view etc/LINUX-GNU @ 105341:2a8a3a69c1c7

2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-set-tags-to): New command. * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-set-initial-vars): Also check in the plist. * org.el (org-additional-option-like-keywords): Add LATEX_CLASS keyword. * org-exp.el (org-infile-export-plist): Add LATEX_CLASS keyword. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-export): Option removed. (org-inlinetask-export-handler): Better export. * org-xoxo.el (org-export-xoxo-final-hook): New hook. (org-export-as-xoxo): Run the new hook. * org-html.el (org-export-html-final-hook): New hook. (org-export-as-html): Run the new hook. * org-docbook.el (org-export-docbook-final-hook): New hook. (org-export-as-docbook): Run the new hook. * org-ascii.el (org-export-ascii-final-hook): New hook. (org-export-as-ascii): Run the new hook. * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-treat-sub-super-char): Allow a space character as the character before the ^/_. (org-export-latex-final-hook): New hook. (org-export-as-latex): Run `org-export-latex-final-hook'. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-macs.el (org-if-unprotected-at): Fix docstring. * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-change-all-lines): Handle invisible text in the prefix (if category is a link). * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-preprocess): Deal properly with empty lines in verse environments. * org.el (org-format-latex-header): Inline fullpage.sty. * org-footnote.el (org-footnote-create-definition): Reveal context to add a new footnote definition. * org.el (org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c): Pass prefix arg to org-table-recalculate when cursor is in TBLFM line. * org-list.el (org-renumber-ordered-list): Fix cursor position when bullet length has changed. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-format-latex): Mention `org-format-latex-options' in the docstring. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-agenda-get): New function. * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-post-command-hook): No longer move point away from end of line. (org-agenda-add-entry-text, org-agenda-collect-markers) (org-finalize-agenda, org-agenda-mark-clocking-task) (org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks, org-agenda-entry-text-show-here) (org-agenda-entry-text-show, org-agenda-highlight-todo) (org-agenda-compare-effort, org-agenda-filter-apply) (org-agenda-later, org-agenda-change-time-span) (org-agenda-post-command-hook, org-agenda-show-priority) (org-agenda-show-tags, org-agenda-goto, org-agenda-kill) (org-agenda-archive, org-agenda-archive-to-archive-sibling) (org-remove-subtree-entries-from-agenda, org-agenda-refile) (org-agenda-open-link, org-agenda-copy-local-variable) (org-agenda-switch-to, org-agenda-check-no-diary) (org-agenda-tree-to-indirect-buffer, org-agenda-todo) (org-agenda-add-note, org-agenda-change-all-lines) (org-agenda-priority, org-agenda-set-tags) (org-agenda-set-property, org-agenda-set-effort) (org-agenda-toggle-archive-tag, org-agenda-date-later) (org-agenda-show-new-time, org-agenda-date-prompt) (org-agenda-schedule, org-agenda-deadline, org-agenda-action) (org-agenda-clock-in, org-agenda-bulk-mark) (org-agenda-bulk-unmark, org-agenda-show-the-flagging-note): Use `org-get-at-bol'. * org-colview.el (org-columns-display-here) (org-columns-edit-allowed, org-agenda-columns): Use `org-get-at-bol'. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-special-ctrl-a/e): Improve documentation and customize type. (org-end-of-line): Don't jump to after the ellipsis. (org-mode-map): Bind <home> and <end> as well. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-fontify-meta-lines-and-blocks): Treat lines with a space after #+ as comments. (org-open-at-point): Run `org-follow-link-hook' always. * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-emph-format): Use better commands to insert special characters in verbatim snippets. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-faces.el (org-copy-face): New function. Use it to create various faces formerly created by using `copy-face'. * org-agenda.el (org-prepare-agenda): Don't officially mark this window dedicated. (org-agenda-quit): Kill the frame containing the agenda window if that frame was created for the agenda. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-date-prompt): Mark the changed time stamp in the agenda. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-prepare-agenda): Reset `org-drawers-for-agenda'. (org-prepare-agenda): Uniquify list of drawers. * org.el (org-complex-heading-regexp-format): New variable. (org-set-regexps-and-options): Define `org-complex-heading-regexp-format'. (org-drawers-for-agenda): New variable. (org-map-entries): Bind `org-drawers-for-agenda'. (org-prepare-agenda-buffers): Add to `org-drawers-for-agenda'. * org-remember.el (org-go-to-remember-target) (org-remember-handler): Use `org-complex-heading-regexp-format'. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-highlight-todo): Fix text property problem. * org.el (org-on-heading-p, org-at-heading-p): Make sure these are always with `invisible-ok'. (org-store-link): No error when there is nothing to link to in the agenda. * org-list.el (org-update-checkbox-count): Insert changed cookie before the old, to avoid problems with invisibility at the end of the line. (org-update-checkbox-count): Insert changed cookie before the old, to avoid problems with invisibility at the end of the line. * org.el (org-sort-entries-or-items): Include the final newline. (org-fontify-meta-lines-and-blocks): Add indented dynamic block lines for fontification. (org-dblock-start-re, org-dblock-end-re): Allow indentation. (org-prepare-dblock): Store the current indentation of the BEGIN line. (org-update-dblock): Apply the indentation of the begin line to the rest of the block. (org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c): Also find indented dblock lines. (org-startup-folded): New allowed value `showeverything'. (org-startup-options): Add STARTUP keyword `showeverything'. (org-set-startup-visibility): Respect value `showeverything' in org-startup-folded. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-closest-date): Fix issue with past preference. * org-archive.el (org-archive-set-tag) (org-archive-subtree-default): New commands. * org-clock.el (org-clock-clocktable-default-properties): New option. (org-clock-report): Use `org-clock-clocktable-default-properties'. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-iswitchb-completing-read): Fix typo. * org-crypt.el: New file. * org.el: Add an entry for org-crypt. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-menu): Reorganize the menu for more consistency. (org-batch-store-agenda-views): New function. (org-agenda-title-append): Define variable. (org-write-agenda): New export to Org files. (org-agenda-get-some-entry-text): New arguments INDENT and KEEP. (org-agenda): Allow to keep the restricted file list if a special variable is bound to t. (org-agenda): Define a special agenda view for working on flagged entries. (org-agenda-get-restriction-and-command): List the new agenda view. (org-agenda-show-the-flagging-note): New command. (org-agenda-mode-map): New key `?' for looking at the flagging note. * org.el (org-autoload): Autoload org-mobile.el. (org-org-menu): Add menu commands for MobileOrg in the Org menu. * org-mobile.el: New file. * org-id.el (org-id-get): Fix bug with forcing ID on an item. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-table.el (orgtbl-line-start-regexp): Match also TBLNAME statements. (org-table-get-remote-range): Match indented #+TBLNAME statements. * org.el (org-convert-to-odd-levels) (org-convert-to-oddeven-levels): Work also correctly if the file is in outline-mode. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org.el (org-store-link): When in agenda buffer, link to referenced entry. (org-add-planning-info): Remove spaces at eol. * org-macs.el (org-with-point-at): Add a `lisp-indent-function' property. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-first-lines): Fix problem with LaTeX export of first line and selected subtree. * org.el (org-shifttab): Interpret arg differently when using only odd levels. 2009-10-01 Bastien Guerry <bzg@altern.org> * org.el (org-check-agenda-file): Use a more explicit message 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-exp.el (org-export-remove-special-table-lines): Don't remove normal lines. 2009-10-01 Bastien Guerry <bzg@altern.org> * org.el (org-offer-links-in-entry): Don't use "Select link" as a prompt in the temporary window. * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-bulk-mark): Use a slightly soberer prefix for marked entries in the agenda view. 2009-10-01 Andreas Burtzlaff <andy13@gmx.net> (tiny change) * org.el (outline-end-of-subtree): Bugfix: advise this function in a way that prevents any trailing character from being displayed. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-menu): Fix bugs in the bulk action menu. * org-exp.el (org-export-remove-special-table-lines): Remove bad slow regexp match. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-latex.el (org-export-latex-preprocess): Do not protect in the LaTeX header. * org-src.el (org-edit-src-save): Save window setup while saving. (org-edit-src-code): Use new buffer name construction scheme. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-entry-text-exclude-regexps): New variable. (org-agenda-entry-text-cleanup-hook): New hook. (org-agenda-get-some-entry-text): Remove matches of `org-agenda-entry-text-exclude-regexps' and run the hook `org-agenda-entry-text-cleanup-hook'. * org.el (org-offer-links-in-entry): New argument ZERO to implement a link with index zero. (org-cycle-show-empty-lines): Not keep empty line under header hidden. (org-iswitchb-completing-read): Bind `switchb-use-virtual-buffers' to nil for special completion. (org-store-link): Don't error before the first heading. * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-open-link): Pass the prefix to `org-offer-links-in-entry'. 2009-10-01 Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-quit): Provide the window argument for `window-dedicated-p', Emacs 22 needs it. (org-format-agenda-item): If the category is a link, arrange for invisible text to replaced with spaces. (org-compile-prefix-format): Add the extra space. (org-prefix-category-length): New variable. * org-exp.el (org-export-cleanup-toc-line): Remove footnote references from TOC lines. * org.el (org-selected-window): New variable. * org-table.el (org-table-edit-formulas): Remember the selected window. (org-table-fedit-finish, org-table-fedit-abort): Select the window that was originally selected. * org-exp.el (org-export-preprocess-apply-macros): Scan the expansion of a macro for more macro definitions. * org-agenda.el (org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks): Make sure the invisibility overlay starts on the newline.
author Carsten Dominik <dominik@science.uva.nl>
date Thu, 01 Oct 2009 07:59:53 +0000
parents 23a1cea22d13
children
line wrap: on
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		     Linux and the GNU system

The GNU project started in 1984 with the goal of developing a complete
free Unix-like operating system: GNU.  "Free" refers to freedom, not
price; it means you are free to run, copy, distribute, study, change,
and improve the software.

A Unix-like system consists of many different programs.  We found some
components already available as free software--for example, X Windows
and TeX.  We obtained other components by helping to convince their
developers to make them free--for example, the Berkeley network
utilities.  This left many missing components that we had to write in
order to produce GNU--for example, GNU Emacs, the GNU C compiler, the
GNU C library, Bash, and Ghostscript.  The GNU system consists of all
these components together.

The GNU project is not just about developing and distributing some
useful free software.  The heart of the GNU project is an idea: that
software should be free, that software users should have freedom to
participate in a community.  To run your computer, you need an
operating system; if it is not free, your freedom has been denied.  To
have freedom, you need a free operating system.  We therefore set out
to write one.

In the long run, though, we cannot expect to keep the free operating
system free unless the users are aware of the freedom it gives them,
and value that freedom.  People who do not appreciate their freedom
will not keep it long.  If we want to make freedom last, we need to
spread awareness of the freedoms they have in free software.

The GNU project's method is that free software and the idea of users'
freedom support each other.  We develop GNU software, and as people
encounter GNU programs or the GNU system and start to use them, they
also think about the GNU idea.  The software shows that the idea can
work in practice.  Some of these people come to agree with the idea,
and then they are more likely to write additional free software.
Thus, the software embodies the idea, spreads the idea, and grows from
the idea.

Early on in the development of GNU, various parts of it became popular
even though users needed proprietary systems to run them on.  Porting
the system to many systems and maintaining them required a lot of
work.  After that work, most GNU software is easily configured for a
variety of different platforms.

By 1991, we had found or written all of the essential major components
of the system except the kernel, which we were writing.  (This kernel
consists of the Mach microkernel plus the GNU HURD.  The first test
release was made in 1996.  Now, in 2002, it is running well, and
Hurd-based GNU systems are starting to be used.)

That was the situation when Linux came into being.  Linux is a kernel,
like the kernel of Unix; it was written by Linus Torvalds, who
released it under the GNU General Public License.  He did not write
this kernel for GNU, but it fit into the gap in GNU.  The combination
of GNU and Linux included all the major essential components of a
Unix-compatible operating system.  Other people, with some work made
the combination into a usable system.  The principal use of Linux, the
kernel, is as part of this combination.

The popularity of the GNU/Linux combination is success, in the sense
of popularity, for GNU.  Ironically, the popularity of GNU/Linux
undermines our method of communicating the ideas of GNU to people who
use GNU.

When GNU programs were only usable individually on top of another
operating system, installing and using them meant knowing and
appreciating these programs, and thus being aware of GNU, which led
people to think about the philosophical base of GNU.  Now users can
install a unified operating system which is basically GNU, but they
usually think these are "Linux systems".  At first impression, a
"Linux system" sounds like something completely distinct from the "GNU
system," and that is what most users think.

This leads many users to identify themselves as a separate community
of "Linux users", distinct from the GNU user community.  They use more
than just some GNU programs, they use almost all of the GNU system,
but they don't think of themselves as GNU users.  Often they never
hear about the GNU idea; if they do, they may not think it relates to
them.

Most introductions to the "Linux system" acknowledge that GNU software
components play a role in it, but they don't say that the system as a
whole is a modified version of the GNU system that the GNU project has
been developing and compiling since Linus Torvalds was in junior high
school.  They don't say that the main reason this free operating
exists is that the GNU Project worked persistently to achieve its goal
of freedom.

As a result, most users don't know these things.  They believe that
the "Linux system" was developed by Linus Torvalds "just for fun", and
that their freedom is a matter of good fortune rather than the
dedicated pursuit of freedom.  This creates a danger that they will
leave the survival of free software to fortune as well.

Since human beings tend to correct their first impressions less than
called for by additional information they learn later, these users
will tend to continue to underestimate their connection to GNU even if
they do learn the facts.

When we began trying to support the GNU/Linux system, we found this
widespread misinformation led to a practical problem--it hampered
cooperation on software maintenance.  Normally when users change a GNU
program to make it work better on a particular system, they send the
change to the maintainer of that program; then they work with the
maintainer, explaining the change, arguing for it, and sometimes
rewriting it for the sake of the overall coherence and maintainability
of the package, to get the patch installed.  But people who thought of
themselves as "Linux users" showed a tendency to release a forked
"Linux-only" version of the GNU program and consider the job done.  In
some cases we had to redo their work in order to make GNU programs run
as released in GNU/Linux systems.

How should the GNU project encourage its users to cooperate?  How
should we spread the idea that freedom for computer users is
important?

We must continue to talk about the freedom to share and change
software--and to teach other users to value these freedoms.  If we
value having a free operating system, it makes sense to think about
preserving those freedoms for the long term.  If we value having a
variety of free software, it makes sense to think about encouraging
others to write free software, instead of proprietary software.

However, it is not enough just to talk about freedom; we must also
make sure people know the reasons it is worth listening to what we
say.

Long explanations such as our philosophical articles are one way of
informing the public, but you may not want to spend so much time on
the matter.  The most effective way you can help with a small amount
of work is simply by using the terms "Linux-based GNU system" or
"GNU/Linux system", instead of "Linux system," when you write about or
mention such a system.  Seeing these terms will show many people the
reason to pay attention to our philosophical articles.

The system as a whole is more GNU than Linux; the name "GNU/Linux" is
fair.  When you are choosing the name of a distribution or a user
group, a name with "GNU/Linux" will reflect both roots of the combined
system, and will bring users into connection with both--including the
spirit of freedom and community that is the basis and purpose of GNU.


Copyright 1996, 2002 Richard Stallman
Verbatim copying and redistribution is permitted
without royalty as long as this notice is preserved.