This was the first kernel that got released under the GPL (0.12 had a
time-lapse to make sure the people involved accepted the license change:
nobody ever complained).
Because 0.12 had been so successful, this was supposed to be closer to
1.0. Yeah, right. 1.0 was eventually released almost exactly two years
later..
The big change here is the first signs of a real VFS layer: while the
only available filesystem is still the Minix-compatible one, the code is
factored out, and the Minix-specific stuff is put in its own directory.
You can clearly see how the thing is moving towards having multiple
different filesystems.
The VFS changes also cause cleanups in various drivers, since we end
up having more clear inode operation structure pointer handling.
Superblock handling is still minix-specific..
NOTE! We also have /bin/init finally. It still falls through to the old
"run shells forever" case if no init can be found, but it's starting to
look a whole more like real UNIX user-land now..
New developers: Ross Biro shows up, and does ptrace. He will later end
up doing the first-generation networking code.
Other changes:
- UK and Danish keyboard maps (and the keyboard driver supported
"Application mode" keys from vt100+)
- Make sure interrupts clear the 'D'irection flag
- Floppy driver gets track buffer, which speeds it up immensely. This
was done based on patches by Lawrence Foard (entropy@wintermute.wpi.edu)
- Lots of buffer cache cleanups.
- support nonblocking pipe file descriptors
- recursive symlink support
- sys_swapon() means that we don't have to select the swap device
at build (or boot) time ("Written 01/25/92 by Simmule Turner, heavily
changed by Linus")
- start some generic timer work (ugh, but these first timers were
_horrible_ hardcoded things)
- ptrace for debugging
- console size query support with TIOC[G|S]WINSZ
- /dev/kmem ("by Damiano")
- rebooting (with ctrl-alt-del or sys_reboot()).
From the release notes:
New features of 0.95, in order of appearance
(ie in the order you see them)
Init/login
Yeah, thanks to poe (Peter Orbaeck (sp?)), linux now boots up like a
real unix with a login-prompt. Login as root (no passwd), and change
your /etc/passwd to your hearts delight (and add other logins in
/etc/inittab etc).
Bash is even bigger
It's really a bummer to boot up from floppies: bash takes a long time to
load. Bash is also now so big that I couldn't fit compress and tar onto
the root-floppy: You'll probably want the old rootimage-0.12 just in
order to get tar+compress onto your harddisk. If anybody has pointers
to a simple shell that is freely distributable, it might be a good idea
to use that for the root-diskette.
Especially with a small buffer-cache, things aren't fun. Don't worry:
linux runs much better on a harddisk.
Virtual consoles on any (?) hardware.
You can select one of several consoles by pressing the left alt-key and
a function key at the same time. Linux should report the number of
virtual consoles available upon bootup. /dev/tty0 is now "the current"
screen, /dev/tty1 is the main console, and /dev/tty2-8 can exist
depending on your text-mode or card.
The virtual consoles also have some new screen-handling commands: they
confirm even better to vt200 control codes than 0.11. Special graphic
characters etc: you can well use them as terminals to VMS (although
that's a shameful waste of resources), and the PF1-4 keys work somewhat
in the application-key mode.
Symbolic links.
0.95 now allows symlinks to point to other symlinks etc (the maximum
depth is a rather arbitrary 5 links). 0.12 didn't like more than one
level of indirection.
Virtual memory.
VM under 0.95 should be better than under 0.12: no more lockups (as far
as I have seen), and you can now swap to the filesystem as well as to a
special partition. There are two programs to handle this: mkswap to set
up a swap-file/partition and swapon to start up swapping.
mkswap needs either a partition or a file that already exists to make a
swap-area. To make a swap-file, do this:
# dd bs=1024 count=NN if=/dev/hda of=swapfile
# mkswap swapfile NN
The first command just makes a file that is NN blocks long (initializing
it from /dev/hda, but that could be anything). The second command then
writes the necessary setup-info into the file. To start swapping, write
# swapon swapfile
NOTE! 'dd' isn't on the rootdisk: you have to install some things onto
the harddisk before you can get up and running.
NOTE2! When linux runs totally out of virtual memory, things slow down
dramatically. It tries to keep on running as long as it can, but at
least it shouldn't lock up any more. ^C should work, although you might
have to wait a while for it..
Faster floppies
Ok, you don't notice this much when booting up from a floppy: bash has
grown, so it takes longer to load, and the optimizations work mostly
with sequential accesses. When you start un-taring floppies to get the
programs onto your harddisk, you'll notice that it's much faster now.
That should be about the only use for floppies under a unix: nobody in
their right mind uses floppies as filesystems.
Better FS-independence
Hopefully you'll never even notice this, but the filesystem has been
partly rewritten to make it less minix-fs-specific. I haven't
implemented all the VFS-patches I got, so it's still not ready, but it's
getting there, slowly.