editor (at least that's what I think it is)
- emelFM2 file manager
- Clex File manager
- mtPaint image editor (one of my favorites)
- Grab screenshot
- GPicView Image Viewer
- Gparted partition manager
- Htop processes viewer
- Lighttpd Web server
- gFTP client
- Grsync
- LostIRC
- Retawq Web browser
- Scpbox secure copy app
- Transmission Bittorrent app
- ePDFView PDF viewer
- Listpatron (I can't figure out what this does, but it appears to "make lists")
- OSMO personal organizer
- SQlite database
- Wikiss PHP Wiki
- Bc calculator
- Burn ISO
- ISO Master
- Leafpad editor
- Nano editor
- Xpad sticky note editor
- Xterm
I'm not sure yet how extensive the Web-server capabilities of Slitaz are as yet, but it does have the Lighttpd server, SQLite database, along with PHP, so you can seemingly roll out a dynamic Web page on the system as configured.
Once I get to a live Internet connection on the Compaq, I plan to check out the Slitaz repository, which has some applications that aren't on the live CD, including Abiword and the GIMP.
I'll have to deal with how to save my settings in Slitaz without USB, but in that quest, I found a great utility called Mountbox that enabled me to easily mount partitions from my hard drive and then look at them with emelFM2. Not that it's hard to mount partitions from live CDs, but this app is as good as the mount tools in Puppy or DSL, and I'm glad to have it.
However, upon mounting a hard-drive partition, I could see all the files there, but I was unable to write a new file to it. That's something I'll have to work on.
(Hint: When you boot Slitaz, the standard user is hacker, with no password. Root's password is root.)
After a read through the online documentation, I settled on the following boot codes for my laptop:
boot: slitaz vga=788 lang=en kmap=us home=hda3 sound=noconf
I was still asked by the system (in French, no less) what resolution to use for X. But the boot process was a bit quicker, since I wasn't asked this time to choose a language or keyboard, nor was I asked to configure sound, something that didn't work automatically (and never does for this laptop in Linux).
I created a file, saved it in the Slitaz filesystem and rebooted without the cheat codes. The file wasn't there. I tried again with the boot codes, and my file was there. The same thing worked for a Firefox bookmark. As long as I used the home=hda3 boot code (since hda3 was the hard drive partition I chose on which to put my Slitaz save file) when booting, everything works.
So it turns out you don't need a USB drive to save files in Slitaz.
There's a "Cooking" release of Slitaz that looks much changed from the 1.0 release, and I will try it soon and hope that perhaps some and hopefully many of my problems will be addressed. It uses Openbox instead of JWM, features desktop icons, uses HAL to automatically mount media and even has Firefox 3.
Another addition, among many, to the latest build of Slitaz is wireless support. Again, I'll have to burn a disc tonight and give it a try when I'm near a WiFi signal.
Thus far, Slitaz 1.0 is absolutely the fastest operating system I've ever used. While it's still fairly young, it boasts of a lot of functionality, and if it runs on your particular hardware, it's a live CD that's well worth having in your laptop bag.
I'd love to have another alternative to Puppy Linux and Damn Small Linux, both extremely lightweight — and extremely well-formed — distributions designed to be run as live CDs (but also capable of being installed to the hard drive). And again, running entirely in RAM with only 144MB is as lightweight as they come.
Right now, I can't use Slitaz with the same "expertise" with which I can use Puppy or DSL. But for a quick-booting, quick-working live CD, Slitaz does exceedingly well for such an early stage in its life.
I'll be watching Slitaz very closely, and I expect big things for it in the future, should development continue — and I really do hope it does.
Point of order: According to the boot screen, Slitaz stands for "Simple, Light, Incredible, Temporary Autonomous Zone."
So far, Slitaz lives up to that name.
More on Slitaz:
Slitaz on Distrowatch
Distrowatch review of Slitaz
My first Slitaz post from April 2008
K.Mandla's review of Slitaz
TechieMoe review of Slitaz
TechSource review of Slitaz
I didn't really need Geany, but I wanted to try Slackbuilds.
The instructions are too brief. I only say this because I can't make it work.
I extract the Slackbuild script, download the source to the proper directory, run the script as root and then get an error message.
The output says: "tar: This does not look like a tar archive," or "bzip2: (stdin) is not a bzip2 file."
I'm sure I'm missing something, but what?
Not one to wait, I went to LinuxPackages.net and got Geany for Slackware 12.0. I used pkgtool to install it. Worked perfectly.
Still, I'd like to figure out Slackbuilds. I'd love to know what I'm doing wrong.
I sent Slackware expert Willy Sudiarto Raharjo an e-mail asking for help. I've exchanged e-mail with Robby Workman before, and he's responsible for many Slackbuilds scripts, but I figured I'd ask Willy first and see what he comes up with.
I've been all excited about how well the Geany text editor has been working in Windows.
But I never even tried to print a text file with Geany in Windows.
Until now.
First it did some kind of shell command. I don't have access to my shell, per my lovely employer, so that didn't work.
When I installed Geany, I used the "nogtk" version because I already had the GTK+ runtime libraries as a result of installing the GIMP image editor on a previous occasion.
So I reinstalled Geany with new GTK+ libraries. Then I went into the Geany preferences and turned on GTK printing.
It works.
But it looks HORRIBLE.
Each and every letter is separated by two lines in various stages of thickness.
Ugly. Horrible.
I wonder if there's a fix for this.
As it is, I had to return to Notepad++ just to print a text file.
So ... it's back to Notepad++.
I'm a fickle user of applications and operating systems. If something doesn't work for me, I'll switch things up in a minute.
Daily News online leader Ryan Garfat uses EditPlus, which is NOT a free, open-source program, but which does edit HTML exceptionally well. It offers a 30-day trial, then costs $35 for a single user.
But y'all know me. I want FOSS.
So does anybody out there have a favorite free, open-source text editor for Windows?
I'm back using the Geany text editor in Windows. I also use it in OpenBSD and in Linux.
I like applications that I can use across platforms. Things like Firefox, OpenOffice, Abiword, Pidgin, and other too numerous to name make life easier for those of us who use three or more different operating systems. The apps also showcase free, open-source software for those who are using proprietary operating systems and give them a reason to explore FOSS further, perhaps even trying something like Linux.
If you learn to love a bunch of free applications, why not try the OS that is just as free?
Anyway, I have a lot of requirements for a text editor, as I'm sure do most of us who use them heavily.
One thing that Geany doesn't do that I need is an easy way to rename files. It's easy enough in a Unix-like shell, or in the finder in Windows, OS X or anything else, to change a file name, but I like to be able to change the name of a file right in the text editor.
Sure, you could always do a "save as" and have the old file with the old name and a new file with the new name, but I like to save steps and have the application do it all for me.
EditPadLite, which isn't FOSS, has a "Rename/Move" function. I don't believe that Notepad++ has it, either.
At any rate, my life would be that much more complete if Geany had a "rename file" feature.
Now that I've got that off my chest, it's back to work.




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