News Index

Sep 16, 2020

The libressl "revert" was reverted. System update will replace libressl dependencies with bearssl. You may choose to keep or remove bearssl after the update.

Sep 03, 2020

The default TLS provider has been reverted to libressl. System update will replace bearssl dependencies with libressl. You may choose to keep or remove bearssl after the update.

Jul 27, 2020

Carbs Linux's fork of the kiss package manager has been renamed to Carbs Packaging Tools due to huge amount of changes. Your latest kiss update will handle the bootstrapping. You will need to rename your KISS-* variables to CPT-*.

Jun 17, 2020

A new rootfs tarball including the changes to the core is released and can be found on the downloads page.

May 26, 2020

An initial version for binary package management is released. It can be found on the GitHub page.

May 19, 2020

A rootfs tarball targeting the i686 architecture has been released. It can be found on the downloads page.

May 10, 2020

A GCC 10.1.0 change causes a kernel panic for kernels built with GCC 10.1. This issue can be resolved by applying this patch to your kernel sources.

EDIT: The patch is no longer necessary.

Apr 27, 2020

A new rootfs tarball has been released! You can see it on https://dl.carbslinux.org/releases!

EDIT: A new bug fix release has been made.

Apr 10, 2020

IRC channel can now be accessed from #carbslinux at freenode!

Apr 06, 2020

A new rootfs tarball has been released. See the downloads page.

Apr 05, 2020

Carbs Linux repositories will be hosted only on Github. Commits will be pushed there, and not the repository. You have until May 4, 2020 Monday to switch your remotes to https://github.com/CarbsLinux/repository. The git repository will continue to be served until then (without additional commits).

You can switch your remote by executing the following command on your repository directory.

git remote set-url origin https://github.com/CarbsLinux/repository

Feb 18, 2020

A new tarball is released. It can be found on https://dl.carbslinux.org.

edit: I have removed the tarball because of a bootstrapping issue. I will be re-adding it later today.

edit 2: I have added a tarball (20200219) to reflect my recent changes on Busybox.

Feb 14, 2020

IMPORTANT! Carbs-init update to be released on 17th of February will require manual intervention. I am holding this update back so people can see it before they update their system (even though the update will show the same message as this). The rationale for the update is explained below the intervention.

# There is an explanation for each init You only need to follow the instructions
# for your own init-system

## busybox-init
# If you did not edit your inittab simply move inittab.new to inittab
mv /etc/inittab.new /etc/inittab

# If you did edit your inittab you can use a simple sed command to remove the
# necessary lines
sed -i '/getty/d;/runsvdir/d' /etc/inittab


## runit
# same as busybox-init, if you did not edit /etc/runit/2 move 2.new to 2
mv /etc/runit/2.new /etc/runit/2

# else
vim /etc/runit/2
# open your 2 file and remove the for loop containing getty commands. If you are
# using runit, it is recommended to comment out /etc/init/runit.boot

## sinit/minit
# If you did not edit your {sinit-,}launch-services.boot you can simply remove
# it.
rm -f /etc/init/launch-services.boot /etc/init/sinit-launch-services.boot

# This should leave you without any issues, and you can safely reboot.

Carbs-init update is to make sure init systems do not clash, and do not have to use different files. This is a sensible update both for the user user and for the maintainer side.

To give an example, before this update busybox-init was managing getty through inittab, runit was managing through /etc/runit/2, and minit/sinit were launching from /etc/init/launch-services.boot. This is a configuration nightmare for everyone, and since I am maintaining and constantly testing those init providers, a huge nightmare for me. This is a Quality of Life update.