Distributions
From Openmoko
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About distributions
Openmoko distributions are designed to run on various mobile devices, with the primary aim of supporting Openmoko Inc.'s Neo 1973 and Neo FreeRunner phones. They are GNU/Linux distributions -- complete operating systems including user applications. You can install any of them on your phone or even have a dualboot system with two distributions installed. For downloads see Download, for installation instructions see Flashing the Neo FreeRunner.
Besides, Openmoko distributions also run on other mobile devices and some other software distributions also run on the phones of Openmoko Inc.
Choosing a distribution
Currently the most used distributions are Om 2008, which comes preinstalled on the Neo FreeRunner, and SHR.[1]
In the future Om 2009 will be the default distribution. It is currently under development and should be released in june 2009. Like SHR it will be based on the freesmartphone.org framework.
Furthermore, there are many other distributions, like Qt Extended (for stable basic functions), Google's Android, and some Debian-based distros.
Distributions |
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Please note
- Stable in the FreeRunner world does not mean the same thing as stable in the Debian world.
- Most distributions use the same bootloader, kernel, drivers and hardware. Therefore, the same low level bugs are commonly found in all distributions. The latest and greatest software usually has most bug fixes, plus a whole set of new fresh bugs.
- Most of these distributions also have package repositories. It is a BAD idea to feed from another distribution's repository.
- Upgrade path between these distributions are mostly not tested, thus updating by changing the feeds will most likely end in broken packages or even an unbootable system. It is advisable to reflash the whole filesystem with dfu-util to switch between the different distributions, with the reminder that a dual-boot setup (e.g. via sdcard or NFS) can be used.
Official Openmoko releases
'Release targets' offered by Openmoko Inc. are built out of different branches of the OpenEmbedded metadistribution source tree.
Om series
- Om2009 is intended to be the new distro; it is not a simple follow-on from Om 2008.12 Update. It is still very much in development and by no means ready for production use and is based on the freesmartphone.org milestone 5.5 framework.
- Main article: Om2009
- Om 2008.12 Update is the second point release after the initial Om 2008.9 release.
- Main article: Om 2008.12 Update
- Om 2008.9 Update is the first point release after the initial Om 2008.8 release. Openmoko recommends that all existing installations of Om 2008.8 should be updated to that version. Quality-wise, we are still far from the goal, but this version includes general stability enhancing operating system improvements and a new splash screen. No applications were added or removed. Users with basic telephony needs will find it tolerable as an everyday phone.
- Main article: Om 2008.9 Update
- Om 2008.8 was released on August 8, 2008, to replace 2007.2. Prior to that, its codename was ASU (April/August Software Update). This is still the name of the branch in the version control system. This distribution integrates the Qtopia phone stack with a set of new Openmoko applications based on the Enlightenment Foundation Libraries (EFL). Qtopia being a more mature product than the GNOME Mobile stack, the standard phone applications (dialer, contacts, calculator, calendar) work better than in 2007.2. The Qtopia used in 2008.8 was ported to run on X11, contrary to standard Qtopia which uses the framebuffer. This allows non-Qt applications to safely share the screen with Qt applications. This is a .0 release, many unresolved issues remain in the lower layers (kernel power management, sound, wifi drivers...).
- Main article: Om 2008.8
- Om 2007.2 was the first distribution created by Openmoko. The interface was totally finger-oriented, optimized for 285ppi, and very orange. It used the GTK+ stack, which is part of the GNOME Mobile platform. This distribution is now considered obsolete and not being worked on by Openmoko Inc or by OpenedHand.
- Main article: Om 2007.2
FSO series
FSO is an abbreviation for FreeSmartphone.Org. Openmoko is working on a stable system services back-end. Focus is on stable highlevel services that you can access from whatever language or UI that supports dbus. The framework will be used in forthcoming Openmoko distributions. FSO is all about middleware, but if one stacks a bootloader+kernel under it and telephony applications on top, one gets a functional distribution. These are made available as FSO-image milestones.
- FSO Milestone V was released and named 'Calling All Stations'. The telephony application on top of it is Zhone. This is a basic Python dialer/homescreen designed as scaffolding to test the FSO functionalities (even if Zhone is pretty, code path coverage is more critical to it than user-friendliness). More details at
Status Update 6. You can grab it from http://downloads.freesmartphone.org/fso-stable/milestone5.1/ .
- Main article: FSO
Openmoko community releases
SHR - Stable Hybrid Release
SHR is a community driven distribution. It contains some basic EFL based applications which make use of the FSO. There currently is an EFL (with elementary) dialer, messages and contacts application programmed in C, as well as a nice Settings-GUI in Python. As of April 12th, 2009, there is no stable release of this distribution yet, as the SHR team doesn't feel it to be good enough. You can find images though on the SHR buildhost.
- Main article: Stable Hybrid Release
FDOM (FAT and Dirty Openmoko)
FDOM is a distribution based on Openmoko's currently supported image, updated with many ready-to-use applications and with fixes posted in the mailing lists. A combination of applications (everything goes) and fixes to demonstrate the capabilities of the Freerunner and to have a functional phone (sort of). This all while retaining the ability to update through the official feeds.
- Main article: FDOM
Non-Openmoko distributions
These are not Openmoko (and OE) based distributions. These are alternatives you can run on your Openmoko phones.
Qt Extended
Qt Extended has had several names. The current name is Qt Extended Improved. An Openmoko-based community develops Qt Extended Improved as a Free Software project. Qt Extended Improved builds on the foundation of Qt Extended/Qtopia/Qt by Qt Software/Trolltech. Qt Extended Improved provides a robust telephony stack, a webkit based browser and other smartphone features.
On 5th March 2009 Qt Software released Qt Extended 4.4.3. On 3rd March 2009 Qt Software announced that Qt Extended would 4.4.3 would be the last release of the Qt Extended product. Prior to version 4.3, Qt Extended was known as Qtopia.
- Main article: Qtopia / Qt Extended on FreeRunner
Debian
Debian is "the universal operating system". It comes with thousands and thousands of packages (most of them designed for desktops or servers so far). So in the words of Joachim "nomeata" Breitner from the pkg-fso team, this is not really a distribution in the Openmoko sense of the word, but rather a different underlying system for Openmoko distributions. At the moment, we ship the software from the FSO stack, but hopefully we’ll also have, for example, the Stable Hybrid Release software in our archive. So for now, Debian is a different way of installing FSO, which takes more space and provides more programs :-)
- Main article: Debian
Gentoo
Gentoo is all about choices. When installing Gentoo, this is made clear to you several times -- you can choose how much you want to compile yourself, how to install Gentoo, what system logger you want, etc. Gentoo is a fast, modern metadistribution with a clean and flexible design. Gentoo is built around free software and doesn't hide from its users what is beneath the hood. Portage, the package maintenance system which Gentoo uses, is written in Python, meaning you can easily view and modify the source code. Gentoo's packaging system uses source code (although support for precompiled packages is included too) and configuring Gentoo happens through regular textfiles. In other words, openness everywhere.
- Main article: Gentoo
Android
Android is a software stack for mobile devices developed by the The Open Handset Alliance. Openmoko is fully supporting Android running on the Freerunner.
Android has now reached a point where it is usable on the FreeRunner as an everyday phone, there are, however, still some caveats. Check out the main Android section of the wiki for more info.
- Main article: Android
You can also visit the user web page for Sean McNeil for some more info.
Slackware
As of release 12.2, Slackware is now officially supported on the Neo Freerunner [2]
Hackable:1
Hackable1 is a community distribution for hackable devices like the Neo Freerunner. It is based on Debian and 2007.2 userland which has been abandoned by Openmoko. It follows the GNOME mobile platform.
- Main article: Hackable:1
neovento
neovento (ex FYP) is a Debian for Freerunner based distribution which uses LXDE and Zhone on top. It is a FreeYourPhone.de community project.
- Main article: neovento
Others / unreleased
- The NeoPwn network auditng system's core is a modified Linux 2.6.24 kernel, with cross-compiled module driver support for the numerous compatible addon devices running on a FULL Debian (ARMEL) operating system. The filesystem has been optimized for performance and size and includes the NeoPwn menu system and several GUI dialogs for hardware control and attack automation. Status: Unknown, the GPL requires source code to be distributed only to customers.
- RunningBear is an innovative, yet free and open-source Operating System for hackable devices driven by Bearstech. Lightweight, Portable, Secure, Friendly and Useful. Status: In development.
- Poky and Sato, by OpenedHand/Intel. An open source platform build tool derived from OE. It is a complete software development environment for the creation of Linux devices. It enables you to design, develop, build, debug, and test a complete, modern, software stack using Linux, the X Window System and GNOME Mobile based application frameworks for both ARM and x86 based platforms. Status: The "Nightly Build" Image works fine on Neo Freerunner, but phone functionality doesn't.
- PyNeo pyneo is a stack for mobile devices excessivly using dbus, glib and evas. pyneo can be considered FSO milestone 0. Afterwards, FSO evolved into an own project with different goals. Status: still active, ask around on #pyneo.org
- mySTEP by Openmoko distributor Golden Delicious Computers is based on GNUstep and brings a Objective-C API to the Neo. Core GUI frameworks are "Foundation" & "AppKit". It has been shown on FOSDEM 2008, LinuxTag 2008 and SYSTEMS 2008 to run on the Neo 1973. If someone reengineers UIKit, (open) source code compatibility to iPhone apps appears achievable. Status: it does not have its own kernel so a Freerunner distribution waits for a solid basis and an arm-linux-gnueabi toolchain that runs natively on Mac OS X is currently lacking.
Features by distribution/release target
Generally, distributions can differ on one or more of the following components:
- The bootsplash screen image. This is purely decorative.
- The bootloader. Theoretically, any version of uboot could be used with any distribution. In the future Qi will replace uboot.
- The kernel. GNU/Linux kernels versions 2.6.24, 2.6.26 or 2.6.28 can be found. Some have modules compiled in, others have modules compiled separately. If compiled separately, modules can be distributed in the same package file as the kernel or separately.
- Middleware: daemons to handle GSM calls or GPS, sound system, personal information storage and so on. Qt and Android have their own subsystems, FreeSmartphone.Org (FSO) is working towards a standard-based Free Software one.
- Display driver. The original Qt Extended uses the framebuffer, most other distributions today use X11.
- Libraries and application framework (widget toolkit and and graphical environment) : EFL, Qt, Gtk+ or Java ?
- Basic telephony applications: voice calls, SMS, alarm clock...
- Smartphone applications: GPS, media player, simple games, web browser...
- Open source applications: more games, scientific, you name it...
Hardware Support
Om 2008.8 | Om 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GTA01 | ?? | ?? | ?? | yes | ?? | yes | yes | ?? | ?? |
GTA02 | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Connectivity
Om 2008.8 | Om 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Telephony | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
SMS | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
GPRS | Not through UI | Not through UI | Not through UI | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | Not through UI | yes |
WiFi | yes (*) | yes | Not through UI | yes | yes | yes | yes | Not through UI | yes |
VoIP | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | yes | yes (1) | yes | ?? | no |
Bluetooth | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | ?? | yes |
GPS (1) | yes (1) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | yes (1) | yes |
Power
Om 2008.8 | Om 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Suspend | yes | ?? | ?? | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Resumes on Event | ?? | ?? | ?? | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | ?? |
Functions after Resume | yes | ?? | ?? | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes |
User Interaction
Om2008.8 | 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stylus friendly | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Finger friendly | Partially | Partially | Partially | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes |
Accelerometer | yes (1)(1) | no | no | yes (1) | yes | no | yes | ?? | yes |
Applications
Om 2008.8 | 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Terminal | yes (1) | Basic (2) | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | yes |
PIM | yes | yes | no | N/A | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | ?? |
Phonebook | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
Dialer | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
Web Browser | yes (1) | yes (1) | ? | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
Mail Client | yes | ? | ? | ? | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
XMPP Client | yes (1) | yes (1) | ? | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | |
Media Player | yes (1) | yes | ? | yes | yes | yes | yes (1) | ?? | yes |
Toolkits / Runtimes
Om 2008.8 | 2007.2 | FSO | SHR | FDOM | Qt Extended | Debian | Gentoo | Android | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GTK+ | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | ?? |
Qt/Qt Extended | yes | no | yes ? | yes ? | yes | yes | yes | yes | ?? |
Middleware | qtopia-x11 | gsmd/neod | FSO | FSO | qtopia-x11 | Qt Extended | FSO | FSO | ?? |
Java | Jalimo | Jalimo | Jalimo | Jalimo | yes | ?? | CacaoVM, JamVM | ?? | ?? |
Python | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | ?? |
Mono | yes (1) | yes (1) | ?? | no | ?? | ?? | yes (1) | ?? | ?? |
Ruby | yes | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | ?? | yes (1) | yes (1) | ?? |
Images
Latest and stable combinations for Neo FreeRunner gta02
OM | FDOM | Qt Extended | Android | |
current bootloader | U-Boot from OM daily version [3] | U-Boot from OM daily version gta02v5_and_up | U-Boot from OM daily version gta02v5_and_up | |
future bootloader | Qi from Andy latest qi-andy.udfu | Qi from Andy latest qi-andy.udfu | Qi from Andy latest qi-andy.udfu | |
splash | U-Boot from OM releases or OM daily latest splash.gz | U-Boot from OM releases or OM daily latest splash.gz | U-Boot from OM releases or OM daily latest splash.gz | |
kernel | Linux from OM releases or OM daily latest uImage.bin | Linux from mwester latest uImage-gta02-mwester-stable.bin or from treviño latest uImage-gta02-stable-3v1n0.bin | Linux see Qt_Extended page for latest version | Linux from koolu |
modules | ? | Linux from mwester latest modules-min-gta02-mwester-stable.tgz or modules-all-gta02-mwester-stable.tgz | Linux from mwester latest modules-min-gta02-mwester-stable.tgz or modules-all-gta02-mwester-stable.tgz | |
rootfs | OM from OM releases or OM daily latest rootfs.jffs2 | FDOM from TuxBrain version 200809_20081023 | See Qt_Extended for latest rootfs | Android from koolu |
Footnotes:
(1) works, but need additional software to be installed
(2) unusable due to lack of certain keyboard characters. Various fixes available.
(*) unstable
Quick download page
See also
- Mickey Lauer's post "GTK, ASU, FSO, TMTLA!" describes the differences between distributions 2007.2, ASU and FSO.
- Latest news and tips are in Community Updates
- Kustomizer is a script to change your 2008.12 to a usable phone