SCO Skunkware

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
SCO Skunkware
Stable release
2006 / July 30, 2006
Written in
Open Source licenses
Websitesco.com/skunkware

SCO Skunkware, often referred to as simply "Skunkware", is a collection of

IBM XT was released by The Santa Cruz Operation.[3] The annual SCO Forum conference was a venue for the makers and users of SCO Skunkware to meet and discuss its contents and ideas for future additions.[4]

Later additional open source distributions for operating platforms such as the FreeBSD Ports collection and the Solaris Freeware repository[5] would lend additional momentum to the adoption of open source in the business community.

Release history

SCO Skunkware has been released frequently on

ISO image. Individual packages are distributed via FTP. The Skunkware CD release history is as follows:[6]

Licensing

SCO Skunkware components are licensed under a variety of terms. Most components are licensed under an

GNU Library General Public License
.

Licenses used by SCO Skunkware components include or are similar to:

A few of the components are "freeware" with no restrictions on their redistribution. Some components may restrict their use to non-commercial purposes or require a license fee for commercial use (e.g. MBROLA). Some components may be redistributed with special permission from the author(s) as is the case with KISDN.

Packaging formats

SCO Skunkware packages are typically distributed in the native packaging format of the operating system release for which they are intended.

Package management systems
used by SCO Skunkware include the following:

  • Old SCO Custom installable floppy images (SCO Xenix & UNIX 3.2v4)
  • New Custom SSO architecture media images (SCO OpenServer 5 and 6)
  • SysV pkgadd datastreams (UnixWare 2, UnixWare 7, Open UNIX 8)
  • RPM (OpenLinux 3, UnixWare 7, OpenServer 5 & 6)
  • tar and cpio
    archives (all platforms)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ SCO Skunkware website
  2. ^ The SCO Skunkware FTP download area contains over 1200 packages and 28 Gigabytes of free downloads
  3. ^ SCO Forum 2000 slide presentation
  4. ^ See for instance "Forum 2000: Birds-of-a-Feather Sessions: B3 Skunkware". Santa Cruz Operation. 2000. Archived from the original on 2001-06-19. and "Caldera Forum 2001: Sessions/Keynotes: BoF06 Skunkware and Contributed Software". Caldera International. 2001. Archived from the original on 2001-11-14.
  5. ^ "Freeware for Solaris". Steven M. Christensen and Associates, Inc. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
  6. BOF
    SCO Forum 2002
  7. ^ Skunkware was temporarily renamed to "Supplemental Open Source Software" after the purchase of the SCO server division by Caldera International. SOSS is the acronym used for this.

References

External links