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Haiku R1 Alpha 4 Release Notes
These are the release notes for Haiku R1 Alpha 4, our fourth official release. For this fourth alpha release, we strove to provide an improved version of Haiku that is more stable, introduces more features for both the end-user and developer, and has a greater chance of properly booting on more hardware.
We have tried hard to make this release as good as possible. Still there are a few known issues and missing features, some of them collected below. Please keep in mind that this is alpha software, which means it is not yet feature complete and still contains known and unknown bugs. While we are mostly confident in the stability of this release, we do not provide any assurances against data loss.
Another goal that has driven the release of the Alpha 4 was to provide current and future Haiku developers an updated and (mostly) stable operating system to work on their software projects. Therefore we have included the basic build tools, along with clients for cvs, svn, git and hg. This release of Haiku is capable of building and running binaries using either GCC 2 or GCC 4. The use of GCC 4 is discouraged however if not absolutely necessary, as no API compatibility is guaranteed with future versions of Haiku.
System Requirements
Haiku currently only works on x86 systems. Minimum memory required is 128 MB. If compiling Haiku within itself, 1 GB of memory is recommended. Haiku has been tested to work on CPUs as slow as a Pentium II 400 MHz, and requires as little as 700 MB of drive space.
New Features
This is a glimpse into some of the more notable improvements and additions to Haiku, since the previous release, R1 Alpha 3. It should be noted that over 1000 bugs closed as fixed since R1 Alpha 3. Additionally, more than TODO subtle bugs have been fixed, which were discovered by Coverity.
- New native debugger application
- New media add-on: 10 channel equalizer
- New KeymapSwitcher application
- Notifications of network card state changes
- Improved virtual memory settings and swap file creation logic
- Native AMD Radeon HD video card mode-changing support
- WPA/WPA2 support
- Initial Blu-ray disc file system support (UDF 2.50)
- New GLife screensaver donated by Aaron Hill
- Ability for kernel debugger (KDL) to generate QR Codes
Enhancements
- OpenGL kit uses newer upstream Mesa3D version (7.8.2, gcc2)
- Improved GUI design to several applications
- Improved BFS file system tools
- Improved NTFS file system support
- Improved translations
- Improved WebPositive rendering, updated WebKit engine
- Enhanced Terminal features
- Better language translations
- Add MSI support to OHCI
- Color highlighting in grep
- Shell 'ps' command now shows true UID/GID
- Improved 'pretty-name' of AHCI devices
- Improved AMD and Intel CPU name detection.
Bug Fixes
- POSIX signal fixes
- BFS stability improvements
- Various potential memory leaks fixed
Known Bugs
- #8617: PoorMan crashes on N-th page refresh
- #8454: Very low network performance on some Marvell Yukon cards.
- #8626: Radeon HD Palm GPU's non-functional due to incomplete DisplayPort support.
- #8345: Rare kernel panic when PAE Translations are in use (RAM >4GB)
Missing Features
Package management is still being developed and is not included in this release. For the time being, a temporary script is included to help install a small set software (available via installoptionalpackage
).
Known Issues
LiveCD and first boot performance: After an initial installation or a boot into LiveCD mode, some background tasks are executed to finish the installation setup. This is known to degrade performance. On hard disk installs this usually is not a problem as the tasks are done quickly. In LiveCD mode the performance hit is more prominently visible due to the usually bad seek performance on CDs. Since the CD is read-only, this setup takes place on every start of the LiveCD. On writable media it will only be done once, so further boots shouldn't experience the same delays.
Font rendering, while improved due to the expired font hinting patent, is still not optimal. Due to the uncertain situation about patents, the official release has disabled code, which is known to be patented. This sadly includes the subpixel code used by FreeType. Once the situation is better understood and a decision has been made, subpixel font rendering may get re-enabled for official releases.
Haiku's ACPI support, which is enabled by default, might cause problems on some hardware. ACPI can be disabled in the boot loader's safe mode options menu.
Copying large amounts of data from faster to slower disk drives (like USB sticks) can cause the system to start paging.
The Haiku boot loader has been reported to hang on some hardware.
Support for localization/internationalization is still a work in progress. Some applications might only be partially translated and have issues with long strings in languages other than English.
Firmware for some wireless network cards need user acknowledgement, prior to their intsallation. This includes Broadcom 43xx, Intel ipw2100, Intel ipw2200 and Marvell 88W8335. As a temporary measure, a script is included to assist in this process (available via install-wifi-firmwares.sh
).
Source Code
The source code of Haiku itself, the source code of the required build tools and the optional packages (except for closed source ones) is made available for download at: http://www.haiku-files.org/files/releases/r1alpha4/sources/
Reporting Issues
There are over 2400 open tickets on Haiku's bug tracker and over 6600 closed items. If you find what you believe to be an issue, please search our Trac to see if it has already been reported, and if not, file a new ticket: http://dev.haiku-os.org/
To see the list of tickets reported in Haiku R1 Alpha 4, visit http://dev.haiku-os.org/wiki/R1/Alpha4/ReportedIssues
For information about major issues that have been fixed since the release, visit http://dev.haiku-os.org/wiki/R1/Alpha4/ReleaseAddendum
For more help see the 'Welcome' link on the Haiku desktop, or visit the Haiku Project's website at www.haiku-os.org.